Most businesses pour their energy into finding new customers and quietly forget the ones who already know them. A newsletter fixes that. It is a simple, low-cost email that keeps you in front of people who have already raised their hand — subscribers who signed up because they wanted to hear from you.
At ZenWeb, we set newsletters up for clients because they earn their keep. You own the list, no platform can switch it off or charge you to reach it, and one good email can bring back a customer who had drifted away. It is one of the few marketing assets a small business truly controls.
This guide explains what a newsletter is, how it differs from a one-off sales blast, what it actually does for a Malaysian SME, and how to start one. The short video below shows the idea inside a real email tool, then we break it down step by step.
Source video: Kevin Stratvert on YouTube
Quick Answer: A newsletter is an email you send on a regular schedule to subscribers who opted in — weekly, fortnightly, or monthly — sharing a mix of useful content, news, and the occasional offer. Unlike a one-off promo, it builds a relationship over time, so people come to know, trust, and buy from you.
Think of it as a friendly check-in from a shop you like. Not a hard sell every time, just a regular note that is worth opening — a tip, a story, something new, and now and then a reason to buy. A newsletter is one specific kind of email marketing, built for the long game rather than a single sale.
Three things separate a newsletter from any other email you send:
Quick Answer: A promotional blast is a one-off email built to sell something right now. A newsletter is a regular email built to stay useful and keep a relationship warm. Both have a place — but the newsletter is what earns the trust that makes your occasional blasts actually work.
The two feel similar when you press send, but they do different jobs. A blast asks. A newsletter gives, then asks once it has earned the right. Send only blasts and people learn that your emails always mean “buy now”, so they stop opening. Every email still needs a clear call to action — the difference is what surrounds it.
| Promotional blast | Newsletter | |
|---|---|---|
| Goal | Sell something now | Build trust over time |
| Frequency | One-off, when there is an offer | Regular, on a schedule |
| Tone | All sell | Mostly useful, gently selling |
| Result over time | Diminishing opens | Loyalty and repeat sales |
You do not have to choose one forever. The strongest setup is a steady newsletter with the odd promotional send mixed in — the trust from the first makes the second land.
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Quick Answer: Most Malaysian SMEs send a newsletter for one main reason: to keep existing customers coming back. New offers, helpful tips, and driving traffic to the website follow close behind. The pattern is clear — a newsletter is a retention tool first, and a fresh-sales tool second.
When we look at how clients actually use their newsletters, the goals stack up in a familiar order. Most lead with keeping customers warm, then layer offers and content on top. The chart below shows the rough share of SMEs leaning on each goal.
| Main goal | Share using it | |
|---|---|---|
| Keep customers coming back | 68% | |
| Announce new products or offers | 61% | |
| Share tips and build trust | 47% | |
| Drive traffic to the website | 39% | |
| Announce events or news | 28% |
Illustrative, based on ZenWeb client patterns, Malaysia, 2024–2026. Most SMEs pick more than one goal.
The goals are not mutually exclusive — a single issue can welcome a buyer back, flag a new product, and link to a fresh blog post. Where the goals differ by audience, a little list segmentation lets you send the offer to buyers and the tips to browsers. It all sits inside a wider digital marketing plan rather than standing alone.
Quick Answer: Reaching 1,000 people by newsletter costs a few ringgit in tool fees; reaching the same 1,000 with ads costs far more, every single time. And with a newsletter you own the audience — no platform can throttle it or raise the price. That cost gap is why email keeps paying back.
Ads are rented reach: you pay again for every send, and the platform decides who sees you. A newsletter is owned reach. Once someone subscribes, contacting them again is nearly free. The table compares the rough cost to reach 1,000 people across common channels.
| Channel | Rough cost per 1,000 | Who owns the audience |
|---|---|---|
| Email newsletter | ~RM 5–20 (tool fee) | You |
| SMS blast | ~RM 50–90 | You (pay per send) |
| Meta ads | ~RM 30–120 | The platform |
| Google Display ads | ~RM 25–100 | The platform |
Illustrative ranges, based on ZenWeb operational data across Malaysian SME accounts, 2024–2026. A guide, not a quote.
The ownership column is the real story. Paid channels can change their rules overnight, much like organic reach on social keeps falling. Owning your audience is the same logic behind earning backlinks for SEO — assets you build and keep beat reach you rent month after month.
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Quick Answer: For most Malaysian SMEs, fortnightly or monthly is the sweet spot. Send too often and people tune out and unsubscribe; send too rarely and they forget who you are. Pick a cadence you can keep up, then stay consistent — rhythm matters more than raw volume.
There is no single right number, but there is a clear shape to the trade-off. The table below shows how cadence tends to move your open and unsubscribe rates, alongside the effort each one takes to sustain.
| Cadence | Typical open rate | Unsubscribe rate | Effort |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weekly | ~28% | ~0.4% | High |
| Fortnightly | ~33% | ~0.3% | Medium |
| Monthly | ~35% | ~0.2% | Low |
| Quarterly | ~24% | ~0.5% | Very low |
Illustrative, based on ZenWeb operational data across Malaysian SME email accounts, 2024–2026. A guide, not a guarantee.
Notice that monthly often beats weekly on opens — less is more when each send is worth reading. Quarterly slips because people simply forget you between issues. Whatever you pick, you can automate the timing with a drip campaign and watch your email open rate to see what your readers prefer.
Quick Answer: A newsletter compounds. In month one it is small; by month six a steady SME often has a list in the low thousands and a meaningful share of sales coming from email. The asset grows while the cost stays flat — which is exactly why starting early beats waiting until you feel ready.
The value of a newsletter is rarely visible in week one. It shows up as a curve. The table below traces an illustrative SME that starts from zero and adds a sign-up form, then sends consistently.
| Month | Subscribers | Share of sales from email |
|---|---|---|
| Month 1 | 220 | ~2% |
| Month 2 | 410 | ~4% |
| Month 3 | 650 | ~7% |
| Month 4 | 900 | ~9% |
| Month 5 | 1,180 | ~12% |
| Month 6 | 1,500 | ~15% |
Illustrative growth path, based on ZenWeb client patterns, Malaysia. Results vary with traffic and offer.
Each issue does double duty: it sells today and nudges quiet contacts back to life — the same idea behind lead nurturing. Keeping the growing list tidy in a simple CRM means the bigger it gets, the more useful it becomes, not the messier.
Quick Answer: To start a newsletter, pick an email tool, add a sign-up form to your site, decide a simple cadence, write one useful first email, then send and review. You can be live within a week and improve as you learn — you do not need a big list or a designer to begin.
Starting is far simpler than most owners expect. Five steps get you from nothing to your first send:
As your list grows, a light touch of list segmentation — new subscribers versus regulars — lets each group get a more fitting message without much extra work.
Quick Answer: The usual newsletter mistakes are selling in every email, sending with no schedule, buying or scraping a list, and never checking the numbers. Each one quietly kills trust or deliverability. Avoid them and your newsletter stays welcome in the inbox instead of sliding into spam.
These traps drain the value from an otherwise good newsletter. Watch for them:
Steady, useful sends keep you out of the spam folder. Leaning on evergreen content means you always have something worth sharing, even in a quiet month.
Quick Answer: If you have repeat customers, more than one thing to say, or an audience you would hate to lose if a platform changed its rules — yes, send a newsletter. The only businesses that can skip it are those with truly one-time customers and nothing useful to share. That describes very few.
Run a quick self-check before you commit:
If you said yes to even one, a newsletter earns its place. It is a core habit in any digital marketing setup for beginners in Malaysia. It also makes the rest of your marketing spend work harder by giving every campaign a warm audience to land on.
A newsletter is simply a regular, opt-in email that stays useful first and sells second. It does not need a big budget or a big list — just a clear purpose, a steady rhythm, and content worth opening. That is what turns a one-time buyer into a regular one.
For a Malaysian SME, it is one of the smartest channels you can build, because you own it outright and it compounds over time. Now you know what a newsletter is, how it differs from a sales blast, and how to start one — the next step is to add a sign-up form and write your first issue, then weave it into the rest of your digital marketing.
A newsletter is a regular email you send to people who signed up to hear from you. It mixes useful content — tips, news, stories — with the occasional offer, sent on a schedule like fortnightly or monthly. The aim is to stay in touch and build trust, so subscribers keep opening and buying over time.
An email blast is a one-off email built to sell something now; a newsletter is a regular email built to stay useful and keep a relationship warm. Blasts work best when they sit on top of the trust a newsletter creates. Most SMEs run a steady newsletter and add the occasional promotional blast.
For most Malaysian SMEs, fortnightly or monthly works best. Monthly is the easiest to sustain and often gets strong open rates because each send is worth reading. Sending weekly can tire readers, while quarterly is so rare that people forget you. Pick a cadence you can keep up, then stay consistent.
Yes. Email remains one of the cheapest channels with the best returns, because you own the audience and reach them directly. While social reach keeps falling, a newsletter list cannot be throttled by an algorithm. For Malaysian SMEs, a useful, well-run newsletter still drives repeat sales reliably.
Start by adding a sign-up form to your website and inviting existing customers to join. Pick a beginner-friendly email tool, offer a clear reason to subscribe, and send your first useful email even to a small list. Lists grow steadily from there — the important thing is to begin and stay consistent.
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Book a free 30-minute strategy session. We will review how you capture subscribers, how often you should send, and where sales slip away, then give you a concrete 90-day plan to make email pay.
Complete the form and our team will contact you to discuss your goals. Let’s grow your business.

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