Relike lets you turn a Facebook page into a newsletter
French
startup Ownpage has recently released a new product called Relike. Relike is
one of the easiest ways to get started with email newsletters. You enter the
web address of your Facebook page and that’s about it.
The company
automatically pulls your most recent posts from your Facebook page and lets you
set up an emailing campaign in a few clicks. You can either automatically pick
your most popular Facebook posts or manually select a few posts.
Just like
any emailing service, you can choose between multiple templates, decide the day
of the week and time of the day, import a database of email addresses and more.
If you’ve used Mailchimp in the past, you’ll feel right at home.
But the idea
isn’t to compete directly with newsletter services. Many social media managers,
media organizations, small companies, nonprofits and sports teams already have
a Facebook page but aren’t doing anything on the email front.
Relike is
free if you send less than 2,000 emails per month and don’t need advanced
features. If you want to get open rates, click-through rates and other
features, you’ll need to pay €5 per month and €0.50 every time you send 1,000
emails.
The
company’s other product Ownpage is a bit different. Ownpage has been working
with media organizations to optimize their email newsletters. The company is
tracking reading habits on a news site and sending personalized email
newsletters.
This way,
readers will get tailored news and will more likely come back to your site.
Many big French news sites use Ownpage for their newsletters, such as Les
Echos, L’Express, 20 Minutes, BFM TV, Le Parisien, etc.
Ownpage
founder and CEO Stéphane Cambon told me that Relike was the obvious second act.
Using browsing data for customized newsletters is one thing, but many talented
social media managers know how to contextualize stories and maximize clicks
(even if it means clickbait, sure).
The startup
was looking at a way to get this data, and ended up creating Relike, which
could appeal to customers beyond news organizations. For now, both products
will stick around. In the future, the company plans to add Twitter and
Instagram integrations as well as better signup flows for newsletter
subscribers.
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