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Are You Making This Mistake Trying to Sell Online?

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Look through any cookbook, or take a peek at your spouse's cookbook.  

Find your favorite cake, and look at the recipe.  Look at the ingredient list.  

If you bought the best ingredients, could you bake your favorite cake?

No, you would have to follow  a recipe -measuring carefully since you are baking.

Writing an effective sales letter is a lot like baking.  You need to follow a recipe.  

Yet, most advice in this area consists of: concentrate on grammar, sentence length and punctuation.  Buy fine ingredients.  

Doesn't work for recipes & doesn't work for marketing communications.

Tom Sant is marvelously different in focusing our attention on selecting 'recipes before ingredients' in his The Language of Success.

"Over the years, I've come to believe that the worst mistakes in business communication have nothing to do with grammar or spelling or sentence complexity."

You can have masterful control over sentence construction and yet fail to communicate.  

"Instead, [mistakes] stem from using the wrong structural pattern, one that is not capable of achieving our purpose."

If we don't follow the correct recipe or format, we will obtain a poor result. This is critical to avoid if we are writing to persuade, convince or educate our clients.

For example, if we deliver flat, accurate, factual content, thinking that the facts alone will persuade our customer to buy, we have profoundly misunderstood the way [human] communication works."

Like using any recipe, you have to practice.  

Here is what I have found useful.  Identiify what format you want to use, look at Sant's example and then re-write Tom's example.

For example, I have used Sants' recipe for writing Nurture messages to create interest in the Franchise Info Nurture Marketing program, Stay in Touch with Qualified Clients until they are Ready To Buy from You.

It is really the oldest trick in the book:  First, I hand copied Tom's language, and then I rewrote each paragraph until it sounded more like me and less like Tom.  

Copying is critical because you are using those parts of your brain which control writing and speaking.  You are more likely to embed this into your own neural network doing this instead of just skimming Tom's writing for the "good bits".

This is Tom's language for selling an attorney on using client lead nurturing program.

The paragraph structure and emphasis is mine. (I expect people to skim more when reading text on a monitor, like you are doing right now.)

"For example, suppose you're an attorney specializing in probate issues with a practice aimed at helping families establish self-directed trusts to preserve their assets.

Why would a client come to you instead of a different attorney? Maybe because you were recommended? Maybe because she met you through some kind of community service work or social activity? Or maybe because you have regularly provided useful information that people appreciate?

Jim Cecil, the guru of nurture marketing, has found that sending out two or three messages doesn't have much impact on business. But by the time you have sent out eight or nine, good things start to happen.

Customers and prospects will have a "top-of-mind" awareness of you and your business after getting that many messages from you, so if they need the kinds of products or services you provide, they think of you first.

Sales will start to soar."

This is terrific language.  

If you want more clients, read and you read this, it is hard to walk away from this advice.  

You can compare my take on nuturing messages, Stay in Touch with Qualified Clients until they are Ready To Buy from You.

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1 Comment

Best writer doesn't win the prize when it comes to getting new business, its the better communicator and connector.

Professionals who recognize that writing about problems and solutions in a way that readers can relate to is just something that they make part of their routine.

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About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Michael Webster published on November 5, 2013 10:20 AM.

At What Age Should Your Child Get a SmartPhone? was the previous entry in this blog.

Does LinkedIn's Endorsement Program Mystify You? A Couple of Easy Fixes is the next entry in this blog.

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