Authors: David Lindahl,Jonathan Rozek
Tags: #Business & Economics, #Entrepreneurship
Uh huh. And if you’re such an incredible genius and rich too, then why do you need to
be sel ing me your kit? Why aren’t you in the air on your private jet heading for your
private island retreat?
It’s just another product of a Me! Me! Buy My Stuff! mentality. I’l talk more about
headlines a little later, but the key thing to remember right now is that, regardless of how
much you want customers to buy, the most effective sales material starts out with talking
about them—their needs, their wants, and their desires. You’l get to the product
information soon enough.
MISTAKE NUMBER FIVE: INEFFECTIVE MARKETERS DO NOT
INCLUDE A CALL TO ACTION AND A DEADLINE
Without both of those elements your sales material is nothing more than a chatty letter.
Let’s say you have done a great job explaining your product and convincing them to buy.
You know how it is—we’ve al got a hundred things on our minds with distractions
everywhere. If you just talk about your stuff and never give them a reason to act now,
you’l lose a significant slice of buyers.
It’s not that they don’t like you. It’s that they’l put your information aside and get to it
sometime in the future. A smart marketer by the name of Brian Tracy says that lots of
people love to go to the same vacation destination—
Someday
Isle. That’s because
most of their important dreams usual y begin with, “Someday I’l lose weight,” or
“Someday I’l start that little business I’ve been dreaming about.”
Your job is to get them to take action now, even if that action is to contact you with
questions. This leads us to the next mistake.
MISTAKE NUMBER SIX: INEFFECTIVE MARKETERS FURTHER
ERODE TRUST BY CREATING FAKE DEADLINES
Most customers can see right through this ploy. It goes like this: “And quantities are
limited, so you must order right now! In fact, there are only
17 kits left! So
order yours today!”
Maybe that line is believable by the most innocent member of one of those lost tribes
that’s never had any contact with civilization, but no one else believes it. Let’s see
—you’re sel ing an information product, which means you’re either sel ing printed reports
or electrons in the form of downloadable reports. And you’re running low on them? Give
me a break.
Another variation on this ploy is: “My accountant thinks I’m nuts! He says ‘Boss, you’re
giving away the store here! We’re losing money on every order at that crazy price you’ve
set! I can only al ow you to sel another seven kits at that price!”’
Right. So the boss is not only sel ing kits at a loss, but he’s taking orders from his
accountant/employee? Do you rol your eyes the way I do when someone puts this stuff
out there?
Here’s a great way to offer an info product with a believable reason to take action
now: “I’m not going to do that fake stuff of tel ing you there are only 17 copies left of my
Widget Guide. It’s a downloadable product, after al ! Only a liar would claim that he
couldn’t make more of them. Instead, I’l simply say this: The sooner you have my guide,
the sooner your life wil become easier from al the time-saving and frustration-saving
techniques I have in my guide. . . .″That kind of statement only adds to your reputation
and integrity.
MISTAKE NUMBER SEVEN: INEFFECTIVE MARKETERS
SPEAK TO AUDIENCES, NOT TO INDIVIDUALS
Once you are aware of this one, I guarantee that you’l see it happening everywhere.
Even some otherwise very sophisticated marketers violate this subtle but important rule.
The tip-off to this rule violation is simple: The marketer uses words like: Al of you,
some of you, folks, you people, many of you, and so on. The real y smart marketer
speaks to one person.
What’s the big deal? If people feel like they’re just one of a crowd, they do not engage
in the same way they wil if they feel like you’re talking to them one-on-one. It’s just too
easy to conclude,
″Oh,
he’s talking to a crowd but my situation’s unique and
different.″
We know how tough that attitude is to overcome, so why make the situation worse?
It’s the difference between sitting in an audience with one of those personal
development guys up on stage talking about attitude, versus talking with the same guy on
the phone, just the two of you. In the audience you might benefit from his speech, but on
the phone you’l pay attention to the conversation.
And that’s the key—one is a speech and one is a conversation.
″But
how can you
have a conversation in
print?″
you wonder. We’re having one right now! I don’t know you
personal y but throughout this book I’ve worked to make it seem like we’re sitting in a
coffee shop talking about your successful second income.
Mark my words—If you make a little card and carry around these audience tip-offs,
you’l hear them used al the time. Once you are sensitized to it, you’l automatical y begin
to talk more directly to individuals in print and also when you’re in a group.
I suspect that you agree that the vast majority of promotions include one and usual y
several of these blunders. That’s real y good news because, just by avoiding them, you
can stand head-and-shoulders above any competition in your target market.
Your customers most likely wil not even realize why they like your stuff much more
—they’l just know that you come across as honest, believable, and one of them. It
doesn’t get much better than that.
THE EIGHT
MONEY QUESTIONS
: ANSWER THESE AND YOUR
PRODUCT WILL SELL
People think in images and questions. We’re constantly playing images in our minds of
situations that happened to us in the past, or worse—things we’re worried may happen
in the future. Mixed in with al those images are many questions like: How can I possibly
get al my work done tomorrow? When is this economy going to improve? I
wonder if
she likes me or does she smile like that at everyone?
In the process of buying anything we tend to ask certain questions each time. We may
not actual y say the words in our heads, but we mental y size up each product in just the
same way that we size up a new acquaintance by intuitively sensing to ourselves the
question,
″Do
I like this
person?″
Therefore, whether you’re writing a long sales letter or a short landing page, you
should keep the fol owing questions in mind. They not only need answering, but by
answering them in the correct order you create a logical flow to your argument.
Money Question One: “Why Should I Stop and Listen to You?”
As we’ve discussed, most people lead pretty busy, distracted lives. We sort our postal
mail over the trash can, not even bothering to open the obvious junk mail. We click-to-
oblivion the e-mails that bleat variations of Open up now! and Only 4 hours Left to Claim
Your Copy!
Almost like scanning a crowd of faces for someone we know, we make split-second
judgments about what’s worth reading and what’s not. You have maybe a half-second or
perhaps even one whole second to make your case. There are only two ways to do it
effectively: First it’s the “from” address in an e-mail or the return address on a physical
envelope. It tel s the reader whether the message is from his fiancée or a fake-fil ed
marketer, from his boss or a bogus salesperson. We’l talk more about that in the next