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Writers Workshop
It has been said that advertising costs the same whether it is
used intelligently or foolishly. An ad in the newspaper costs
you the same amount whether it generates one new customer or 100
new customers. A mailer costs you the same whether it brings in
$10 of business or $10,000. Your degree of skill in marketing
and advertising can obviously have a profound impact on your
business.
Few Small Business
Owners Really Understand
How To Advertise Intelligently
Small businesses must demand maximum performance from every
marketing dollar spent. Ad campaigns that are cute and/or silly
attempt only to build name recognition or merely say, "Here it
is, come get it" must be avoided.
Small businesses cannot afford to spend a lot of money on
advertising where the main purpose is to build name recognition.
Advertising must lead prospects to act in some measurable,
specific way - send in a coupon, call a number, write a check,
go to the store, etc. - all in an effort to make a sale.
Headlines
Simply stated, the headline is the ad for the ad. Its purpose is
to pick people out of a crowd of readers/listeners who may be
responsive to your general offer and give them a reason to
continue reading or listening to the ad.
You will usually want to incorporate your Articulated Sales
Argument (ASA) into your headline. Your ASA is the singular,
unique benefit your customers will receive by doing business
with your firm, stated in an easily embraceable way. It's the
one thing that really distinguishes you from your competition.
People who have interest in your proposition will read the
headline and decide to keep reading. Those who aren't interested
in your headline won't keep reading - but you shouldn't care
because they aren't qualified prospects. On the other hand, if
you use a cute, ambiguous headline to attract attention, chances
are you will lose people who are qualified. Remember: you are
only interested in selling to qualified, interested prospects!
Being Specific
Claude Hopkins, the father of direct response advertising, said
"Platitudes and generalities roll off the human understanding
like water from a duck. They leave no impression whatever." To
say "Low Prices, Biggest Selection or Highest Quality" is
useless. People tend to be skeptical. They need to be convinced.
Instead, try using specific, graphically illustrative words and
phrases that quantify your statement. "We Always Have at Least
1745 Tuxedos in No Less Than 22 Different Styles, 72 Varying
Sizes, and 10 Desirable Colors, And in Price Ranges From $25 to
$125." This is more definite and more believable than the usual
generic "Large Selection."
Since people are skeptical, they tend to discount (or flat out
ignore) any generalized statements you make. But they know that
you wouldn't tell a bold-faced lie. When you make a specific
statement about your product, they give it 100% credibility.
Changing general statements to specific ones will double the
effectiveness of any advertisement. No extra cost. Try it.
Long vs. Short Copy
Interesting short copy is better than boring long copy. But
remember who you are trying to sell your products to:
interested, qualified prospects - the people who are hungry for
information about the product in question.
Think in terms of salesman-like advertising. You certainly
wouldn't send a salesman to see an interested, qualified
prospect and have him merely hand the prospect a photograph of
your product and say, "Ours is higher quality and we have better
service," and then leave. But that is exactly what 90% of all
advertising says! If you don't believe me, just look in your
local newspaper or yellow pages directory.
The More You Tell, The
More You Sell
A rule of thumb is to use as much space as it takes to present a
fairly complete argument for your product or service. Drew
Kaplan of DAK consumer electronics fame has earned hundreds of
millions of dollars describing in exacting, painstaking detail
every feature, benefit, and advantage of what seem to be very
common products. You should see his 32-page mini-magazine that
sells one product - a desktop publishing software package. Since
I was an interested, qualified prospect, I read the entire
magazine twice in one sitting and then placed my order.
W.I.I.F.M.
(What's In It For Me?)
Every ad must address this important question. Surprisingly,
most advertisements only breeze over WIIFM. They would rather
tell you that they've been in business for 200 years or that
they have 44 expert tailors on site.
If this sounds familiar, that's because it is. Your ASA should
tell people what's in it for them - and state that reason in
clear, graphically illustrative terms. Here's another formula
for you to remember when you're describing your products or
services: FAB.
FAB stands for Features, Advantages, and Benefits. While most
ads focus on features, your ads should focus on advantages and
benefits.
Risk Reversal
In almost every business relationship, one party is always
asking the other - whether implicitly or explicitly - to bear
the burden of risk on the transaction.
If your product or service can truly perform, then you should
not hesitate to offer it to interested, qualified prospects at
zero risk. If your product cannot perform, or if you're trying
to sell it to the wrong target, you have no business being in
business. Don't make your prospect take the risk.
Marketing consulting is a perfect example of risk reversal. Even
though most of my clients come to me on a referral basis, they
don't really know if I can help them out in their situation.
People hesitate to pay me in advance to write an advertisement
if they've never worked with me before.
But since I know my services will exceed their expectations (I
can't go wrong because I hedge by testing), I don't mind
"giving" the service away. Depending on the relationship with
the client, I might or might not ask for a good faith deposit.
But I never accept any money if something doesn't work.
Now, contrast that to my competition - advertising agencies.
They demand payment in advance - and I guarantee that they will
refuse to refund your money if their $10,000 artwork didn't net
you any new customers. They're funny that way.
Like everything else I exhort, always state your guarantee in
readily embraceable terms. "Money Back Guarantee" does not evoke
the same response as saying "Your check will not be cashed for
two weeks and the sale isn't even considered binding until
you've taken your diamond to be appraised by at least two
certified gemologists of your choice."
Yes, you will have a higher incidence of returns if you offer a
guarantee. You might even have a few people take advantage of
you. But if emphasizing a performance guarantee doubles or
triples the response of an ad, the returns are inconsequential.
Again, the guarantee offers you an opportunity to increase your
bottom line without spending extra money.
Chameleon Advertising
In many cases, it makes sense to disguise your advertisement.
People tend to not pay attention to advertisements, but they do
tend to pay attention to news or entertainment your
advertisements are so often delivered with.
Paul Harvey tells the whole world "The Rest of the Story" three
times a day. At least a couple of times a week, he starts one of
his news stories by talking about the consumer satisfaction
polls for new cars. Buick Park Avenue, the car Paul himself
drives, is always on top. It sounds just like a news clip. It's
an advertisement.
Some of the greatest print advertisements of all times looked
just like news articles. One I like is frequently found in the
sports section. The headline says, "New, Hot Golf Ball Banned
From Pro Tour - Flies Too Far." It keeps running year after
year; it must be working.
Call to Action
Just like a good salesman always tries to close the deal, your
advertisements should lead the prospect to do something. Your
objective will determine what that action is. If you're
generating leads, your ad needs to tell people to call, send a
card, bring in a coupon, write for more information or some
other specific reply. If you're trying to make sales, tell
people to write a check or call with their credit card ready.
People are silently begging to be led. If your advertisement has
built a solid case for your product, all you have to do is ask
for action and you will get it.
In Conclusion
There are several other aspects of ad writing that haven't been
covered here, like use of testimonials, bonuses, postscripts,
and such. Unless your product is very simple to understand, it's
a good idea to use advertising for lead generating. There comes
a point when it makes sense to sub a real salesman to close the
sale. But don't underestimate the usefulness of employing a huge
army of tiny salesmen to open doors and pique interest. If your
salesman-like ads are reaching qualified, interested prospects,
they will definitely have a positive effect on your business.
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