7 Top Tips for Writing Sales Letters that Work
>> Saturday, July 08, 2006
Make a sales letter effective and you will be rewarded. If your sales letter is ineffective, you'll find you might be leaving smoney on the table. Here are 7 top tips to make the most of your salesmen-in-print.
1. Analyze other people's sales letters.
If you receive a sales letter and you are tempted to buy file it away. When you next have to write a sales letter get the file out and look for inspiration. For each retained sales letter examine the wording, the layout, the offer and how it is presented. You can even make notes on the sales letters that did not persuade you to buy. Look at what they do wrong and How could improve that sales letter. It will only help you become that much better.
2. Include testimonials in the letter.
Testimonials are your best source for success. Comments from official sources outside your company or from satisfied customers will greatly add to the proof your prospect needs to become interested in your product or service.
3. Include the Order Request Form in the Sales Letter.
One often-neglected part of the sales letter is the order or request form at the end of the letter. Make it clear, attractive and easy to complete. If possible restate the offer on the form so that the customer is in no doubt about what he is ordering.
4. Show your Contact Information Visibly.
Make it easy for the prospect to contact you. Always Include a contact address, email, and fax number as well as a contact phone number usually at the bottom of your sales pitch.
5. Don't forget to make a PS.
When they first see a sales page many people scan the headline, then go to the bottom of the page to read the PS. This is because the PS often summarizes the offer. Make sure your PS does this. If you feel you need more than one PS to fully give the benefits you are offering use three, not two. How do marketers know one or three P.S.'s work better than two? Testing.
6. Test Before You Try.
If possible test everything in your sales letter. A change to your offer, the price, the typeface or how a customer is encouraged to respond can each make a difference to your response rates. If you do not have the time or resources to test everything then at least test different headlines. A change in headline can double the response or better.
7. Analyze Your Results.
After the sales page has been before your prospects for a while take some time to analyze the results. How many sales did you make? When you sat down to write the letter you should have had a clear outcome in mind. Take a look at the response to the sales letter. Did you get the outcome you wanted? If you did not, why was that? If you find your sales letter cannot sell your product or service then either it is too complicated for your customers to understand or you have not expressed the benefits well enough.
All of these tips can only make you that much better as a person and a step towards reaching your goals, and definitely a millionaire mind idea.