Issue 289 - How Empty Words Can
Cripple Your Sales Copy
By Ernest Nicastro, Positive Response
Nothing will hold the attention of your reader and
advance your selling proposition as well as specific and meaningful benefit-oriented
copy.
In his keynotes and recordings, world-class motivational speaker and sales trainer
Zig Ziglar often talks about the importance of having meaningful, specific goals.
And he'll drive home his point with the rhetorical question, "What would
you rather be in life, a meaningful specific or a wandering generality?"
As marketers, if we want our sales copy to produce profitable results we would
do well to heed Zig's admonition. Because nothing will hold the attention of
your reader and advance your selling proposition as well as specific and meaningful
benefit-oriented copy. But many sales letters and emails I receive show little
regard for this fact.
For example, I recently received a sales letter from a commercial real estate
broker. Here are the opening few paragraphs:
Few decisions are as important to your company's future success as where
you choose to locate your company and under what parameters.
Fewer decisions still are as difficult to make and feel secure that you made
the right choice. And yet few you will make can be made with as much confidence
as relocation with the help of BKP Commercial Tenant Advisory Services. That
is because with BKP as your exclusive representative, you can be assured you
are not only seeing all your options, you are entering into the most economically
favorable transaction.
After salaries and wages, rent typically is your second largest cost of doing
business...
Let's overlook the overuse of the word "few" and the fact that
the opening lacks any real attention-grabbling power. That said, what do you
notice about the second paragraph? If your answer is, "It doesn't offer
up any meaningful specifics to justify its claim," give yourself an "A." In
fact, nothing in this paragraph or the entire letter explains or even hints at
how it is... that when I work with BKP I can be assured that I'm seeing all
my options.
Does BKP have a national up-to-the-minute database of available space that can
be queried and searched by a multitude of parameters? If so, they should tell
me. Are they part of a nationwide network with access to up-to-the-minute lease
rates in all 50 states across 873 local markets? If so, they should tell me.
Simply put, BKP should give me meaningful specifics instead of generalities and
unsubstantiated claims.
Quality, Service, Value, Etc: Meaningless Without
Specificity.
Want to set your sales copy and your business apart from the overwhelming
majority of organizations you're competing against? Here's a simple but
powerful strategy you can start implementing today:
Specify exactly what you mean when you use such words and phrases as quality,
quality services, customer-service-oriented, we put the customer first, value, etc.
These words and phrases - in and of themselves - are meaningless. Yes, they sound
good. Yes, they look good on your stationery and in your email and on your web
site. But the sales impact of using them, without defining and detailing what
you mean, is nil. Here's an example of exactly what I mean, taken directly from
this company's home page.
Our Commitment To Quality
- · Quality Training
Quality
Tools
Quality Lighting Systems that
enable you to see the "entire dent"
Quality Staff to Support
You
Quality Training Facilities
Quality Instructors to Educate
You
Quality PERIOD!!!
That is exactly what The Ding King Training Institute will provide you with -
Quality!
There you have it. We know exactly what they mean by quality. They mean, uh,
Quality PERIOD!!!
(Continued Below)
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This was a great strategy with good direction on how to implement a cold calling
plan that was proven to work. The hands on calling you did to show by example
and the calling I did which led to a meeting, plus plenty of new contact
information.
Brian Z., Sr. Account Exec.
I have learned a new way to systematically work through an account using the
same process every time. This will allow me to be much more efficient.
I liked that Ron got on the phone to show how it’s done, and that I got
to do live calls with the help of Ron.
Dan S., Internal Sales Rep.
Strategies for getting through to decision makers, and getting information that
will help with the meeting, and eventually, the sale. The love cold calling made
by both Ron and the participants. It helps to see/hear first hand and then
to analyze the results and actions.
James H., Internal Sales Rep.
Ron’s techniques and processes actually work as demonstrated. Many useful
tips and tricks were documented in the hand outs to take away and use successfully
in my office.
Rick K., Sales Rep
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(Continued from Above)
Words That Made A Difference
OK. I couldn't resist having a little fun. But the flip side is
that good things can happen when you translate terms like quality and value
into specific, benefit-oriented, "reasons-why" copy. For instance,
in his book, My Life In Advertising, Claude Hopkins tells of the
time when his agency landed the Schlitz Beer account:
"All brewers at that time were crying Pure. They put the word Pure in large
letters. Then they took double pages to put it in larger letters. The claim made
about as much impression on people as water makes on a duck." (Is there
any business today that doesn't claim to have a quality product or service? Yet
most of them fail to define what they mean by quality. Substitute the word quality
for pure and the situation is nearly identical.)
So what did Hopkins do? He toured the Schlitz brewery and witnessed the beer-making
process. Specifically, he observed the many detailed steps that went into making
sure the beer was pure.
In My Life In Advertising he recounts what happened next:
I came back to the office amazed. I said, "Why don't you tell people
these things? Why do you merely try to cry louder than others that your beer
is pure? Why don't you tell the reasons?"
"'Why?" they said. "The processes we use are just the same as
others use. No one can make good beer without them."
"'But," I replied, "others have never told this story. It amazes
everyone who goes through your brewery. It will startle everyone in print."
So I... told a story which had never been told. I gave purity a meaning.
Schlitz jumped from fifth place to neck-and-neck with first place in a very few
months.
By the way, Budweiser had a campaign a few years back that reminded me of this
story. It was the "born-on date" campaign. I thought at the time, "I'm
sure every brewer could make that claim if they wanted." But Budweiser made
it a point to - and anyone else who used this approach after them would only
look like a copycat. Budweiser, of course, is the leading beer brand in the United
States.
Now if you're thinking, "That's well and good, but I'm not a brewery and
my target market isn't 'Joe Six-pack,'" I understand. The lesson herein
though is still applicable no matter what it is you're marketing and selling.
And that lesson can be summed up in two words: Specifics sell.
So when you write sales copy, one of the key questions should be:
"What meaningful details are there - about our consulting process, our project
management, our product, our service, our manufacturing process, our customer
service, our people, our corporate culture etc. - that we can articulate that
will resonate with our target market and differentiate us from our competitors?"
For example, I once did a copywriting project for a printing company. Early on,
I noticed that every time I called them the phone was always quickly answered
by a person - as opposed to an automated electronic attendant.
I commented favorably on this to their Marketing V.P. and this is what she said: "Oh
that's company policy. A live person always answers the phone, and we answer
it by the fourth ring." As you would expect, I made it a point to include
that fact in the marketing materials I created for them.
2007: Amica Insurance Effectively Defines And Sells Value And Customer
Service
More recently, I received an excellent sales letter from Amica. It seems
that Amica wants to give me a quote on my car insurance, and I'm going to take
them up on their offer. They tell me that, when it comes to car insurance, I
have options:
"You can choose to get great coverage and exceptional service at a low price
- for a better all around value."
Then a few lines later they define what they mean by value.
"'Value is a combination of what you get, what you pay, and how you're treated."
Early on in the letter they talk about how they've been "making quite a
name for ourselves by employing a simple, but often-forgotten principle of good
business: putting the customer first."
A couple of short paragraphs after that they offer up proof of that claim by
writing,
"...our commitment to superior service has earned us a prestigious distinction.
J.D. Power and Associates has rated Amica 'Highest in Customer Satisfaction Among
National Auto Insurers' for seven years in a row.'"
Objective, third-party substantiation of their claim. From a well-known, well-respected
source. Excellent!
Then, for good measure, they include several testimonials from satisfied customers.
This is a very effective letter. In my book it beats a suave, talking lizard
hands down. I mean, I love listening to that English accent of his, but I'm going
to get a quote from Amica.
Once again, as with Schlitz, this example is also from a business to consumer
marketer. Nevertheless, the points highlighted are every bit as relevant for
a B-to-B marketer. If you want your sales copy to have impact, you need to include,
impactful, meaningful details.
Now, as I wrap up this article, I'd like to leave you with another quote by Zig
Ziglar: "Every choice you make has an end result."
And so it is with your sales copy. Every word, phrase, sentence, paragraph and
page has an end result. For the most profitable end result, forego generalities
and infuse your copy with lots of meaningful, detailed, benefit-oriented, response-producing
specifics. Do this consistently and - to quote Zig one final time: "I'll
see you at the top!"
Ernest Nicastro, a direct marketing consultant, copywriter and
lead-generation specialist, heads up Positive Response, an award-winning marketing
firm specializing in B-to-B marketing and lead-generation. For your FREE copy
of the Positive Response Special Report, 77 Sure-Fire Marketing Tips Guaranteed
To Boost Results, email Ernest (subject line Tips) at enicastro@positiveresponse.com or,
contact him by phone at 614.747.2256. For more information visit www.positiveresponse.com
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