| Article Check |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Marketing Direct > Why You Should Use Direct Mail |
|
Article Check - Why You Should Use Direct Mail
Take the Test: Do Your Marketing Materials Really Grab Attention? your envelope is to have the benefits of your product or service on the envelope. If you are mailing to a specified audience, put some copy on the outside of the envelope that promises a benefit that you know they’re interested in.Today’s constant bombardment of marketing messages means your materials must grab your prospects attention in the first few seconds, or your efforts are wasted.How do you know if your marketing materials will prompt prospects to keep reading? Take this simple test: hold each of your marketing pieces at arm’s length and answer the following questions:1. Got white space? If your materials look crowded, add white space by increasing the sides, top or bottom margins. Try adding extra blank spaces between each section so the information is more readable. You should also add headlines to break up the text. Consider editing your copy and eliminating wasteful graphics to gain even more space.Too m For example, if you are sending a letter about a tennis product to tennis enthusiasts, then the outside of the envelope could say, “Inside: A simple process that will improve your tennis game by 20% and move you from a B to an A player in 3 easy steps, guaranteed!” Direct mail is your friend. It gives you a way to communicate directly and expansively with your best target prospects. It will take you into homes on any day of the week. You can make every case necessary when you send direct mail to your prospects. You can say things you wouldn’t have time to say in a phone call. A sales letter can get you by defensive secretaries. It can help you get into the prospects mind. You can’t do that as well with display advertising or email marketing. You have many marketing techniques available to you. Internet and email marketing are very powerful. But, mail delivered b America's Busiest Copywriter Reveals His Secrets for High-Impact Business (and Product) Names With the explosion of the Internet coupled with the rising cost of postage many businesses simply no longer use direct mail as part of their marketing. If you’re just marketing online you are missing a wealth of opportunities off-line.This may seem obvious to the veteran marketer, but you’d be surprised at the number of business owners who disregard the name of their business as a marketing tool. A business name that is short, easy to remember, easy to spell, descriptive of your business, and capable of drawing attention, will always win out over an otherwise boring, generic name. In fact, the name of your business could easily be worth millions to you, or it could easily mean certain failure.There really are no rules regarding business names when it comes to marketing. It’s merely a matter of deciding what you want your name to accomplish. Here are some general guidelines that will help you decide on a name that works best for you, y Direct mail gives you the opportunity to talk directly to hundreds, thousands, and even millions of potential customers. A letter is like a dialogue between you and your prospective customer. It is a communication, one person talking to another. A letter is an opportunity to make the most compelling case on how your product or service will benefit the recipient. With direct mail you have an advantage over almost every other marketing or advertising form. No one will know the size of your staff or the capital of your company; with direct mail you are playing on a level field. The better you are at utilizing direct mail, the more successful your business will be. When you write your letter it has to be about the person you’re sending it to, the recipient, and his or her interests, not about you and your interests. It needs to focus on the benefits and results the recipient will receive from using your product or service and not about the features. Always keep in mind when you’re writing a letter that you’re not selling an abstract product or service. You’re selling the dynamic change that a product or service makes in someone’s life. You need to develop a desire on the part of the recipient to want the benefit that your product or service offers them. The easiest way to get ready to write a great sales letter is to sit down with someone you are comfortable with and have a conversation with them. Tell them all the different ways your product or service can benefit their lives. Describe the benefits in terms of dollar savings and qualitative improvement in their life. Tell stories about other people and how their lives were improved by using your products or services. Talk about the rapid dramatic and tangible changes that will occur in a prospects life once he or she is using your product or service. Tell the other person about the improvements and the savings they’ll see in time, money, or emotion. Help them see and think about what those improvements will be. Then, show them how they can use your product or service without taking any risk. It’s always a good idea to rehearse what you want to say before you actually write it. Sit down with a friend or family member, and tell them all the good things about your product or service. Doing this, will get you ready to put the same thoughts on paper. People need, want, and appreciate guidance. Your letter needs to tell them what to do, when to do it, and how to do it. There are other effective things you can add to a direct-mail presentation. For example, you could enclose a product catalog, a brochure, or a summary of all the benefits that the recipient will receive from you product or service. Performance-based testimonials from your customers can be a potent addition to your letter. Make sure your testimonials really quantify the benefit. For example, don’t have the testimonial say, “ The product was really great. I highly recommend it.” Instead, it should say, “This product, saved me $100 a month on my heating bill, and now my house is perfectly climate-controlled.” General and vague testimonials are worthless in selling. In addition, it’s good to include what’s called a “lift note.” A lift note is a separate little note from the writer, or from some other influential person referred to in the letter or in the accompanying sales material, that restates a key point of your offer in a very simple but motivating way. There should also be a personal “P.S.” at the end of each of your sales letters. The P.S. should summarize your offer and underscore one more benefit that was not mentioned in the letter. Many people have a tendency to read letters backwards. A strong “P.S.” will get the reader motivated to go back and read the letter completely. Studies show that next to the headline and the offer the “P.S.” is the part of the letter that is the read the most. Sometimes that’s all people remember about the letter. Always include a “P.S.” The envelope is a very important part of the direct mail package. It can be very businesslike, with just a name, address, city, state; or it can be more personal with a personalized-looking message on the outside envelope. Another effective way to use your envelope is to have the benefits of your product or service on the envelope. If you are mailing to a specified audience, put some copy on the outside of the envelope that promises a benefit that you know they’re interested in. For example, if you are sending a letter about a tennis product to tennis enthusiasts, then the outside of the envelope could say, “Inside: A simple process that will improve your tennis game by 20% and move you from a B to an A player in 3 easy steps, guaranteed!” Direct mail is your friend. It gives you a way to communicate directly and expansively with your best target prospects. It will take you into homes on any day of the week. You can make every case necessary when you send direct mail to your prospects. You can say things you wouldn’t have time to say in a phone call. A sales letter can get you by defensive secretaries. It can help you get into the prospects mind. You can’t do that as well with display advertising or email marketing. You have many marketing techniques available to you. Internet and email marketing are very powerful. But, mail delivered b The Six Figure Job Search cipient will receive from using your product or service and not about the features.Before we start discussing how to search for a six figure salary job, let's set a goal. The goal I suggest is to double your income every five years. That may sound like a stretch. Well it is… but it is a doable stretch goal.I set this goal for myself twenty years ago when I graduated from a small public college. I grew up an average kid from Philadelphia. I had average grades in high school and college. And I never went to graduate school. At the time I graduated from college I had never been west of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Twenty years later I can tell you that I have lived and worked on three different continents and I'm vice president of a large publicly traded company.What made the difference for me were tw Always keep in mind when you’re writing a letter that you’re not selling an abstract product or service. You’re selling the dynamic change that a product or service makes in someone’s life. You need to develop a desire on the part of the recipient to want the benefit that your product or service offers them. The easiest way to get ready to write a great sales letter is to sit down with someone you are comfortable with and have a conversation with them. Tell them all the different ways your product or service can benefit their lives. Describe the benefits in terms of dollar savings and qualitative improvement in their life. Tell stories about other people and how their lives were improved by using your products or services. Talk about the rapid dramatic and tangible changes that will occur in a prospects life once he or she is using your product or service. Tell the other person about the improvements and the savings they’ll see in time, money, or emotion. Help them see and think about what those improvements will be. Then, show them how they can use your product or service without taking any risk. It’s always a good idea to rehearse what you want to say before you actually write it. Sit down with a friend or family member, and tell them all the good things about your product or service. Doing this, will get you ready to put the same thoughts on paper. People need, want, and appreciate guidance. Your letter needs to tell them what to do, when to do it, and how to do it. There are other effective things you can add to a direct-mail presentation. For example, you could enclose a product catalog, a brochure, or a summary of all the benefits that the recipient will receive from you product or service. Performance-based testimonials from your customers can be a potent addition to your letter. Make sure your testimonials really quantify the benefit. For example, don’t have the testimonial say, “ The product was really great. I highly recommend it.” Instead, it should say, “This product, saved me $100 a month on my heating bill, and now my house is perfectly climate-controlled.” General and vague testimonials are worthless in selling. In addition, it’s good to include what’s called a “lift note.” A lift note is a separate little note from the writer, or from some other influential person referred to in the letter or in the accompanying sales material, that restates a key point of your offer in a very simple but motivating way. There should also be a personal “P.S.” at the end of each of your sales letters. The P.S. should summarize your offer and underscore one more benefit that was not mentioned in the letter. Many people have a tendency to read letters backwards. A strong “P.S.” will get the reader motivated to go back and read the letter completely. Studies show that next to the headline and the offer the “P.S.” is the part of the letter that is the read the most. Sometimes that’s all people remember about the letter. Always include a “P.S.” The envelope is a very important part of the direct mail package. It can be very businesslike, with just a name, address, city, state; or it can be more personal with a personalized-looking message on the outside envelope. Another effective way to use your envelope is to have the benefits of your product or service on the envelope. If you are mailing to a specified audience, put some copy on the outside of the envelope that promises a benefit that you know they’re interested in. For example, if you are sending a letter about a tennis product to tennis enthusiasts, then the outside of the envelope could say, “Inside: A simple process that will improve your tennis game by 20% and move you from a B to an A player in 3 easy steps, guaranteed!” Direct mail is your friend. It gives you a way to communicate directly and expansively with your best target prospects. It will take you into homes on any day of the week. You can make every case necessary when you send direct mail to your prospects. You can say things you wouldn’t have time to say in a phone call. A sales letter can get you by defensive secretaries. It can help you get into the prospects mind. You can’t do that as well with display advertising or email marketing. You have many marketing techniques available to you. Internet and email marketing are very powerful. But, mail delivered b How to Turn Strangers Into Lovers be.Finding and keeping great clients is like dating, courtship and falling in love. You can’t rush it, and you can’t force trust or intimacy for the relationship to work. If your company’s approach has amounted to the equivalent of unsuccessful blind dates and kissing frogs, read on!Whether a new flame or new buyer, there are five predictable phases of involvement: Stranger, Acquaintance, Friend, Lover, and Loyal Partner. As in dating, the laws of attraction, permission, trust, and commitment rule when it comes to successfully finding and keeping clients. Just as a cheesy pick-up line won’t work on the dating scene, driving revenue takes thoughtfulness, strategy and mutual consent.These rules apply in any buyer-selle Then, show them how they can use your product or service without taking any risk. It’s always a good idea to rehearse what you want to say before you actually write it. Sit down with a friend or family member, and tell them all the good things about your product or service. Doing this, will get you ready to put the same thoughts on paper. People need, want, and appreciate guidance. Your letter needs to tell them what to do, when to do it, and how to do it. There are other effective things you can add to a direct-mail presentation. For example, you could enclose a product catalog, a brochure, or a summary of all the benefits that the recipient will receive from you product or service. Performance-based testimonials from your customers can be a potent addition to your letter. Make sure your testimonials really quantify the benefit. For example, don’t have the testimonial say, “ The product was really great. I highly recommend it.” Instead, it should say, “This product, saved me $100 a month on my heating bill, and now my house is perfectly climate-controlled.” General and vague testimonials are worthless in selling. In addition, it’s good to include what’s called a “lift note.” A lift note is a separate little note from the writer, or from some other influential person referred to in the letter or in the accompanying sales material, that restates a key point of your offer in a very simple but motivating way. There should also be a personal “P.S.” at the end of each of your sales letters. The P.S. should summarize your offer and underscore one more benefit that was not mentioned in the letter. Many people have a tendency to read letters backwards. A strong “P.S.” will get the reader motivated to go back and read the letter completely. Studies show that next to the headline and the offer the “P.S.” is the part of the letter that is the read the most. Sometimes that’s all people remember about the letter. Always include a “P.S.” The envelope is a very important part of the direct mail package. It can be very businesslike, with just a name, address, city, state; or it can be more personal with a personalized-looking message on the outside envelope. Another effective way to use your envelope is to have the benefits of your product or service on the envelope. If you are mailing to a specified audience, put some copy on the outside of the envelope that promises a benefit that you know they’re interested in. For example, if you are sending a letter about a tennis product to tennis enthusiasts, then the outside of the envelope could say, “Inside: A simple process that will improve your tennis game by 20% and move you from a B to an A player in 3 easy steps, guaranteed!” Direct mail is your friend. It gives you a way to communicate directly and expansively with your best target prospects. It will take you into homes on any day of the week. You can make every case necessary when you send direct mail to your prospects. You can say things you wouldn’t have time to say in a phone call. A sales letter can get you by defensive secretaries. It can help you get into the prospects mind. You can’t do that as well with display advertising or email marketing. You have many marketing techniques available to you. Internet and email marketing are very powerful. But, mail delivered b Advergaming: Marketing's New Advertising Miracle Cure? worthless in selling.Any basic marketing class begins by introducing its students to the “Four Ps of Marketing”--Product, Place, Price, Promotion. Most business gurus will tell you that of these four, Product is the most important. Your product must have a unique value to the consumer or it won’t sell. Today, with virtual instant communication, it could be argued that PROMOTION is fast becoming Product’s equal when discussing marketing principles. If you promote your product in such a way as to capture the attention and hard-earned dollars of the prized consumer before any competitor has the chance, you’ve won the biggest battle in the marketing war.And marketing IS a war. Companies spend millions of dollars every year on marketing studies a In addition, it’s good to include what’s called a “lift note.” A lift note is a separate little note from the writer, or from some other influential person referred to in the letter or in the accompanying sales material, that restates a key point of your offer in a very simple but motivating way. There should also be a personal “P.S.” at the end of each of your sales letters. The P.S. should summarize your offer and underscore one more benefit that was not mentioned in the letter. Many people have a tendency to read letters backwards. A strong “P.S.” will get the reader motivated to go back and read the letter completely. Studies show that next to the headline and the offer the “P.S.” is the part of the letter that is the read the most. Sometimes that’s all people remember about the letter. Always include a “P.S.” The envelope is a very important part of the direct mail package. It can be very businesslike, with just a name, address, city, state; or it can be more personal with a personalized-looking message on the outside envelope. Another effective way to use your envelope is to have the benefits of your product or service on the envelope. If you are mailing to a specified audience, put some copy on the outside of the envelope that promises a benefit that you know they’re interested in. For example, if you are sending a letter about a tennis product to tennis enthusiasts, then the outside of the envelope could say, “Inside: A simple process that will improve your tennis game by 20% and move you from a B to an A player in 3 easy steps, guaranteed!” Direct mail is your friend. It gives you a way to communicate directly and expansively with your best target prospects. It will take you into homes on any day of the week. You can make every case necessary when you send direct mail to your prospects. You can say things you wouldn’t have time to say in a phone call. A sales letter can get you by defensive secretaries. It can help you get into the prospects mind. You can’t do that as well with display advertising or email marketing. You have many marketing techniques available to you. Internet and email marketing are very powerful. But, mail delivered b Managing People - No More Mr Tough Guy your envelope is to have the benefits of your product or service on the envelope. If you are mailing to a specified audience, put some copy on the outside of the envelope that promises a benefit that you know they’re interested in.I believe the media and our culture sends the wrong messages about how to manage people and this makes it difficult for Business Owners and Managers.We've all heard the old clich? "nice guys don't finish first" and that has a huge impact on how managers deal with their people. We're led to believe that successful managers are tough, courageous "no nonsense" type of people. And if you're weak or soft with your people, then you'll get walked on and taken advantage of.A manager will often look at "successful" managers in business or sport to try and understand what makes them successful. The media often portrays these people as tough guys who drive their people by the force of their personality, shouts and For example, if you are sending a letter about a tennis product to tennis enthusiasts, then the outside of the envelope could say, “Inside: A simple process that will improve your tennis game by 20% and move you from a B to an A player in 3 easy steps, guaranteed!” Direct mail is your friend. It gives you a way to communicate directly and expansively with your best target prospects. It will take you into homes on any day of the week. You can make every case necessary when you send direct mail to your prospects. You can say things you wouldn’t have time to say in a phone call. A sales letter can get you by defensive secretaries. It can help you get into the prospects mind. You can’t do that as well with display advertising or email marketing. You have many marketing techniques available to you. Internet and email marketing are very powerful. But, mail delivered by a U.S Postal Service carrier is still one of the best and most effective ways to personalize your message and get it out to your prospective audience. Copyright©2006 by Joe Love and JLM & Associates, Inc. All rights reserved worldwide.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Checklist and Tips for Selling a Business Hearing That Entrepreneurial Voice? In B2B Direct Mail Lead Generation, Sell Your Offer, Not Your Offering
|