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Write
On The Money: The Ten Commandments (Plus Five) Of Profitable Sales
Letter Writing
According
to the Direct Marketing Association, in 2003 U.S. direct mail marketing
efforts produced more than $689 billion in sales. For those organizations
who know how to use it direct mail always has been and always will
be a core component of their overall marketing strategy.
Several
key factors are critical to your direct mail marketing success.
One important factor is the letter. In many cases, particularly
with small to mid-size companies, the sales letter may be the entire
marketing package. But given the right list and the right offer,
a skillfully-crafted sales letter can be all you need to turn a
substantial profit -- or, pull in a large number of high-quality
leads.
With
that fact in mind I offer you: Nicastro's Ten Commandments (Plus
Five) of Highly Profitable Sales Letter Writing.
I.
Thou Shalt Always Focus On The Wants, Needs, Hopes, Dreams And Desires
of the People To Whom You Are Writing. Always write with a "you"
focus. Put -- and keep -- yourself in the prospect's shoes when
writing your letter. Because, when your prospect looks at your letter
his or her mind is tuned in to only one station -- WIIFM. What's
in it for ME! So make sure your letters play the same refrain over
and over again -- you, you, you.
II.
Thou Shalt Always Write To Someone Specific. An aunt, uncle, brother,
sister, cousin, friend -- anyone. As long as it's a living, breathing
person. This mind-set will make your writing more personable, friendly,
genuine; important traits that every salesperson must have. In person
and on paper.
As you write, keep in mind the words of the great copywriter Malcolm
Decker, "The Letter itself is the pen-and-ink embodiment of
the salesperson who is speaking personally and directly to the prospect
on a one-to-one basis."
III.
Thou Shalt Never Forget That Benefits Are The Reason Why People
Buy. What your product or service does is a feature. What it does
for me -- Mr. or Ms. Prospect -- is a benefit. Give your readers
benefits, benefits, benefits!
As my
good friend and top-flight wordsmith Barry Freed likes to say, "Keep
piling on the benefits till they can't stand it anymore. They have
to get out the checkbook. They have to pick up the phone. They have
to get in their car and drive to your place of business."
IV.
Thou Shalt Grab The Attention Of Your Reader With Your Very First
Line. 1-2-3-4. You have exactly that long -- 4 seconds -- to grab
the attention of your reader so your opening line better be good.
Because it's the most important line in your entire letter.
The
objective of your first sentence is to get your prospect to read
the second sentence. The second sentence must get him or her to
read the third. And so on. Every word, every sentence of your letter
is important-- and must advance the sale.
V.
Thou Shalt Provide The Reader With Relevant And Specific Information.
You've got great service? What is it -- specifically -- that makes
your service so great? And why should I care?
You
make a "total quality" product? What specifically do you
mean by "total quality?" Do you mean the dang thing never
breaks down and you have third party maintenance records to prove
it? Then tell me. That's relevant. That's specific and verifiable.
That's a benefit! And that's why I buy.
World-class
motivational speaker Zig Ziglar likes to ask his audience: "What
would you rather be, a wandering generality or a meaningful specific."
Fill your letter with meaningful specifics and you're more apt fill
your coffers with cash.
VI.
Thou Shalt Write To Sell Because That's All That Matters. Write
in a conversational, working person's, sitting-down-talking-to-someone-you-know-face-to-face
style. Forget about always writing in complete sentences. You don't
always talk in complete sentences do you?
And
it's OK to start sentences with "and" or "but".
Remember, you're trying to generate a lead or advance or close a
sale, not impress your high school English teacher. Not a one of
your prospects is getting paid to read your letter.
VII.
Thou Shalt Stop And Ask The Following Question Several Times While
Writing Your Sales Letter. "If someone were sitting in front
of me . . . trying to sell me what I'm trying to sell them . . .
and speaking the words I'm writing . . . would I be reaching for
my checkbook or the phone?"
VIII.
Thou Shalt Use Active, Action-Oriented Language. Don't write, "When
we receive your check your order will be shipped right away."
Instead write, "When your check comes in we'll ship your order
that very same day." Active, action-oriented language is more
motivating, involving and persuasive.
IX.
Thou Shalt Write As Much Copy As It Takes To Get The Job Done. There
is no such thing as copy that is too long. There is only copy that
is too boring, too uninteresting, too uninvolving, too me-me-me-we-we-we-product-product-product-oriented.
Interested people will read everything that's interesting about
an interesting offer.
In Denny
Hatch's great book, Million Dollar Mailings, the average letter
length for consumer mailings was 3.3 pages. For business mailings,
2.1 pages. And there have been many highly successful sales letters
that were 8 pages and longer.
X.
Thou Shalt Give Your Letter Visual Variety and Eye Appeal. Pay attention
to how your letter looks. For example, vary the length of your paragraphs
and break up long blocks of copy. Six lines are usually the maximum
for any one paragraph.
Also,
when you speak you create variety through volume, tone, inflection
and gestures. When you write you do this by underlining, italicizing,
CAPITALIZING and making bold. Be careful though not to overuse emphasis
devices. Because when you emphasize everything, you emphasize nothing.
XI.
Thou Shalt Never End Any Page Except The Last Page In A Complete
Sentence. The human mind seeks completion. If a page ends in mid-sentence
the natural tendency is to go to the next page to complete the sentence.
And the more interesting, dramatic or intriguing you make your copy
leading up to that point the better the odds are that your reader
will keep reading.
XII.
Thou Shalt Use A Comma In Your Salutation, Indent Your Paragraphs
And Avoid Like The Plague Long Drawn Out Sentences. You should strive
to give your letter a personal look and "feel." And when
you were a little boy or girl writing home from summer camp you
always used a comma and indented your paragraphs didn't you? So
do the same with your sales letter. Plus, indenting your paragraphs
will make your letter easier and more inviting to read.
Never,
never, never justify or "block" your text! It's boring
and hard to read. And avoid long, drawn out sentences. Remember,
you want your letter to be easy to read. Long, drawn out sentences,
in addition to being hard to read, can be confusing -- a real "deal-killer"
in any sales situation.
XIII.
Thou Shalt Not Be Cute Or Clever.. When was the last time you closed
a sale by being cute or clever? Here's a suggestion: When you're
finished with your letter show it to a friend or colleague. If their
reaction is, "Boy, this is really clever. You know, you're
a good writer." tear it up and throw it away. But if their
reaction is, "Boy, this sounds like a really great product.
How can I get one?" then, you're on the right track.
XIV.
Thou Shalt Tell The Reader Exactly What You Want Him or Her To Do.
Don't assume anything. As salespeople we all know the consequences
of doing that. If what you want is for the prospect to pick up the
phone and call then say so. Here's an example: "So why don't
you pick up the phone right now and give me a call at 800-555-1212?
Go ahead and do it now while you still have this letter in your
hands."
XV.
Thou Shalt Always Include A P.S. Research shows that the P.S. is
one of the first things people look at. Restating a key benefit
or guarantee here can pull your reader into the body copy of your
letter.
The
great copywriter Herschell Gordon Lewis tells the story in one of
his books about a test mailing of fund-raising letters by St. Jude
hospital. The letters were identical except for the fact that one
included a P.S. and the other did not. The letter with a P.S. pulled
a 19% greater response. The moral of the story? It pays to use a
P.S.
These
are but a few of the many commandments followed by all top-flight
copywriters. Your consistent adherence to them can substantially
increase the profitability of your direct mail marketing efforts.
Ernest
Nicastro, a direct marketing consultant, copywriter and lead-generation
specialist, heads up Positive Response, an award-winning marketing
firm specializing in B-to-B marketing and lead-generation. For your
FREE copy of the Positive Response Special Report, 77 Sure-Fire
Marketing Tips Guaranteed To Boost Results, email Ernest (subject
line Tips) at ENicastro@positiveresponse.com
Or, contact him by phone at 614.747.2256. For more information visit
http://www.positiveresponse.com |