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Casual Articles - Top Seven Reasons Salesletters Fail
Support During Career Transition: Keeping Upbeat and Focused ct of business life.Do you sometimes find that as soon as you take that leap and decide to make a positive career change, you’re met with criticism and resistance from those around you? They tell you why it’s a bad idea and try to persuade you not to follow your dream.Luckily, it only seems that way. One of the biggest challenges that many people in career transition face is trying to convince their families, friends, coworkers and the people who know them best, that change is a good thing. At a time when everything is in flux, it's tough for us to reassure people we are headed on the path to success despite any obstacles which may surface along the way. We may even be uncertain ourselves! And because we frequently experience the most resistance to our ideas from the people who mean the most to us, it can FEEL like our core support system is caving in. But don't worry, I assure you it's not!As a certified career coach who has helped many people overcome obstacles and who has paved the way for my own career, I make sure my clients know where to find the best type of career support, at the time when they need it most. Here are five sources where you can seek out guidance, education--even commiseration!--during your career transition period.1. Career networking - both online and in person.There are tons of career-focused networks and resources on the internet and in your local area. To locate them online, do a Google search. Check out your home town paper t Customers care about themselves, their problems, important goals they'd like to achieve, and the things that will make their lives easier or better. That's just human nature. I'm sure that the last time you bought a book through the mail on reducing your taxes, you didn't think, "Oh boy, here's the perfect opportunity for me to give McGraw-Hill more money and to help Sally Author get on the best seller list!" Instead, you were thinking something along the lines of, "Here's something I can use to hang onto a few more of my hard-earned dollars!" In order to get someone to dip into their wallet and part with their hard-earned currency, you must prove that what you have to offer is worth so much to them, that parting with the money is insignificant. And that, my friend, is a tall order. To accomplish this, you must talk directly to their needs, wants, desires, problems, and goals. This means you've got to drop down and get personal. Use a lot of "you" language Four Steps to Career Achievement Every marketer wants success from their ads and sales letters.Recently, I read a wonderful quote by William A. Ward, American scholar, author and pastor. Here’s the quote: “Four steps to achievement: Plan purposefully. Prepare prayerfully. Proceed positively. Pursue persistently.”Besides the memorable alliterative nature of the quote, bells went off in my head. To me, the quote epitomized the true meaning of what it takes to have a successful career.Let me explain.First, “Plan purposefully.” How does this apply to your career?You’ve probably heard the statement, “If you don’t know where you’re going, you’ll end up someplace else.” Setting your career direction is the first, and most critical decision you need to make. How can you possibly reach a goal unless you define it?Ask yourself “What do I want?” You’ll find answers in your dreams, yearnings, the thoughts you’ve placed on the shelf, and what you’re naturally attracted to. Talk to people about what they do and if a profession seems interesting to you, ask more questions and do research.If you’ve decided that you want to move up in your organization, model your behavior and actions on high achievers and learn how to use office politics and the corporate culture in your favor.Second, “Prepare prayerfully.”Trust that you can and will get what you want. I’m referring to having faith that with careful planning, hard work and a laser-like attention to your goal, it can become a reality. Focused intent This article shows how to get predictable and measurable results from every dollar you invest in promoting your products or services. 1. Failure To Understand The REAL Purpose Of Advertising. Make no mistakes about it. A sales letter is an ad for your products and services. Ask any ad agent the reason to advertise and they will say things like, ‘exposure’, ‘to be seen’, or ‘to get your name out there’. These concepts may all sound logical but reality is that none of these ideas can put money into your pockets or cover the expense of the ad themselves. Image ads are designed to appeal to you and your sense of feeling good about seeing your image professionally displayed. Image ads do nothing more than show your picture and contact information and perhaps a slogan such as ‘we care’, ‘we try harder’, or some other phrase that anyone else can also claim. That is all wrong for small business. Clients are more skeptical today than ever before. They don’t believe these slogans and are not drawn to image ads (unless you are unusually attractive). Besides, it takes five to seven years of that kind of ‘image’ advertising before people to permanently remember who you are—and still, there is no guarantee they will do business with you. The idea that people need to see your ad 6-12 times before they’ll remember you is a fallacy. Having them remember you later is far less important than having them take action and do business with you, or at the very least identify themselves to you, now! The real purpose of advertising is to generate sales. This includes attract new business, get existing clients to buy more, and get past clients to come back. Nothing else matters but sales. Period! "The only purpose of advertising is to make sales." - Claude Hopkins author of Scientific Advertising "The only objective, reality-based measure of any ad is sales" - Ted Nicholas author of Magic Words That Bring You Riches The first step begins with recognizing that the only reason to advertise is to make money. Once you agree with that, all else comes easy. 2. Marketing To The Wrong Audience. If you go wrong here, your entire campaign is doomed. It doesn't matter how exceptional a product you have, how convincing your copy is, or what incredible price you're offering. If you try to sell this amazing widget to the wrong people, I guarantee you that you'll flop. On the other hand, if you offer an average product promoted by pedestrian copy and bearing a median price, but offered to precisely the right people, it will always pull in some business. Not that this is your goal. I'm only mentioning this to show you the difference caused by properly defining your audience. What can you do to make sure you've selected the right market? You have to start by defining precisely whom your product or service appeals to. Your objective is to find the largest possible market that wants and can afford your product. At the same time, you want to make sure that your focus is tight enough that you aren't trying to appeal to too broad a range of interests at once. If you do, your marketing can easily become so watered down, it won't really appeal to anyone. If you're fortunate enough to have a product that appeals to multiple markets, you'll need to develop distinct variations of your sales pieces for each specific market. 3. Focusing Your Copy On You, Your Company, Or Your Product. This is a mistake that's made by companies of all sizes. Larger corporations are frequent offenders. Everyone likes to see their name in print. I do. You do. Everyone does. I'm sure that you're rightfully proud of your company and the products you sell. But I urge you to resist the temptation to stroke your ego in your sales letters. Here's why. Customers don't care. They don't care about you, your company, or your product. That may sound cruel, but it's a fact of business life. Customers care about themselves, their problems, important goals they'd like to achieve, and the things that will make their lives easier or better. That's just human nature. I'm sure that the last time you bought a book through the mail on reducing your taxes, you didn't think, "Oh boy, here's the perfect opportunity for me to give McGraw-Hill more money and to help Sally Author get on the best seller list!" Instead, you were thinking something along the lines of, "Here's something I can use to hang onto a few more of my hard-earned dollars!" In order to get someone to dip into their wallet and part with their hard-earned currency, you must prove that what you have to offer is worth so much to them, that parting with the money is insignificant. And that, my friend, is a tall order. To accomplish this, you must talk directly to their needs, wants, desires, problems, and goals. This means you've got to drop down and get personal. Use a lot of "you" language. Shape Sends a Message re more skeptical today than ever before. They don’t believe these slogans and are not drawn to image ads (unless you are unusually attractive).A logo's shape may be just as important as color, line or simplicity. Shape visually tells a customer what style your organization has. For example, square shapes portray a more serious, solid image, while softer angles indicate that an organization is more relaxed and friendly. Circles, the ultimate round shape, portray fun perhaps better than any other shape. Ovals are often used in traditional-looking logos. Triangles, with their angular appearance, can tell a customer that your organization is cutting edge, different, and not run of the mill.Of course, these meanings are not set in stone. For example, the edges of a square can be softened to look like a child's building block. Circles can be made to have sharp stray edges (as if someone were sketching a circle and some of the lines went stray) to make it look much harder. Triangles can have rounded corners so that it ends up looking like a triangle from an orchestra.All the design elements combine to create the complete message. The message portrayed by the shape of a logo is only part of the total package. The use of colors, lines and other artistic design elements all combine with the shape to form the complete message you will send through your logo. Besides, it takes five to seven years of that kind of ‘image’ advertising before people to permanently remember who you are—and still, there is no guarantee they will do business with you. The idea that people need to see your ad 6-12 times before they’ll remember you is a fallacy. Having them remember you later is far less important than having them take action and do business with you, or at the very least identify themselves to you, now! The real purpose of advertising is to generate sales. This includes attract new business, get existing clients to buy more, and get past clients to come back. Nothing else matters but sales. Period! "The only purpose of advertising is to make sales." - Claude Hopkins author of Scientific Advertising "The only objective, reality-based measure of any ad is sales" - Ted Nicholas author of Magic Words That Bring You Riches The first step begins with recognizing that the only reason to advertise is to make money. Once you agree with that, all else comes easy. 2. Marketing To The Wrong Audience. If you go wrong here, your entire campaign is doomed. It doesn't matter how exceptional a product you have, how convincing your copy is, or what incredible price you're offering. If you try to sell this amazing widget to the wrong people, I guarantee you that you'll flop. On the other hand, if you offer an average product promoted by pedestrian copy and bearing a median price, but offered to precisely the right people, it will always pull in some business. Not that this is your goal. I'm only mentioning this to show you the difference caused by properly defining your audience. What can you do to make sure you've selected the right market? You have to start by defining precisely whom your product or service appeals to. Your objective is to find the largest possible market that wants and can afford your product. At the same time, you want to make sure that your focus is tight enough that you aren't trying to appeal to too broad a range of interests at once. If you do, your marketing can easily become so watered down, it won't really appeal to anyone. If you're fortunate enough to have a product that appeals to multiple markets, you'll need to develop distinct variations of your sales pieces for each specific market. 3. Focusing Your Copy On You, Your Company, Or Your Product. This is a mistake that's made by companies of all sizes. Larger corporations are frequent offenders. Everyone likes to see their name in print. I do. You do. Everyone does. I'm sure that you're rightfully proud of your company and the products you sell. But I urge you to resist the temptation to stroke your ego in your sales letters. Here's why. Customers don't care. They don't care about you, your company, or your product. That may sound cruel, but it's a fact of business life. Customers care about themselves, their problems, important goals they'd like to achieve, and the things that will make their lives easier or better. That's just human nature. I'm sure that the last time you bought a book through the mail on reducing your taxes, you didn't think, "Oh boy, here's the perfect opportunity for me to give McGraw-Hill more money and to help Sally Author get on the best seller list!" Instead, you were thinking something along the lines of, "Here's something I can use to hang onto a few more of my hard-earned dollars!" In order to get someone to dip into their wallet and part with their hard-earned currency, you must prove that what you have to offer is worth so much to them, that parting with the money is insignificant. And that, my friend, is a tall order. To accomplish this, you must talk directly to their needs, wants, desires, problems, and goals. This means you've got to drop down and get personal. Use a lot of "you" language Presentation Folders for Corporate Marketing agic Words That Bring You RichesFolders are normally used to store important documents. But the role of folders doesn’t stop there. A presentation folder has a great part to portray in improving the growth of a business. Though most people use it to organize documents still it has become a great marketing tool that any business should not ignore.Normally you can see that the presentation folders are used to deliver very important documents such as brochures and letters. Basically, the common term for presentation folder is pocket folder. It is labeled as pocket folder for the reason that it has pockets inside it. Sometimes it is referred only as folder.You see the significance of a presentation folder is undeniable. It can add an impact to your corporate identity whenever you have a meeting or there’s something you want to deliver to your potential customers. By using folders as a primary tool for your marketing campaign, it only implies that you really want to maintain a professional image for your company. Remember a professionally-designed folder is what people used to keep.There are many uses of folders. But you must take into account that a folder will not be effective if it’s not designed properly. In view of that the folder should have a very compelling design to attract the attention of the prospective clients especially in important business meetings.Bear in mind that the design of the presentation folder must given utmost attention. Among the features that you sh The first step begins with recognizing that the only reason to advertise is to make money. Once you agree with that, all else comes easy. 2. Marketing To The Wrong Audience. If you go wrong here, your entire campaign is doomed. It doesn't matter how exceptional a product you have, how convincing your copy is, or what incredible price you're offering. If you try to sell this amazing widget to the wrong people, I guarantee you that you'll flop. On the other hand, if you offer an average product promoted by pedestrian copy and bearing a median price, but offered to precisely the right people, it will always pull in some business. Not that this is your goal. I'm only mentioning this to show you the difference caused by properly defining your audience. What can you do to make sure you've selected the right market? You have to start by defining precisely whom your product or service appeals to. Your objective is to find the largest possible market that wants and can afford your product. At the same time, you want to make sure that your focus is tight enough that you aren't trying to appeal to too broad a range of interests at once. If you do, your marketing can easily become so watered down, it won't really appeal to anyone. If you're fortunate enough to have a product that appeals to multiple markets, you'll need to develop distinct variations of your sales pieces for each specific market. 3. Focusing Your Copy On You, Your Company, Or Your Product. This is a mistake that's made by companies of all sizes. Larger corporations are frequent offenders. Everyone likes to see their name in print. I do. You do. Everyone does. I'm sure that you're rightfully proud of your company and the products you sell. But I urge you to resist the temptation to stroke your ego in your sales letters. Here's why. Customers don't care. They don't care about you, your company, or your product. That may sound cruel, but it's a fact of business life. Customers care about themselves, their problems, important goals they'd like to achieve, and the things that will make their lives easier or better. That's just human nature. I'm sure that the last time you bought a book through the mail on reducing your taxes, you didn't think, "Oh boy, here's the perfect opportunity for me to give McGraw-Hill more money and to help Sally Author get on the best seller list!" Instead, you were thinking something along the lines of, "Here's something I can use to hang onto a few more of my hard-earned dollars!" In order to get someone to dip into their wallet and part with their hard-earned currency, you must prove that what you have to offer is worth so much to them, that parting with the money is insignificant. And that, my friend, is a tall order. To accomplish this, you must talk directly to their needs, wants, desires, problems, and goals. This means you've got to drop down and get personal. Use a lot of "you" language Low to No-Budget Marketing ket that wants and can afford your product.Marketing is not just advertising. In fact, some of the most effective marketing doesn’t involve traditional advertising at all. Marketing is everything that your customers see you do from your initial business concept to the delivery of your company’s value. Ironically, when sales are down, it is often one of the first things to be cut out of the budget. Whether times are tough or things are booming marketing is critical to a business’ success. Most successful marketing strategies do require some money, but it is far more expensive to not market your value at all. However, there are strategies that you can implement for little or no cost.Choosing and setting up an attractive business name is an initial cost that you will have to spend anyway and it is crucial to a business’ success. Your name should tell prospective clients exactly what you do and why they should do business with you. It is usually best to avoid using your own name in your business name unless of course you are a celebrity. What works for Paul Newman probably won’t work for the average Joe. Carefully consider your business name as it is vital to your marketing campaign. Make sure it is easy to spell, say and creates a positive first impression.Developing a marketing plan is also free and can be as simple as making a timeline of when to order business cards, how often to attend networking opportunities, which organizations you will join and take on leadership positions within, At the same time, you want to make sure that your focus is tight enough that you aren't trying to appeal to too broad a range of interests at once. If you do, your marketing can easily become so watered down, it won't really appeal to anyone. If you're fortunate enough to have a product that appeals to multiple markets, you'll need to develop distinct variations of your sales pieces for each specific market. 3. Focusing Your Copy On You, Your Company, Or Your Product. This is a mistake that's made by companies of all sizes. Larger corporations are frequent offenders. Everyone likes to see their name in print. I do. You do. Everyone does. I'm sure that you're rightfully proud of your company and the products you sell. But I urge you to resist the temptation to stroke your ego in your sales letters. Here's why. Customers don't care. They don't care about you, your company, or your product. That may sound cruel, but it's a fact of business life. Customers care about themselves, their problems, important goals they'd like to achieve, and the things that will make their lives easier or better. That's just human nature. I'm sure that the last time you bought a book through the mail on reducing your taxes, you didn't think, "Oh boy, here's the perfect opportunity for me to give McGraw-Hill more money and to help Sally Author get on the best seller list!" Instead, you were thinking something along the lines of, "Here's something I can use to hang onto a few more of my hard-earned dollars!" In order to get someone to dip into their wallet and part with their hard-earned currency, you must prove that what you have to offer is worth so much to them, that parting with the money is insignificant. And that, my friend, is a tall order. To accomplish this, you must talk directly to their needs, wants, desires, problems, and goals. This means you've got to drop down and get personal. Use a lot of "you" language 7 Steps To A Better Life In Trucking ct of business life.1. Eat healthy. When you're trucking over America's roadways, you are limited in you meal choices. I have read that the #1 dinner meal served at truck stops is the chicken fried steak. If you're trying for a healthier diet, try to avoid that dinner. Opt for the salad bar and choose a low-fat dressing or try just using vinegar if the taste appeals to you. Choose grilled (not fried) chicken or fish with steamed vegetables as a side. In an ideal trucking world, you should look into getting a small refrigerator in your truck and stop often at local grocery stores to stock up on fruits and vegetables. You can use a plug-in cooler (truck stops sell them, as well as stores like Wal-Mart) but they do not stay as cold as an actual refrigerator, so dairy and other items that require cold temperatures will go bad faster. We know of drivers who removed a shelving unit in their company truck and purchased an actual freezer that was about 3 feet tall. They bought a 1,500 watt inverter to power the freezer and a small microwave to heat up the frozen food. They stocked up on low-fat, frozen dinners. When they were at home they cooked chicken and browned ground beef to keep in the freezer. Using a crock pot or the Burton stove, they could use canned beans or broths to make "homemade" chili or low-fat Chicken and dumplings (using canned bread dough for the dumplings).2. Get into an exercise routine. Exercise increases your metabolism and releases Customers care about themselves, their problems, important goals they'd like to achieve, and the things that will make their lives easier or better. That's just human nature. I'm sure that the last time you bought a book through the mail on reducing your taxes, you didn't think, "Oh boy, here's the perfect opportunity for me to give McGraw-Hill more money and to help Sally Author get on the best seller list!" Instead, you were thinking something along the lines of, "Here's something I can use to hang onto a few more of my hard-earned dollars!" In order to get someone to dip into their wallet and part with their hard-earned currency, you must prove that what you have to offer is worth so much to them, that parting with the money is insignificant. And that, my friend, is a tall order. To accomplish this, you must talk directly to their needs, wants, desires, problems, and goals. This means you've got to drop down and get personal. Use a lot of "you" language. Kill all of the technical babble. Get rid of anything that makes you sound like a pompous, marble encrusted institution. What's that? You say you’re selling securities, gemstones, or some other high-ticket, upper echelon item and you need to sound sophisticated? Sorry, but you're disillusioned - and you stand to compromise your potential profits. Even the upper-crust are people, human beings, carbon-based life forms who respond to being treated personally. Successful marketers understand this. They consistently use it to build their fortunes. 4. Assuming You Know The Benefits Your Customers Value The Most. Here's another presumptuous error that can cost you dearly. Too often, companies think that since they created a product, they are the ultimate authority on that product and its benefits. This gets them into trouble. While your market may remain the same, its needs are volatile and prone to change during the life of a product. When a product is new, its very newness may be the most appealing factor. As it becomes more common and other competitors enter the market, price, quality, and additional features take on more importance. Also, the problems that your market faces today may be solved tomorrow. Then you're faced with having to reposition your product to offer solutions to other problems. Now, where you may ask, do you get all of this crucial marketing data? You go to the source: your customers. You must constantly poll your customers to find out what their most critical needs, aspirations, problems, and objectives are. Once you've found out, you seize the opportunity and adjust the benefits in your copy accordingly. 5. You Think That Your Ad Or Your Product Are Important. Well maybe they are, but not to your customers. It's important to you, your family, your friends, and your employees. But that's as far as it goes. Customers don't care. They don't wait eagerly to get your sales pitch in the mail. Chances are they'll pass right by your ad in a newspaper or magazine. They might have a mild interest in your product, but you'd better be able to seize their attention, to reach out and grab them by the throat in order to make your case. You accomplish this by featuring a benefit in your headline that is so potent it can't be passed over. This benefit headline should be as subtle as a jackhammer. Look, you have only a few seconds to stop someone and pull them into the detail of your ad or sales letter. If you can't grab them here and now, you've lost them forever. The page gets turned or your letter hits the trash. To avoid this, you've got to roll out your biggest, loudest gun right away. Feature it as prominently as you can. Make it so irresistible that only an idiot would pass it by. This is a radically different approach than most ads take. They focus on a clever, catchy headline or eye-popping visuals. To the detriment of the people who use them, these techniques don't work. They're pure window dressing. If you want to win more leads and sales, forget about your ad and its fancy layout. Forget about being clever or creative. Concentrate instead on hitting your customers right between the eyes with the most potent benefit you have to offer. 6. Failing To Track Your Results And Use What You've Learned To Compound Your Profits. If you really want to cash in on direct response principles this is one mistake you should correct as soon as possible. One of the greatest advantages of direct response marketing is that it's completely measurable. By keying your ads and sales letters (with a unique department number, suite number, person's name, or other identifier), you track precisely what kind of response you get from every sales letter you use. Most ad agents claim that advertising is not measurable. Hogwash! By keying your ads and sales letters you can track exactly how many people inquire each time your ad runs, how many buy, how many continue
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