March 16th, 2010 — Tactical Copywriting
I’m reading a book that has nothing to do with marketing or sales. (GASP!) Even though this book is not even remotely connected to business, the authors managed to force me to stop everything and just ponder for a while. What did they say that was so profound?
Just this: “When we were young and first started out we made everything complicated. Now that we are older, we’ve simplified everything only to find it works better.” (paraphrased)
How about that? I had to stop and think on that one. Sure enough, I still tend to make stuff a lot more complicated than I need to. It reminds me of a story of a fellow who went to his 10 year high school reunion…
The guy had done well and was pretty proud of him. Of course, he was anxious to show off. Then he saw a classmate who had obviously topped them all and his jaw dropped. He had to get the inside story. The conversation went something like this:
“Hey Joe, how’s it going?”
“I’m doing all right. You?”
“Fine, fine, but not as good as you from what I can see.”
“Yeah, I kinda stumbled onto something and it made me rich.”
“What was that? I mean, I hate to say it, but you were voted the guy most likely to be collecting garbage…”
“Yeah, well, I started making this product for two dollars that I could sell for five. It’s amazing how much money you can make on a three percent profit.”
My point? In the story the fellow who wasn’t very bright – not even smart enough to calculate what his profit margin was – made a fortune by producing a product and selling it.
It’s not rocket science folks. And, yes, even the simplest product is a bit more complex than this but does it HAVE to be hard? No.
Lately, I’ve been pounding on one topic – your sales process – and one point in that process – the one step in that process where you need to focus:
Get the people coming to your place of business to raise their hands.
I don’t care if you are online or offline. Take names. Take email addresses. Take numbers. Start a relationship. It doesn’t matter if they are buying today. Heck, it doesn’t even matter if they NEVER buy. Why? Because they know people. And if you treat them well, chances are they’ll remember you and maybe send someone your way.
The gloves are coming off. The gauntlet is tossed. I challenge you to do something today to get more hands in the air.
Let me know what action you are taking – leave a comment – contact me directly – whatever. If you don’t want your comment made public, just say so.
If you need help, feel free to ask.
God bless,
Andy
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May 5th, 2009 — Tactical Copywriting
Hi,
For those of you who saw the video embedded in my last post – maybe you caught this. Maybe not.
One of Google’s top analytics experts states the average conversion rate for US web pages is 1-2%. Yeah. So what? Big deal. Well, actually it IS a big deal.
One of the questions I see most often is “What’s a good conversion rate?”. What these business folks are really asking is “Am I selling as much as I should be?” Are you? Consider this…
Paul Hancox in his book The Secrets of a Ten Percent Conversion Rate, says direct salespeople often achieve conversion rates of 20-40%. Do you think those salespeople are satisfied? Even those who consistently converted 40%? So why should you be satisfied with 2% or even 5%? You shouldn’t – pure and simple. So how do you improve upon your now totally unacceptable sales performance? Before I answer that I have a confession to make.
I’ve been an Idiot.
Yes, that IS with a capitol “I”. Though much of this not new to me – as a matter of fact I’m a “natural anti-salesman” – I, too, got tangled up in the “hard sales copy craze”. I bought and read 10% Conversion over a year ago. I bought and read Paul Hancox’s previous book “Small Changes, Big Profits” a couple of years before that. On top of all that, I’ve long billed myself as more of a marketer than a salesperson. What’s the difference?
As I usually say, a salesperson pitches until they make a sale or get thrown out. A marketer finds a need and fills it.
While this is simplified, you get the idea. So whats my point?
Recently I read a report that brought all this together and finally woke me up to the truth about sales and selling. I’ve been having a miserable run at copywriting lately only to find out what should have been so obvious…
Copywriting doesn’t “work” anymore!
Or rather, it’s getting harder and harder to make a living if you model yourself after the “carnival hawker”. It’s time for a better approach. It’s time for
Process Selling
What is process selling? Simply put it’s recognizing sales is a process and changing your approach to your prospects accordingly. I’ll delve into this more and more in the coming months… and then some.
Meanwhile, I’ve got a report I’d like to give you that explains all this very well. It’s called “Why Johnny Can’t Sell” by Paul Myers. Don’t let the fact that it doesn’t cost you a cent fool you – it’s one of the best reports you’ll ever read.
I’m not even collecting email addresses to give you this. My subscribers may cry foul because I usually reserve the best stuff for them alone. But this is too important to mess around. If you sell anything, you need this.
Right now the credibility for marketers – especially online marketers – is at an all time low. The sooner business moves way from “hypesterizing” and towards a more customer-focused, problem-solving win-win style of true marketing, the better things will get for all of us.
‘Nough said – get your copy of “Why Johnny Can’t Sell” here.
There is just one thing I’d like in return, if you would – please come back and let me know by adding a comment to this post.
God bless,
Andy
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