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Making People Part With Their Money, the Old-Fashioned Way

Category: Copy Writing - email copy Date: 2003-05-13
Neither snow, nor rain, nor heat, nor the rising cost of postage can keep a well-written sales letter from persuading readers to send money directly to its writer or organization. And many of the techniques successful direct mail writers have been using for years work equally well on-line today. Here are ten tried-and-true tips from the snail-mailers.

1. Have a plan.
Writing a sales letter is a lot like writing an ad. And successful advertising starts with clear thinking about what to say -- and to whom. Picture your prospect in your mind -- in terms of age, income, attitudes, and the product she or he uses. Then determine the single most important benefit your product offers. The essence of a good plan is sacrifice -- playing down the lesser benefits to concentrate on the biggest.

2. Start fast.
The first sentence of your letter is the most important. Thats when your prospect decides whether your letter is just an other piece of junk mail or something that will make him say, "This sounds interesting. Id like to know more about it." Involve your reader in your first sentence, or your second sentence may never be read.

3. The early offer gets the worm.
Direct-mail pros work on the coupon first, not the letter. Whats the offer? How should it be stated? What are the terms? The offer is what gets the action. So make it clear. Make it direct. And make it early. Because a good offer can outpull any other technique to get your letter started.

4. Show the benefits
Write about benefits, not features. A feature describes a product; a benefit explains what it does for the reader. Remember that people dont want to buy grass seed. They want to buy a beautiful green lawn.

5. Show some personality.
The tone of your letter should be as important as what you say. Write the way you speak, using the language of the reader, so he perceives the sales pitch is coming from a peer rather than an outsider. By using this approach, you receive empathy from the reader by saying, "Look, Im just like you. I know your problem; Ive been through it; I have a solution." Writing peer to peer -- writing as you would speak to a friend -- is the tone you want to cultivate in every letter you write.

6. Go long.
The amateur letter writer assumes that people will not read long letters. All the research tells us otherwise. The fact is that long letters sell better than short ones. If they make an attractive offer. If they get the readers attention at the top. If they are packed with facts. You are asking your readers to make an investment -- of their time, money, or both. They need to be -- they want to be -- convinced that what youre selling is worth it. And that takes plenty of information. So the more you tell, the more youll sell.

7. Be short.
Research also shows that people wont read long letters that look hard to read, with long, black, solid blocks of text. Better to use short paragraphs that make your letter look more inviting, and easy to get through.

Use simple words and use jargon sparingly. Write in crisp, short, snappy sentences. Even sentence fragments.

When youre writing a sales letter, youre trying to communicate with your readers, not impress them with your grasp of the American language. Remember, youre writing to sell, not impress.

8. Be free.
Give something away. A free trial, free shipping, even free literature you may have printed for another purpose. It has been proven, time and again, that adding something free adds tremendously to the power of the sales letter.

9. Dont let em get away.
Follow the advice in the previous eight tips and youll find yourself writing letters that will capture the interest of your readers. But you cant just let them nod in agreement, and do nothing. After all, its human nature for most people to procrastinate. You cant let them off the hook. The successful letter writer tackles inertia and creates a reason for the prospect to act -- and to act now. Ask her to tear off a reply card, check a preference, paste a sticker on the phone or calendar, or answer a short quiz. There are probably dozens of other simple devices you can think of. A reader who starts to do something with your mailing is a good bet to end up being a reader who buys something.

10. P.S. Dont forget a postscript.
A postscript is an opportunity to restate the offer, to create a sense of urgency with a deadline, to offer a special premium or to remind the reader of an important detail. And maybe the best reason for using a P.S. is that so many professionals have proven that it works.

About the author.

Walter is an award-winning advertising copywriter who writes, edits and publishes "Words @ Work", a FREE bimonthly newsletter of advice and information about writing that works. Subscribe by visiting walterburek.com or via e-mail:

burekwrites@netscape.net
http://www.walterburek.com/
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 • Affiliate Marketing
 • Affiliate Marketing - Basics
 • Affiliate Marketing - Development
 • Affiliate Marketing - Setting Up
 • Archive catalogue
 • Autoresponders
 • Banner Advertising
 • Business Development
 • Checklists
 • Competitors
 • Copy Writing
 • Copy Writing - ad copy
 • Copy Writing - email copy
 • Copy Writing - sales copy
 • Customer Service
 • Database Marketing
 • Direct Mail
 • Domain Names
 • E-books
 • E-commerce
 • E-mail Marketing
 • E-zines
 • E-zines: Advertising
 • E-zines: Promotion
 • E-zines: Subscribers
 • E-zines: Writing
 • Entrepreneurship
 • Free Services
 • Home Based Business
 • Home Based Business - Finance
 • Home Based Business - Getting Started
 • Home Based Business - is it for YOU?
 • Home Based Business - Marketing
 • Internet Tips
 • Market Research
 • Marketing
 • Marketing Strategy
 • Net Business Start ups
 • Networking(MLM)
 • Newsletters/Newsgroups
 • Online Payments
 • Online Promotion
 • PC KNOW HOW
 • Personal Development For Marketeers
 • PR/Publicity and Media
 • Sales Tips
 • Search Engines
 • Search Engines - Keywords
 • Search engines - Optimisation
 • Selling Techniques
 • Surveys and Statistics
 • Telesales
 • Top 10 Tips
 • Traffic and Tracking
 • Viral Marketing
 • Website Design and Development
 • ZeLatest