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Post Cards: Improving Readership and Response

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

Let’s see, where were we…  oh yes, you were bitching, er… complaining that your direct mail post card wasn’t large enough to sell your products, and I said you’re right – it isn’t.   The ONLY job of your post card is to make the reader pick up the phone and call YOU.  Then, YOU sell your products. 

To do that, I suggested you offer something FREE.  You remember all that – or, were you sleeping like the rest of my students?  Or whatever they’re doing when they have their hands in their laps and there is the gentle glow of a cell phone coming from under the desk.  Texting perhaps?  Playing Tetris?

Rule 14. Offer something FREE

OK, so a FREE CAR is good – everyone would call! But wait… it’s expensive.  Damn, I knew there was a reason we didn’t use that.  A FREE Mont Blanc pen is nice – but wait, heck that’s expensive, too.  I mean, not like a car, but still it’s pretty pricey when you’re sending out a few thousand direct mail post cards.  Or a few hundred thousand post cards.

Rule 15. Offer something FREE that’s not so expensive.

Hummm… if there was only something that we could pique the reader’s interest in so keenly, and drive him to the phone.  If there were just something, anything, we could describe in one or two lines, so that we made the free offer the reader would want it, need it so badly that if he threw out the post card, he’d wake up in the middle of the night and come running down to get the card out of the trash… and respond.

Oh, if there were only some bit of information that we had, a small piece of the puzzle, some crucial information that he needed so badly that he would call and ask for it; critical information that… what?  Wait.  Wait just a darn minute here.  Information?  Did I say “Information?” “Information the reader needs?”  That’s it!  Information the reader needs.  Information he needs badly!  By Jove, I think we’ve got it! 

Rule 16.  Offer Free Information

We’ll offer FREE information.  We’ll offer an informational booklet!  A FREE informational booklet.  They’ll call for that, hummmm…  if we can just make it sound useful and incredibly interesting.  Maybe there’s a way…

Rule 17. Offer a FREE informational booklet with a catchy title.

Maybe if you write a catchy title —— something your clients really, really want… and need.  A title so compelling they’d gladly dive in the trash can to recover if they inadvertently tossed it out earlier.  More than that…  Something they’d drive across town to find out! 

Maybe… Information they’d want so badly they’d swim across the English Channel to get!  Information so valuable they’d take my wife… and keep her.  OK, never mind that.  This last idea was asking just a little too much from anyone.

But certainly offering information readers need and want would generate a phone call. 

So, settled!  Offer information.  Information about how readers can easily resolve their wants; and satisfy their needs, if they just call now.  It’s a good thing your products and services can do exactly that.  If only we could figure out – how to make them pick up the phone and call…

But wait – How about offering a FREE booklet that has valuable information specific to the needs of your market? Yes! 

Yes, with “FREE” written in all capital letters, like this: FREE!  Because would you rather have a free booklet, or a FREE booklet.  See what I mean.  Maybe offering a FREE booklet with a title that has a number of ways readers can solve their most pressing problems? 

“How To Solve your 9 Biggest Headaches concerning______.”  Excellent!  How about “FREE BOOKLET shows you 9 ways to solve your______!”  Yes, even better! Just fill in the blank part yourself—with exactly what your customers are looking for, what they need, or how to resolve their areas of pain. 

Solve a specific problem: “9 Ways to cut your employee payroll without layoffs!” Yes! “6 Ways to increase your profit in a down economy!” Yes! “12 Different Ways to Find a Leak in your Roof!” YES! “7 Things to Check when your Car won’t Start… and 5 ways to Get it Started!”  Yes, yes, and yes!

Don’t forget to tell readers exactly what you want them to do:  “Just Call Now and get your FREE booklet!”

Booklets are cheap to produce, easy to change, light to ship and make excellent giveaways that your customers will hold onto for years if you provide valuable information.  And they’ll call if you can create the booklet title on target by offering the specific information your direct response market of readers really want.

Rule 18: It’s the TITLE of the booklet that makes it valuable.

The better the title, the better the response. A very simple formula. A FREE booklet with an irresistible title makes readers call.

It’s not really the booklet itself – just the title.  They don’t see the booklet until much later, way after they’ve called – so frankly, the booklet doesn’t need to be that great.  People call just because of the title.  So the title needs to be exceptional. 

When readers call, the post card worked.  The booklet title made readers pick up the phone. The better the title, the more phone calls you get.  The more phone calls you get, the better your direct mail post card worked.  And the more opportunities YOU have to sell your products or services.  The success of your post card is measured by how many readers call.  Simple formula, isn’t it? 

And here is a great formula for creating the best headline to increase your success:

Rule 100-to-one, revisited.

The best way to create a title for your FREE informational booklet?  Yep… Same way you came up with your headline, and your subheadlines:  The 100 to 1 rule:  Write 100 titles, go back and pick out your best one. (Remember we struck-up a deal in the first article of this series – you were going to send me 5 bucks each time you used this?)  The 100 to 1 Rule is taken from the book written by Jeffrey Dobkin, “Uncommon Marketing Techniques.”  It’s the best way to create the most irresistible booklet title. And yes, it works. 

7 Point Article Summary

1. Get your post card through the first critical 2-second round of Instant Readership: by having a super-compelling headline, tightly written sub-headlines and outstanding graphics. 
2. Get the post card objective right: The objective of the direct mail post card is NOT to sell your product or service, it’s to generate a phone call.     
3. Make the phone ring by offering something for free.  I mean for FREE (all capitals)!
4. FREE informational booklets work really well. 
5. The booklet TITLE drives the response: the number and quality of calls. The title owns 100% of the responsibility of getting the reader to the phone to make the call. The better the title = the more calls. 
6. When the phone rings, the post card worked. It did everything  it was supposed to do: make your phone ring.
7. Finally, when the phone rings, YOU sell your product or service.

Abstract
Post card marketing and Instant Readership: The better your graphics and the better your headline, the more people will read your post card.  The more readers, the more opportunities you have to offer something for FREE. Offering a FREE informational booklet is one of the best, lowest-cost ways to drive maximum phone calls. 

The TITLE of your booklet determines the response.  The better the booklet title, the more calls you receive.  The more calls you receive, the better your direct mail post card has worked.  The success of your direct mail post card is determined by the number of your phone calls.  The more phone calls, the more opportunities you’ll have to sell your products and services.  Any questions?

Jeff Dobkin will now take your questions.

This is the third and final installment of the direct marketing article series on “Glance Readership,” on creating highly responsive direct mail post cards.  It was written by Jeffrey Dobkin to help you improve your direct mail response.  

Jeff Dobkin will now take your questions.

Need More Business? Why struggle: If you’d like to easily get more customers and kick up the response you get from any direct mail program, visit [Jeffrey Dobkin’s website] at www.dobkin.com and read more FREE articles — learn other fast and easy ways to make your direct marketing more effective – and yet lower your cost. Read more FREE articles [Direct Marketing Articles] at [http://www.articlesbase.com/marketing-tips-articles/post-cards-improving-readership-and-response-1647118.html

The Basics in Business Card Etiquette

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

One thing you should not do with your business cards is to leave them sitting in the box that they came in when they are already delivered in your door. The objective of having them printed is to hand them out as soon as possible.

In fact, the faster you send them out, the better. Notwithstanding the fact if they were printed by an online business card printing company or a traditional one

Here are ideas on how you can get other people to see them:

1- Keep them nearby. Whether you put them in your pocket, your bag, your briefcase, and wallet or even on your desk, the purpose of the exercise is to keep them near you that every time there is an opportunity for you to network, you will be able to hand one out. Remember that every place and every person is a chance for you to introduce yourself, so never leave home without them.

2- Present a stylish and professional card. Always keep your cards in holders that would not be able to bend them. When you hand them out, it would be to your benefit if you do not give garbled and bent ones just because you were not in the right mind to buy a good holder. In addition, if you have your contact information change, be sure to have new ones printed right away.

3- Place them where they can be seen always. Think bulletin boards, church announcement boards, supermarket panels, in your shop, in the restaurant, in other people’s stores – the idea is to have your target clients to get as many of your business cards as possible.

4- Include them in all the bills and letters you have to send out. You will never know who will open your envelope. It would be another opportunity for you to network yourself and your business.

5- Use the back of your cards to jot down notes. Do not put your ideas on table napkins or scraps of paper. Writing down notes about the person you are talking to makes them feel important, hence, providing them a reason to keep it.

6- Give your target audience a reason to keep what you handed out. Put a discount, print a coupon, or write a calendar of activities at the back part.

One business etiquette that you have to remember though is to never force your cards to anyone. Make sure that you do it appropriately. Present them when the time is right and be sure to ask for their business cards as well when you are networking or meeting prospects.

Learn about the developments in online business card printing or business card printing industry.

Kaye Z. Marks is an avid writer and follower of the developments in online printing that help businesses in their marketing and advertising campaigns.

Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/marketing-tips-articles/the-basics-in-business-card-etiquette-1394566.html

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