About Terri S. Turner

Business writer. Trainer. Content advisor. Founder of TST Business Strategies, LLC. I help you compete in the noisy, crowded Internet environment, where 99% of communication is done through the written word. How? You get hands-on training to write so customers will buy. You learn how to find, plan and schedule content, how to reuse content to increase follower, and how to hire a writer when needed. Wanna write for business success? Contact me at terri@terristurner.com.

10 Writing and Content Tips to Avoid SPAM

In the most basic sense of the word, SPAM is unsolicited email that targets users with direct mail messages. When recipients receive unwanted email from your company, you erode your online reputation. Digital consumers buy from companies they know and trust. Email marketing develops relationships with customers and prospects. However, SPAM counteracts your goal to gain trust. Follow these 10 practices to avoid email marketing SPAM.

By |2020-07-27T01:52:09-05:00June 29th, 2011|Content, Email Marketing, Writing Tips|0 Comments

5 Best Practices For Email Marketing Success

Poof, when Facebook changes its business page policies, your business page becomes outdated. Yikes, stop using Yahoo and Bing search because YouTube and Google are the now the search engines of choice. With frequent changes to Facebook, Twitter, blogging and other social media, small business can maintain a consistent digital presence with email marketing. When combined with a properly maintained list, email marketing remains the #1 asset for small businesses. Follow these 5 best practices for email campaign success.

Ten Commandments for Business Growth

While signs of economic recovery flirt with news headlines, unemployment staggers at nearly 9 percent and millions of Americans reluctantly accept early retirement severance without a desire to leave the workforce. Seasoned, energetic professionals often desire to turn unemployment into self-employment. However they get stuck hunting for the perfect first move. During the April 2011 StartUp Weekend Kansas City, keynote speaker Ben Milne, founder of Iowa-based Dwolla, told participants that the key to a successful million dollar startup is to “Simply start, then hustle.” He challenged all “to be really naïve; do what you think you cannot do.” Likewise, Infegy President Adam Coomes told the more than 60 attendees: “It starts with an idea. But in the end, it’s about just doing it!” So, leave the starting block, dive in and just do it. No matter where you begin, enjoy the journey. Let these Ten Commandments motivate you to launch or grow your business.

Go to Top