When you first read a professionally written sales letter, you can find yourself gripped by the words, held in awe by the language, and, finally, reaching for your wallet so that you can pay for your future purchase. You might also find yourself surprised: how can such a letter exert so much power in only a single page, with brilliant illustrations and only a few paragraphs of text? The answer is not so much in skillfully writing words. To write a sales letter, you need people skills: you need to know what touches people, what makes them happy, what clicks with them, what makes them excited, and what pushes them to finally spend their hard-earned money to buy something. Your job as a sales letter writer is to sell not by writing well, but by striking a balance: you have to be exciting without being sensational, and you need to be as truthful about your product as possible, playing on its strengths and using these strengths to fuel your letter. Many sales letter writers make the mistake of thinking that they must sell something, and using this mentality to fuel the task of writing a sales letter. The job, however, can be more complicated than that. Your starting mentality should be geared toward speaking to a person directly, and touching that person's life; if you are able to get in touch with a person's needs and wants, then you can make that person buy something without even trying to sell the product.
Before you start writing that sales letter, you need to remember what it feels like to be a customer. If you were being sold something, would you like a product or service that catered exactly to your needs, or would you buy something only because someone said it looked or felt nice? Would you like a product or service that was marketed as cheap but useless, or a little bit expensive but infinitely useful? Put yourself in your customer's shoes before writing your sales letter. The meat of a sales letter is not only in its message, but in its language. Many sales letter writers think that they have to speak formally, as this connotes respect; other sales letter writers think that they can use casual language, as this seems to put a sales letter writer in the midst of the masses. Overly formal language can alienate your customer, when what you really want to do is attract them to your company. Overly casual language can annoy your customer, when what you really want to do is make them feel that they need you. Strike the balance between formality and casual conversation. You do not need to go overboard with the greetings, and neither should you gush with excitement so that you seem more a hyperactive marketer high on uppers than a marketing expert showing the value of the product or service that he or she is trying to sell.
Avoid using the generic ?To whom it may concern,? or any other address that can make the letter look like a shoot-anywhere document. Address your customer by name: this not only makes the customer feel respected, but it gives a personal touch to the sales letter. The letter's body should be as succinct as possible, and should include, if possible, images of your products or services in action. In a few paragraphs, elaborate on a customer's need for something, and on the lack of products or services on the market that have been made to meet this need. Proceed by describing your company briefly, and why your company is best suited to meeting the need through a product or service that the company provides. You can then proceed to describe your product and service. If you have customer testimonials, include only a few; choose testimonials that do not sound gushy, sentimental, or overblown. Customers can sense if they are being led on, so be brief and true to your product or service. When you have fully but briefly described what you can offer, provide price information, and how customers can get in touch with you in order to buy the product or service.
Writing A Sales Plan
You can write a great sales letter. Sure, you may have to learn some new skills. But keep in mind, the great copywriters of today weren't born writing great sales letters. They started right where you may be--having never written a sales letter. Or maybe you've written a few sales letters, but they have disappointed you. Take heart. In this article, I will show you step by step what you need to put in your sales letters to give them the structure and persuasiveness you may desire.
Every sales letter has a basic structure. Now, each sales letter may insert these basics in different orders or using a different method, but generally all sales letters will include these basics:
Headline: Every winning sales letter should have an attention-grabbing headline, one that draws the reader into your sales letter. If they don't read your letter, they won't buy your product. They must read the sales letter first.
Make your headline exciting. What will your product do for the user? For example, if you sell a product that helps the user find discount travel packages, a few strong headlines could be:
How to Travel Like the Rich on a Pauper's Income
How to Travel for Less than Half-Price
Travel the World for Less than Traveling Locally
How I Travel Everywhere For Half-Price
Try to write some similar headlines for your product. Simply substitute your product and benefit for the keywords in those headlines. Try to write 20 or 40 or so headlines---some of them will be lousy, but some of them may surprise you. One thing about writing is that you will get more creative and efficient as you spend more time writing. Practice, practice, practice.
Benefit Bullets:
These bullets will be key points about your product. For example, if you are selling a product geared towards grade school teachers, your bullets might be:
Learn to manage your classroom with no effort Discover the keys to teaching vocabulary at any level How to teach math so that students learn the fastest What every teacher needs to know about discipline. For more details visit to www.10steps-to-killer-web-copy.com.
Notice that these bullets promise a benefit to the reader. Bullets are designed to draw the reader to purchase the product, so that they can receive the benefits of the product. These bullets reveal the benefits to the purchaser.
Guarantee: Especially when selling online, you must include a specific guarantee. Online purchasers are already skeptical of purchasing an information product. By offering a money-back guarantee, you assure the buyer that if the product isn't what you say it is, they can receive a refund. For more information logon to www.sales-page-rapid-fire.com. Your responsibility, of course, is to make absolutely sure that the product does everything you say that it does. If you do that, you will have few returns. Here is an example of a guarantee: Your complete satisfaction guaranteed: If for any reason during the first 30 days after you purchase this product, you are not completely satisfied for any reason at all, simply return the product and we will cheerfully refund your purchase price, no questions asked.
Obviously that guarantee should be modified to meet the nature of your product, and the time frame altered. By having the guarantee, although you will have to give a refund from time to time, you should sell far more units than without the guarantee.
Close and ask for the sale: This step is critical! No matter how good a job you do describing the product, it will not sell itself. You MUST ask for the sale. Tell the customer to buy. Give them an easy link to your order or shopping page. If you don't ask for the sale, you won't sell much.
Try to write your first sales letter using this template. Write comfortable, as if you were talking to someone at lunch. A sales letter should be easy to read and feel like a friend discussing the product. It should not have stilted or awkward language, but should flow naturally---just write the way you would talk about your product.
Both Arvind Gupta & Raj Thakur Dda are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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