|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
How many times has someone you've called said, "Why don't you send me some information on your company"?
Ask yourself, before you send anything: How will this be dealt with once it arrives at that person's desk. Aren't they already suffering from information overload? On the one hand, people say they they need more information in order to make the decision just to meet with you, let alone to agree to buy or hire. On the other, they have more information about everything than they know what to do with.
The problem is, your prospects are not usually looking for information. They are usually, politely, asking you to go away. Most salespeople at this point shovel a whole lot of information at their prospect, hoping something will stick.
A more effective way to respond to your prospect's request for more information is to send something that reaches them at a gut level. It doesn't have to be overwhelming, a subtle message can be as effective as a bold one, as long as it connects. How to achieve that connection on paper or a website is, of course, the big challenge.
Upon receiving your marketing material your prospect will ask themselves, "Is it worth my time to look at this? and "Do I have the time to look at it now?" This happens in the first glance. If your material doesn't elicit a yes to one or both of these questions, you have failed.
When done right, the connection is made with no effort on your prospect's part. Suddenly they recognize that someone is saying all the right things. Information alone does not have the power to move a prospect further along the sales path. Making a connection does. And it can happen to your prospect in the blink of an eye.
A well known, well received, Saturn commercial showed how in seconds we can come to a profound understanding and connection with an advertiser. A young woman calls the Saturn guys and asks a favour for when the new car is delivered to the showroom. We see her and her nice, average-Joe kind of fellow looking over the new car. He's paying lots of attention to the macho dashboard details and such and she seems a little nervous. As he turns to examine the rest of the interior, we see in a flash, (in one version, we see only a few square inches) what he sees--a baby seat. We have all the information we need. We know precisely, now, what this story is all about.
We cannot help but be caught up in the drama because it is up to us to make the story up for ourselves, as it unfolds in the remaining few seconds: in his eyes, surprise and (very obvious) love for the lady. On her face, the question: how will he take the news? Then the happily-ever-after answer. The connection with the audience has been made.
The thought of a mother-to-be doesn't make me go all mushy, and I've never even been in a car with a baby seat. But this reached me at a profound, personal level. I'm ready to look at a Saturn when my latest Honda is ready to be traded in.
You may not be selling cars, but the principle is the same. You must connect strongly and quickly, and the best way to do that is at the gut level. That gut level connection is often all your prospect needs to know before they will meet with you.
The average person has a unfathomable reserve of information that is accessed, processed, understood and felt in something approaching the speed of light. That kind of information--gut level understanding--is more powerful than anything else a marketer can thrust on a prospect. Does it really work that way? Does watching a boy call his grandfather from the beaches of Dieppe on his cell phone to say thanks work? Ask Bell. Not only does an image or a concept do the work of a thousand words, it does it in 1/1000th of the time, and with a thousand times the punch.
This is not to say you must include pictures with your marketing material. A good writer can paint vivid pictures with text in people's minds, using the power of a metaphor or a story.
The lesson: Don't turn your marketing materials into something like a manual, catalogue, lecture, or diatribe. Use the powerful informational forces already resident in your target market. Work to understand who they are and why they might want you instead of someone else. Speak in their language, and keep the focus on them.
Keith Thirgood, Creative Director
Capstone Communications Group
Helping businesses get more business through innovative marketing
Markham, Ontario, Canada 905-472-2330
Subscribe to Thrive-on-line http://list.capstonecomm.com/ma il.cgi?f=list&l=thrive_on_line
Boomers are a prime and growing target audience. Does your... Read More
You can't put up a beautiful (or any) web site... Read More
What is a Joint Venture?A joint venture is an agreement... Read More
Your market is not everybody, as so many small businesses... Read More
The point is what you give to another you give... Read More
Trading reciprocal links is one of the best ways to... Read More
We all watch the commercials on TV. We hear them... Read More
Direct mail marketing is essential for a business to survive.Choosing... Read More
If you take a look at the features that different... Read More
When marketing your practice, as well as designing your brochure,... Read More
Loyalty marketing has been around for as long as retailing... Read More
For many of service-based businesses out there, it's not that... Read More
The right direct mailing list targets people who want your... Read More
Trade Shows are lots of work, but they can generate... Read More
Are You Riding The Marketing Roller Coaster?If you're like many... Read More
How often do you sit around and wonder how to... Read More
Sometimes we loose site of the small things in life... Read More
First, some background on today's topic. I've had a terrible... Read More
No doubt you started this year with some big ideas... Read More
Fear and Greed. The stock-in-trade of sales. Appeal to them,... Read More
Preparing a Marketing Plan for your product or service is... Read More
Let's be honest, when you're writing sales material for a... Read More
When you take a piece of gold to a pawn... Read More
Business owners often find it difficult to know whether their... Read More
Is your business publishing a print or e-newsletter? An informative... Read More
"Cross promoting with other businesses can give you a significant... Read More
Entrepreneurs pay a lot of attention to the mechanics of... Read More
Telemarketers... ooohhh... I'll bet we've all got a nice story... Read More
I just collected my mail. As usual, more than 80%... Read More
Direct mail marketing is essential for a business to survive.Choosing... Read More
..products or services now. They may not revisit your web... Read More
When you want to win and woo new clients with... Read More
The "Unique Selling Proposition" advertising campaign was developed by Reeves... Read More
Your URL (www) should be everywhere and more.I know many... Read More
We all know the English language contains hundreds of thousands... Read More
Can I share a secret with you?I love working out.... Read More
Here's a proven, and truly easy way to start increasing... Read More
Boomers are a prime and growing target audience. Does your... Read More
Face it?you know you've got to do something to keep... Read More
Two years ago I started my small Virtual Assistant business... Read More
As a massage therapist, your income is usually limited by... Read More
Today's constant bombardment of marketing messages means your materials must... Read More
Quit spreading those chain letters, nothing is going to happen... Read More
Good marketing, whatever form it takes, always meets certain criteria.... Read More
The greatest asset to your business is your Customer, specifically,... Read More
Telemarketing has its place in the marketing arsenal. But telespammers... Read More
Direct Mail . . . Newspaper . . . Radio... Read More
You may not realize it, but you already have a... Read More
The secret to increasing sales doesn't lie in choosing just... Read More
One of the most effective ways to market your products/services... Read More
Marketing |