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A_Stupid_Question
| A Stupid Question.
This is a stupid question but it has to be asked.
Does your sales letter create as many sales as you would like.
What proportion of them respond to your advert? What is just as
important, how many of those that responded actually purchased
your product?
How can you improve the response rate? How many new email
addresses did you capture? Do you have an 'opt in' strategy so
that you can mail them later with more offers without being
accused of spamming?
Let us look at the sales letter first. The headline. Does it
stand out? Does it grab your attention? Does it shout, "READ ME,
READ ME, READ ME".
On the other hand: Does it give a tantalising hint at something
interesting inside. Something of real benefit to the reader.
Does it ask a question that can only be answered by reading the
content of the letter?
The letter itself. Is it speaking to a group of people? Or is it
a one to one conversation? How many times does it say 'You'
compared with the number of times it says 'Me, We or I'.
Your readers are not interested in you or what a marvellous
gadget you are offering. No, they are only interested in what it
can do for them. How much better off they will be if they invest
their hard earned cash in your enterprise.
Will it help them to become rich, a better person, happier or
better looking, Will it make them more attractive to the
opposite sex?
Convince them of just one of these, or similar things and the
price will not matter.
It all boils down to "What's in it for me."
The old adage: "Sell the sizzle, not the steak" is as relevant
now as it was in the old days of door knocking.
Let's go back to the original sales letter. How good was it in
the first instance? Were you happy with the initial response? if
so, what went wrong? Has it become stale. Would a makeover put
it right? Perhaps it just needs a new headline.
If the click through rate is good, it would appear that the
headline is doing it's job. Should the ratio of purchases to
clicks-through be poor I would suggest that the text of the
letter is not up to scratch.
The problem may not be in the letter, or the headline. It could
be that you are not aiming your advertising at the right people.
Whatever you are selling, a very large percentage of the
population will not be interested in it. You must find those who
are the most interested in your particular product.
You would not think of advertising fishing rods in a boxing
magazine.
It is amazing how many things are aimed at e-zines and other
media that have little or no relevance to the product.
Let us assume that we are advertising in a selection of ezines.
How do we know which ones to use? The surest way is to sort out
some likely ones and subscribe to them. Ask for some back
issues. Get a feel for the type of readership. Would they be
likely to be interested in your product? Or have you another
product that would interest them? I have had some of my best
product ideas from reading an ezine that had no relevance to
what I was selling at the time.
I generally try the cheapest adds first, if I am sure that the
readership is right for my product and the cheap ad' pulls even
a few sales, I then put a similar ad in the best position in the
ezine, knowing that if the small ad' works, the bigger ad will
surely make a good profit.
Should the cheap ad' not work, don't give up yet. You can
generally get a good idea of what is working by studying the
other ad's in the ezine, especially those that appear week after
week in more than one ezine. Type out a similar ad' but for your
product and see how it goes.
Copy other people's methods but don't copy their adverts. As
soon as someone has written something, it immediately becomes
their copy write and you would need their permission to
reproduce it. (The main exception is if you paid that person to
write it for you.) In that case it is best to decide who is the
owner of the copy write before you start.
Don't give up. If you have faith in what you are selling, you
must find the best methods of advertising it.
Then it is up to you to write the best advert that you can.
Always remembering that it is the headline that must capture the
reader's attention. Without a good headline, the best advert in
the world will be overlooked and just a waste of space, time and
money.
I hope I have given you something to think about. In this
business your adverts are your shop window. The aim is to get
their attention and invite them to come in and take a closer
look. I wish you all the best in your business ventures,
remember, You are a very important member of the community.
Without the small businesses, the world's economy would collapse
over-night.
By for now. Bob.....Robjfar
980. word count.
About the author:
Robert earns his crust by targeting the thousands of newcomers
to internet trading. He aims to cut their learning curve to
enable them to start earning money from the word go. He learned
the hard way. You can learn the easy way. Checkout his website.
It's not posh. It's not perfect, but it is effective.
http://www.learn-and-earn-now.co.uk/
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