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Two Simple Ways to Create a Christmas Newsletter - Tuesday 1st December 2015
1. We are working on a Newsletter at work and there are some great templates for doing your own from home. You can include photo’s, headings, write stories, have a feature article and the likes. Great for emailing to all the relatives OR posting out instead of Xmas cards. Free templates are available off the MS website and emailing is virtually free.
2. Blog. Currently we keep our friends and family informed of our camping travels by doing a blog for each adventure we have. I email the link to everyone and let them know I’ve added another adventure for them to read. I can email my new blog straight to the site and add pictures later if I wish. Starting a blog costs virtually nothing.
For both these ideas, you need access to the Internet to either email or post photos to your blog. The rest is free and can be done at home for next to nothing. Don’t have a computer? Why not loan one at your local library? This is usually free but you will have to book a time with the librarian, and most also have internet access which may have a small fee. Internet cafes are now popular and relatively cheap to use if you can design things at home or at the library.
Contributed by Tracey Lyons
2. Blog. Currently we keep our friends and family informed of our camping travels by doing a blog for each adventure we have. I email the link to everyone and let them know I’ve added another adventure for them to read. I can email my new blog straight to the site and add pictures later if I wish. Starting a blog costs virtually nothing.
For both these ideas, you need access to the Internet to either email or post photos to your blog. The rest is free and can be done at home for next to nothing. Don’t have a computer? Why not loan one at your local library? This is usually free but you will have to book a time with the librarian, and most also have internet access which may have a small fee. Internet cafes are now popular and relatively cheap to use if you can design things at home or at the library.
Contributed by Tracey Lyons