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Marketing is all about helping people get what they want, and
you use marketing vehicles -- ads, flyers, sales letters,
telemarketing, face-to-face sales presentations, etc. -- to let
your prospects and customers know that they can get what they
want . . . from you.
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With that concept as a foundation, here is a simple formula
to help you create powerful and effective marketing vehicles for
your business.
1.
Headline: Tell Them They Can Get What They Want
People are extremely busy and their lives are hectic. When
they look through their mail, or look through a newspaper, or
listen to a telemarketer or sales presentation, they are looking
and listening for only one thing -- 'What do you have for me?'
If they don't see or hear 'what's in it for them' within 15
seconds, they will respond immediately with, 'Sorry, not
interested!'
They are not going to dig through your sales letter, or your
ad, or your verbal presentation to find out if you have anything
of interest for them. If you don't tell them immediately and
upfront what you have for them, you will have lost them -- in
seconds.
If you are creating an ad, tell them in your headline at the
top of the ad. If you are writing a sales letter, put it in your
headline at the top of your letter. Yes, sales letters should
have a headline just like an ad.
If you are talking to them in-person or on the phone, tell
them upfront what you have for them. You see, even a
face-to-face or phone contact should have a headline too.
It's vital to ensure that what you have for them, and what
they want are both the same. If what you have for them in your
headline isn't what they want, then you've lost before you've
begun. That's why it's so important for you to know exactly what
your prospects and customers want before you begin spending
money on marketing. Test, don't guess.
2.
Sub-Head: Tell Them They Will Have to Act Quickly to Get It
We all procrastinate. We put off taking action even for
things we want for a variety of reasons. We get easily
distracted. If you don't get immediate action from your target
group, there is a good chance they won't come back to your
marketing vehicle later. It will surely get lost or tossed. Out
of sight, out of mind.
It's up to you to help your prospects and customers overcome
their tendency to procrastinate and take immediate action to get
what you are offering. You do that with what is called a Sense
of Urgency. Tell them the offer ends on a particular date,
perhaps in a week or two. Or tell them that there is a limited
supply, or that they will receive a special bonus if they act
now, but they will miss the bonus if they put it off.
Like it or not, you need to use a Sense of Urgency if you
have any hope of overcoming the universal human trait of
procrastination. Start looking more closely at the marketing
vehicles you receive every day, and you'll begin to see that
effective marketing always gives you a reason to act now.
3. Body
Copy: Tell Them the Details of What They Will Get
You got your targets' attention with your headline, by
telling them that you have what they want. Now it's time to tell
them exactly what they will get if they respond to your
marketing offer.
Tell them exactly what is included. Tell them the specific
features of your offer and how they will benefit from them. Tell
them how others have been benefited. Provide them with specific
numbers if appropriate.
Use bold sub-heads and bullets to make it easy for them to
skim to the information that is important to them.
4.
Call to Action: Tell Them What They Must Do to Get It
Don't assume that your prospects and customers will figure
out how to get what you are offering. They won't do your work
for you.
If they have to call to get it, then tell them to call. If
they have to write or drop a post card in the mail, or fax
something to you, then tell them clearly.
The point is to make it as easy as possible for your target
to do what you want them to do. People don't like to do anything
that is going to take work on their part. Make it as easy for
them to respond as possible, or they won't.
5. Postscript:
Tell Them Again What They Can Get, How Quickly They Must Act, and What
They Must Do to Get It
If there is room in the marketing vehicle, such as a sales
letter, it is always a good idea to re-cap your offer in a P.S.
Very often people will skip down to the P.S. right after
reading the headline. By repeating all of the specifics of your
offer there, you stand a much better chance of ensuring that
your prospects will understand your offer.
Tell them what they will get if they respond by the deadline,
and exactly what they must do.
Here's an example:
P.S. Drop the enclosed post card in the mail by Friday, March
30th, to receive your Free Information Packet!
See how easy it is to recap everything in just one short
sentence?
About the Author:
Joe Gracia - Give to Get
Marketing http://www.givetogetmarketing.com
Visit Joe and Maria Gracia's, Give to Get Marketing Web site, to
receive a free Marketing Idea-Kit, plus hundreds of marketing tips and
real-world marketing examples. Discover the simple techniques Joe and
Maria used to generate from $10,000 to $15,000 a month with their first
Web site, on a shoestring budget, in less than 18 months.
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