How to Write A Church Email Newsletter
Church Email Newsletters are great for keeping your people informed and entertained. Always include an interesting short story about your area, people or something funny that happened.
What to write in a Church Newsletter
You need to keep people reading your church bulletins so keep it fun and informative. Don't be too serious all the time. You can find free church email newsletter templates online if you do a little searching.
Don't feel alone, a lot of people search every month for how to write a newsletter email for a church group. It's rare but there is church email newsletter software. You can go to canva and use a report template to make a great looking bulletin or newsletter.
What can a church use to send newsletter via email?
You don't want to send them all by hand. Use an online tool like an autoresponder like Aweber or GetResponse. They know how to get your email delivered. It isn't too expensive.
All you have to do is join one and add a new list, new signup form and write a welcome email. There are great videos online that show you what to do. It will cost you a $200 a year most start about $20 a month and go up based on the size of your list. It can get expensive if you have 2000 or more in your church.
A Church Email Newsletter Free Alternative
You can make a free email newsletter on Substack.com, they don't charge you anything to have a large newsletter. They only take a small fee if you have a paid newsletter. It is confusing to setup but I have some videos that show you how to get it done.
==>Click here to learn how to setup a Free Newsletter on Substack<==
It will save you $100's if not $1,000's over the years. You can't beat FREE!
I bring this topic up because I often get questions like:
"I send a church newsletter to 400 emails a day, what email program should I use?"
Substack is perfect for that.
Or:
"What can a church use to send newsletter via email?"
Use the free Substack to send your emails, they archive all your past issues so people can read them again.
Read the Rest of this article here—>>Church Email Newsletters