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, a sales letter done right gives you a salesman that does the job around the clock and never asks for time and a half. You can tell good advertising copy because it is copy that creates money for your business. Too bad most business owners never employ a sales letter 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.

You’ll know the sales letters because they are usually full or half page, but not always. They frequently offer a free report if you contact them. Very often the focus is on the product or service and there is almost no mention of a company name. Trutfhfully, the big corporation advertisers you see during the final episode of Seinfeld or whatever, don’t have a clue about sales letters or how to use them.

How do you find really good sales copy? It finds you actually. It stands out and sucks you in and makes you interested enough to maybe spend money on the product offered.. Mark the page in the magazine and immediately go get a couple of recent back issues. Browse those for the same or similar ad. A repeat means the ad is probably successful. The more back issues it appears in, the better indicator of being successful.

The strategy of the big boys who throw their money around on the expensive ads is mass marketing to a mass market based on branding using singing polar bears and football playing frogs or whatever. It is highly likely that they have no idea of the ultimate effect of the millions spent. That’s fine, they have that luxury in many cases. For the purposes of bringing your product or service to everyday people with choices, you need to bring them benefit and make it real clear up front what that benefit is.

Rule #2 is to convey a unique benefit to your customer. The question to answer is: “Why should I be doing business with you and not others offering the same product or service?” What can you do for them? The ultimate question.

It has been written many times over about the power that a simple USP (unique selling proposition) can have for a business. Tom Monaghan, founder of Domino’s pizza took a fledgling pizza joint in a college town (he lived in the back room at the beginning) by carving out special turf in the brutal market of pizza with: “Fresh Hot Pizza delivered in 30 Minutes or Less, Guaranteed”.

That simple USP frankly brought the big boys to their knees and had them playing catch up.

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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