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The Selling Secrets Of Million Dollar
Sales Letters
Regardless of what you're trying to sell, you really can't sell
it without "talking" with your prospective buyer.
And in attempting to sell anything by mail, the sales letter you
send out is when and how you talk to your prospect.
All winning sales letters "talk" to the prospect by
creating an image in the mind of the reader.
They "set the scene" by appealing to a desire or need;
and then they flow smoothly into the "visionary" part of the
sales pitch by describing in detail how wonderful life will be and, how
"good" the prospect is going to feel after he's purchased your
product. This is the
"body or guts" of a sales letter.
Overall, a winning sales letter follows a time-tested and proven
formula: l) Get his
attention; 2) Get him interested in what you can do for him; 3) Make him
desire the benefits of your product so badly his mouth begins lo water;
4) Demand action from him - tell him to send for whatever it is you're
selling without delay - any procrastination on his part might cause him
to lose out. This is called
the "AIDA" formula and it works.
Sales letters that pull in the most sales are almost always two
pages with 1 1/2 spaces between lines.
For really big ticket items, they'll run at least four pages - on
an 11 x 17 inch sheet of paper folded in half.
If your sales letter is only two pages in length, there's nothing
wrong with running it on the front and back of one sheet of 8 1/2 x 11
paper. However, your sales
letter should always be on letterhead paper - your letterhead printed,
and including your logo and business motto if you have one.
Regardless of the length of your sales letter, it should do one
thing, and that's sell, and sell hard!
If you intend to close the sale, you've got to do it with your
sales letter. You should
never be "wishy-washy" with your sales letter and expect to
close the sale with a color brochure or circular. You do the actual selling and the closing of that sale with
your sales letter - any brochure or circular you send along with it will
just re in force what you say in the sales letter.
There's been a great deal of discussion in the past few ears
regarding just how long a sales letter should be.
A lot of people are asking:
will people really take the time to read a long sales letter.
The answer is a simple and time-tested yes indeed!
Surveys and tests over the years emphatically prove that longer
sales letters pull even better than the shorter ones, so don't worry
about the length of your sales letter - Just make sure that it sells
your product for you!
The "inside secret" is to make your sales letter so
interesting, and "visionary" with the benefits you're offering
to the reader, that he can't resist reading it all the way through. You
break up the "work" of reading by using short, punchy
sentences, under lining important points you're trying to make, with the
use of sub-headlines, indentations and even the use of a second color.
Relative to the brochures or circulars you may want to include
with your sales letter to reinforce the sale - providing the materials
you're enclosing are of the best quality, they will generally reinforce
the sale for you. But, if
they are of poor quality, look cheap and don't complement your sales
letter, then you shouldn't be using them. Another thing, it will definitely classify you as an
independent home-worker if you hand-stamp your name/address on these
brochures or advertising circulars.
Whenever possible, and so long as you have really good brochures
to send out, have your printer run them through his press and print your
name/address - even your telephone number and company logo - on them
before you send them out. The
thing is, you want your prospect to think of you as his supplier - the
company - and not as just another mail order operator.
Sure, you can get by with less expense but you'll end up with
fewer orders and in the end, less profits.
Another thing that's been bandied about and discussed from every
direction for years is whether to use a post office box number or your
street address. Generally,
it's best to include both your post office box number, AND, your street
address on your sales letter. This
kind of open display of your honesty will give you credibility and
dispel the thought of you being just another "fly-by-night"
mail order company in the mind of your prospect.
Above all else, you've got to include some sort of ordering
coupon. This coupon has to
be as simple and as easy for the prospect to fill out and return to you
as you can possibly make it. A
great many sales are lost because this order coupon is just too
complicated for the would-be buyer to follow.
Don't get fancy! Keep
it simple, and you'll find your prospects responding with glee.
Should you or shouldn't you include a self-addressed reply
envelope? There are a lot
of variables as well as pro's and con's to this question, but overall,
when you send out a "winning" sales letter to a good mailing
list, a return reply envelope will increase your response tremendously.
Tests of late seem to indicate that it isn't that big a deal or
difference in responses relative to whether you do or don't pre-stamp
the return reply envelope. Again,
the decision here will rest primarily on the product you're selling and
the mailing list you're using. Our
recommendation is that you experiment - try it both ways - with
different mailings, and decide for yourself from there. |