The power and magic of a sales letter that really sells.

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by Scott Nelson

A business owner who lives by conventional wisdom in the area of advertising and marketing, stands a high likelihood of getting lousy results. Conventional wisdom says to advertise and market by using big ticket media like radio and tv and to keep your written advertisements short and clever. In other words, entertain and they’ll remember you. So why is this all wrong? Because it doesn’t have work in most cases. Dan Kennedy, an internationally sought after business consultant calls good sales copy writing; “writing your own check”. Yet most entrepreneurs are clueless about sales letters and definitely have no clue about what makes a good one.

Basically it is a salesman on paper that keeps working and working without the need for profit sharing or vacation days. There is nothing particularly special or unique about good advertising copy, except that it works. The fact is that most businesses never make use of the power of good advertising copy in any form.

Fail to use the awesome power of well done advertising copy at your own risk. Don’t be concerned about formality or following the herd of how it “should” be done. Just adopt the mindset that even bad copy is ok because it can be made great, often with minor changes.

To get started: Go to the nearest library and pick up a pile of magazines from the popular genres. The areas you are most interested in are sports, fitness, health, fashion, and entertainment. Pick a specific category within the genre and then a more general one. In the area of health and fitness, pick up Men’s Health and then more specifically one dealing only with getting bulky through weightlifting. Read through them and focus on the ads.

The sales letters are often full or half page. They sometimes can be half page. Many times they offer a free written or audio material when you get in touch with them. You’ll notice that the sales letter focuses heavily on the service or product offered and not at all on the company name. It is an unfortunate false perception that the big corporations are masters of advertising. In reality, most have not clue about how to draft or use a good sales letter.

Trust me, you’ll know really good sales copy right away. It is interesting to read and makes you interested in the product or service being sold. Put a book placeholder and go get two or three past issues. If you see the same or very similar ad in those back issues, the ad is very likely a successful ad.

By way of comparison, the ads you see during a popular prime time show are focused on mass marketing of products to a generally large audience. They use things like talking horses and the like. Keep in mind that they usually have no clue of the effectiveness of their millions spent. That is not wise advertising. They have the millions to spend. You must bring the general public who has never heard of you what the benefit of your product is and make it clear right away.

Strategy #2 is to provide your unique benefit to your customer. You want to answer the question: “Why should I be doing business with you and not others offering the same product or service. What is it can you do for them? Always keep that question in mind in creating winning advertising copy.

It is widely documented that a simple USP can have a powerful impact on a business. When Tom Monaghan started Domino’s Pizza, he basically took a fledgling mom and pop and turned it into an empire based on the USP: “Fresh Hot Pizza delivered in 30 minutes or Less, Guaranteed”.

By conveying a unique benefit, unlike any other in the marketplace, Dominos moved to the head of the pack.

But you might have noticed that having a powerful USP is strategy # 2. Where is strategy 1?

It’s have a good headline for your sales letter. A whole different topic for a future discussion.

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