
How to Serve Multiple Audience Types
JLive Music
Description
<p>As we evolve as creators, it’s inevitable that our audiences evolve with us. If you find yourself serving multiple audiences, deciding which audience to speak to and when can feel like an impossible task that inevitably isolates one fan base or another. Unfortunately, with most mediums, creators must choose. </p><p><br></p><p>In this episode, Alyssa and Melissa answer the question, how do you create for multiple audiences<em>? </em>Because this is Deliverability Defined, email is always the answer. And while email has many superpowers, audience segmentation is possibly the most undervalued. Whether your audience is made up of both parents and teachers or dog owners and cat lovers, here’s how to embrace them all while keeping it personal. </p><p><br></p><p><strong>Key Takeaways</strong></p><ul> <li>[08:08] - Social media will inevitably be filled with clutter you don’t care about. Email allows us to subscribe to only the content we’re interested in.</li> <li>[13:33] - Before you segment subscribers, you have to learn about them. Start by asking questions through a welcome sequence. </li> <li>[16:23] - Don’t feel weird asking people for information. We underestimate how much people enjoy talking about themselves. </li> <li>[18:02] - Segmentation isn’t permanent. As you start sending content, you can combine your lists when content is relevant to multiple audiences. </li> <li>[19:00] - Having multiple audiences via email can lead to multiple business opportunities.</li> <li>[19:35] - Gathering subscriber information at signup is more upfront work, but it makes your life much easier down the line. Build the system, don’t be the system. <p></p> </li> </ul><p><strong>Quotes</strong></p><p>[07:00] - “I think it’s easy to overlook that there are people in your audience who are different.” ~ <a href="https://twitter.com/mel_lambert_">@mel_lambert_</a></p><p><br>[11:25] - “Email is so unique in the way that you can have all of your audience together in one place, but send them completely different emails.” ~ <a