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How to start your own email discussion list or online community


Introduction

You might have a group of colleagues from different organizations who need an easy way to share information.  Or perhaps you have a team tasked with developing a proposal or a workplan.  Maybe you met a group of people at a workshop you attended and you want to keep in touch.  You want to find people who are interested in the same issue that your organization is working on and share your questions and experiences with them. Or your organization wants to send out a monthly distribution email to let people know about new publications and activities. These are some of the reasons why you might want to start your own email discussion list. 

There are practical reasons why starting an email discussion or distribution list makes it easier to communicate with a group of people. First of all, there's the convenience of not having to type in or keep track of email addresses. You send one email and it goes to everyone on the list automatically. Secondly, each member is responsible for keeping their own information up to date. Bounced messages don't come back to you. Each member receives the emails at the frequency they specify. And, you have an online archive where members can read or search old postings, so you don't have to look through your email inbox to find an email to resend to another person.


How to start your own email discussion list

Before you start, take a few minutes to answer these questions:

Some commercial sites allow you to start your own email discussion list or online community for free.  Both MSN Groups and Yahoo Groups allow anyone to start a group. Within a few minutes, you can have your email discussion list ready to go.

 
INFO can host your email discussion list

If you are working in the field of family planning/reproductive health, and you would like to start an email discussion list, The INFO Project can help you create and manage your email discussion list. If you'd like to have your email discussion list hosted by INFO, contact Peggy D'Adamo. .  The INFO Project is especially interested in hosting email discussion lists for organizations in the field who would like to make use of this tool.  INFO currently uses a software program called MAILMAN for the email discussion lists that it hosts.  MAILMAN also allows you to have a simple list home page and an online archive. Take a look at an example of a home page

Set up your own community on the Implementing Best Practices Knowledge Gateway

Do you want to do more than send email?  Consider establishing a Community of Practice (CoP) through INFO.

INFO can also help you set up an online community through the Implementing Best Practices in Reproductive Health (IBP/ECS) Knowledge Gateway.  The Knowledge Gateway provides you with access to an easy-to-use electronic communication tool that is designed to encourage reproductive health professionals to share ideas, opinions, experiences, and lessons learned.   Each community has its own home page and virtual library with folders and versioning capabilities.  In addition, community leaders can post and e-mail announcements, conduct discussions online/by e-mail, hold online meetings, and access a group calendar and contacts list.  For more information on setting up your own community contact info@ibpinitiative.org.

You can invite reproductive health professionals to join, allow people to sign themselves up, or restrict membership to a particular group of people who are working on a project.  Also, your members benefit from being included into the Global Community, which is a general community for all members.  They get to participate in general discussions, see announcements of events open to all, make announcements to a broader community, and network with a broad range of RH professionals.  A weekly newsletter to the Global Community helps to keep all the members up-to-date with new publications, events and announcements which may help them in their work.

Organizations can also conduct forums from the Global Community allowing many different RH professionals to participate in a discussion of a particular focused subject.  This is a valuable way to hear from voices in the field, get input and ideas, learn about what others are doing and make new contacts.  


Basic questions

Once you’ve decided that you do want to start an email discussion list or online community, ask yourself the following questions:
  • Will your group be public (open to anyone) or private (only open to people you invite)?
  • If it is public, do people need the moderator's approval to join?
  • Who can post messages?
    • Only the moderator or group owner. This is really an electronic newsletter. For some examples of electronic newsletters in reproductive health, see the list on Reproductive Health Gateway.
    • Members only.
    • Any person who knows about the email list, including nonmembers. This is an open discussion.
  • Do you want to approve all messages before they are sent out or should they go out immediately without approval?  If your email discussion list or IBP community has more than 25-30 members, you will probably want to approve messages just to eliminate those “I am out of the office…” e-mails.
  • Are you interested in other features like file sharing, photos, member directories and online chat?  Yahoo and MSN groups allow you to create these features for your group, but they can only be accessed online by people who have Yahoo or Hotmail/MSN email addresses. The IBP/ECS Knowledge Gateway allows file sharing, a group calendar, and group contact list regardless of the email system they use.. It also provides a threaded archive of all discussions.  If you only want a group that communicates by email, don’t add these features.
  • Do you want an online archive of the messages? Will the archive be open to anyone? To group members only? To the moderators only?

First steps

Email lists can help build relationships


Promote your email discussion list

List management "dont's"


Inviting people to join

You can often invite people to join an email discussion list by sending them an email. They can then reply to the email or visit the discussion list website to join. Compose a letter of invitation, explaining the purpose of the group, what kinds of emails should be posted, and why you are inviting people to join.  Send it to individuals and to other e-mail discussion groups. Here is an example of an invitation to join an email discussion list called HIFA2015. This invitation is a good example of what to include. Notice that it does several important things:

 


INVITATION TO HIFA2015
Healthcare Information For All by 2015
 
HIFA2015 is a global email discussion group with a focus on the information and learning needs of healthcare providers in developing countries. The main focus is at the local level: households and communities, primary health workers, and health professionals working in district hospital facilities.
 
HIFA2015 is open to anyone with an interest in improving healthcare in developing countries and membership is free. Its goal is linked with the Millennium Development Goals:
 
By 2015, every person worldwide will have access to an informed healthcare provider.
 
Why join HIFA2015?
 
* Be part of a worldwide community dedicated to meet the information and learning needs of healthcare providers - more than 600 members from over 80 countries worldwide
* Learn from others
* Share your experience
* Make new contacts and collaborations
* Let others know about your interests, activities, services, publications
* Find out about funding and training opportunities, useful websites, new publications...
* Collaborate to achieve common goals
 
Please join today by sending an email to HIFA2015-admin@dgroups.org
(or direct to neil.pakenham-walsh@ghi-net.org)
with your name, organization, and a brief description of your professional interests.
 
For further details, see
www.hifa2015.org or contact the moderator: HIFA2015-admin@dgroups.org

To post a message to the group, email HIFA2015@dgroups.org

Website for HIFA2015 email group:
www.dgroups.org/groups/hifa2015


Welcome messages

Be sure to include information on how to subscribe and unsubscribe, how to send a message, how to get help in your welcome message.  Explain the purpose of the group, the intended audience and the range of topics that will be covered.  Below is the “welcome” email message that was sent to people who joined an email list called PDA4HEALTH. In addition to repeating the information that was in the invitation email about the purpose of the list, topics that would be covered, and the sponsoring organization, it also includes detailed instructions on

Good luck with starting your email discussion group or online community! 



Welcome to the pda4health mailing list!

PDA4HEALTH, a forum setup by SATELLIFE, aims to share up-to-date information, knowledge, and experiences on the use of handheld computers for data collection and information dissemination in developing country health settings. Organizations and institutions
engaged in field projects are encouraged to exchange the lessons they have learned, challenges faced, and successes achieved.

PDA4HEALTH will allow easy communication via simple email messages on a broad array of topics related to the use of handheld computers in clinical education and patient monitoring and public health program management. The range of topics will include, but not be limited to, choice of equipment, memory requirements, recharging devices, power issues, selection of relevant content, formatting needs, developing surveys for data collection, database creation, analysis of data, and reporting.  Creative ways to expand applications of the handheld computer will also be explored.

Trained moderators will ensure that appropriate messages are sent to the discussion group to maintain a high quality dialogue.

To post to this list, send your message to:  xxx@xxx.org [all e-mail addresses are only examples]

To unsubscribe from this list, send a message to:   xxx-leave@xxx.org

To subscribe to this list, send a message to:   xxx-join@xxx.org

When subscribing or unsubscribing, the subject and body of the message will be ignored, so it doesn't matter what you put there. When you receive a confirmation message, reply to it to complete your request.

For assistance with problems, contact the pda4health list owner:  xxx-owner@xxx.org

General information about the mailing list is at:   [Web home page for the discussion group]

If you ever want to unsubscribe or change your options (eg, switch to or from digest mode, change your password, etc.), visit your subscription page at:   [subscription page for discussion group]

You must know your password to change your options (including changing the password, itself) or to unsubscribe. It is:
     xxxxxxx

Mailman can remind you of your mailing list passwords once every month. This reminder will also include instructions on how to unsubscribe or change your account options. There is also a button on your options page that will email your current password to you.

You can also make such adjustments via email by sending a message to: pda4health-request@healthnet.org with the word `help' in the subject or body (don't include the quotes), and you will get back a message with instructions.


Email List Glossary


All definitions from Webopedia.

Email list:  An automatic mailing list. When email is addressed to a discussion list, it is automatically broadcast to everyone on the list. The result is similar to a newsgroup or forum, except that the messages are transmitted as email and are therefore available only to individuals on the list.

Moderator: An individual or group of people who have the authority to block messages to a discussion list or newsgroup that are inappropriate or unsolicited.

Read-only: Capable of being displayed, but not modified or deleted

Spam: Electronic junk mail or junk newsgroup postings. Some people define spam even more generally as any unsolicited email.


Resources on email lists 

Updated: 2007/09/24

Disclaimer: The information provided on this web site is not official U.S. Government information and does not represent the views or positions of the U.S. Agency for International Development, the U.S. Government or The Johns Hopkins University.