Eight Ways To Make Direct Marketing Copy Work Harder

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Craft a powerful message that will present your products in the best possible light.

In direct marketing campaigns designed to provoke a response of some kind, creativity often takes a back seat to other factors. In the 60-20-20 rule (or any of its countless variations), audience is essential, offer is everything, and creativity is merely compulsory.

Nevertheless, copy remains king. Here’s why: Without good copy, your perfectly-targeted audience might never understand that wonderful offer of yours or, even if they’re suitably impressed, might not summon the energy to do anything about it. So whether you’re penning an e-blast yourself, or reviewing your agency’s draft of an upcoming self-mailer, it pays to know the difference between highly effective copy — the kind that commands high response rates — and the kind that just speeds your campaigns journey to the recycle bin.

Nailed your lists? Got an irresistible offer? Great. Here are eight ways to make sure the copy does its job, too:

1. MAKE YOUR COPY APPROACHABLE

Even great copy won’t work if people don’t read it. Present everything in digestible, “bite-size” chunks:

  • Split up any paragraph longer than three lines.
  • Present key selling concepts in a series of bullets.
  • Use ellipses ( ) both within sentences and at the end of serial bullets to keep the readers eye moving ...
  • Sprinkle the page (or screen) with subheads (preferably bold or underlined, unless you’re working in text-only e-mail).
  • Add more bold and underline treatments. For every important idea. Remember, some readers skim only the big-and-bold; others might decide to read more, but only if these highly visible ideas draw them in.

Ultimately, your page or screen should be at least 45% white space (and more is almost always better). Does this mean you’ll spend more on paper? Maybe, but the increased response rates will more than cover any additional costs. Worried about forcing online readers to scroll? As long as a call to action and hyperlink are visible at all times, physical copy length wont hurt you. It’s the readability that counts.

2. PRESENT THE CALL TO ACTION EARLY, AND OFTEN

Most audience members won’t read your entire piece; and many skim or skip around. It’s critical to tell them what to do as early as possible (in a letter or e-mail package, no later than the third paragraph). Briefly describe the offer, and then tell readers to respond and how to do so.

After that first call to action, give readers a few more reasons to respond; then tell them again (and tell them how again). If your copy is long (multiple pages or screens), always keep a call to action in sight. And because many readers look first at a letter’s opening and close, always use the P.S. to tell readers precisely what to do.

3. LEAD WITH BENEFITS

Let’s assume you’re already sold on the value of communicating benefits over features. In direct response copy, there’s an important trick that has to do with the way people skim these pieces. In nearly every phrase or sentence, express a benefit of responding to or using your product or service and write that benefit first.

Wrong: “Graphical, point-and-click user interface saves hours of valuable time.” (Feature mentioned first)
Right: “Save valuable hours on a wide range of tasks, thanks to an easy-to-use, point-and-click interface.” (Benefit mentioned first)

4. SELL THE OFFER, NOT THE PRODUCT

Whatever your campaign offers the target audience — a free information packet, an instructive Web seminar, a gift for visiting a trade show booth, etc. — concentrate on selling the benefits of responding and receiving the offer. Why? Because the goal of your campaign is getting the person to respond, period.

Selling the product might or might not be achievable (or even advisable) in the space your piece allows; especially if it’s a big-ticket item. If you can just get someone interested enough to respond to the offer, you can then leave the real selling to your sales force. Plus you can always include your product brochure in that free info pack.

Wrong: “Send for your free packet and discover the powerful benefits of the Acme Integrated Infrastructure Miracle Suite.” (Selling the product)
Right: “Send for your free packet and learn how companies like yours are already trimming costs, boosting morale, and earning higher test scores for their kids.” (Selling the offer)

5. BECOME THE HELPFUL COLLEAGUE YOUR READER HAS BEEN LOOKING FOR

Most people like to take positive action, but many need encouragement. Everything about your copy should provide this helping hand. Here are some ways to find the right voice:

Use second person (“you”) language. Don’t talk about yourself, your company, or its products — talk to the reader, about the reader.

Wrong: “Our matchless products and services can help you increase productivity “(talking about you and your products)
Right: “You’ll eliminate hours of tedious labor every week, just by… “(Talking about the reader, and benefits to the reader)

Keep it action oriented. Repeatedly describe the reader taking action (“Call today and find out how “). Communicate concepts and benefits in active terms.

Wrong: “These tools can really improve your bottom line “(this is about your tools)
Right: “You can boost revenues and slash costs with these tools “(this is about the reader)

Stick to the active voice: it’s easier to read and works to stimulate the kind of action you like: responses to your offer.

Wrong: “Our product is used in more than 300 companies in 20 countries.” (The passive voice invites drowsiness)
Right: “Call center managers are already using the Acme Solution to crank up productivity in more than 300 companies worldwide.” (Active voice, plus action-oriented words)

6. USE THE SHAMPOO FORMULA

It’s a bit more complex than lather, rinse, and repeat. But it’s a proven winner in direct mail letters, brochures, broadcast e-mail messages — even on splash pages for e-newsletter ad and banner campaigns. Structure your copy with this formula and you’ll reel in the widest possible range of respondents:

  • Acknowledge pain or opportunity
  • Offer benefit (ease pain, gain opportunity)
  • Call for action
  • Offer description and benefit(s)
  • Call to action (Note: repeat steps D and E until you’re out of compelling benefits or space)
  • Mention product, brief benefits
  • Add a “sweetener” (a reason to respond now, such as a giveaway or limited-time discount)
  • Summarize benefits of responding (keep it punchy)
  • Restate call to action

7. MAKE EVERY WORD COUNT -- BUT DON’T COUNT WORDS

In direct marketing we can’t afford to waste words, but we shouldn’t unnecessarily withhold them, either. Stop writing when you’ve exhausted all the most compelling reasons to respond without being repetitive -- and no earlier.

If you hold back a few key benefits just to satisfy someone’s idea of ideal copy length, you risk losing the reader who might have been on the fence and needed just a little more convincing.

8. TAKE THE SKIMMER TEST

Finally, go back to the top and read only the headlines, subheads, and underlined or bolded phrases. These words alone should tell your story. If they don’t, adjust as necessary.

CONCLUSION

We already admitted that the audience, lists, media, and offer make the greatest impact on response. So why bother with all of this? The best reason: money. You’ll spend a sizeable chunk on media, design, and production. Why wouldn’t you want to maximize the return on your investment?

Patricia A.Czech can be reached at Ultimate Insurance Resource Inc., 8353 Sagebrush Road, North Platte, NE 69101, Phone (308) 532-5577, e-mail [email protected],
Web site http://www.UltimateInsuranceResource.com.
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