Salesmanship, Repetition and Direct Mail
by Ernest W. Nicastro
In a classic business-to-business print ad from the late 50’s for
McGraw-Hill Magazines an imposing looking executive sits in his chair. He
has both feet planted firmly on the ground, a scowl on his face. His hands
are folded together in front of him and his elbows rest on the chair; he
leans ever so slightly forward. To his right run these eight lines of
copy:
- “I don’t know who you are.
- I don’t know your company.
- I don’t know your company’s product.
- I don’t know what your company stands for.
- I don’t know your company’s customers.
- I don’t know your company’s record.
- I don’t know your company’s reputation.
- Now – what was it you wanted to sell me?”
Across the bottom, a single line of copy drives home the selling
proposition:
- “MORAL: Sales start before your
salesman calls – with business publication advertising.”
This ad amplifies and expands on what many, including David Ogilvy,
consider to be the single best definition of advertising ever given.
“Advertising,” said copywriter John E. Kennedy nearly eighty years ago,
“is salesmanship in print.”
Salesmanship and Repetition
Any salesperson worth his or her commission check will tell you that
landing worthwhile new business takes a repeated and concerted effort –
and lots of contact with the decision-maker. This is all the more true
with salesmanship in print (or across the airwaves, phone lines and other
forms of modern communication.).
Of course, repetition is fundamental to the success of any advertising
program. The marketplace proves out this fact, as does scientific
research. Several years ago a group of researchers at Harvard University
were asked, “How many times must a prospect see a marketing message to
take them from a state of total apathy to purchasing readiness?” After a
year-long study the researchers responded with a definitive answer: Nine
times.
Important note: Do not assume that your prospects will see, hear
or otherwise experience your advertising every time you expose them to it.
Ample evidence exists that in the din, noise and clutter of today’s
over-communicated world…your prospects will miss or ignore your marketing
message 2 out of every 3 times you communicate it.
That’s why, in print advertising, if you have the budget to run either
6 full-page ads or 12 half-page ads it’s almost always better to go for
the 12 exposures. Another approach is to run a full-page ad in the
publication’s biggest, most popular issue(s) and smaller size ads in other
months.
Cost-effective Ways to Use Direct Mail to Repeatedly Communicate
Your Marketing Message to Your Prospects
Two of direct mail’s biggest benefits are:
- Its pinpoint targeting ability and
- Its ability to deliver a full and complete sales presentation of any
length.
Correspondingly, this makes direct mail a highly effective way to
repeatedly expose your prospect to your salesmanship…and positively
influence his or her decision. That said, I’d like to outline two direct
mail marketing strategies (as opposed to single-shot mailing ideas) that
virtually any business can put to work to achieve better, more profitable
results.
1. Repeatedly mail the same letter or direct mail package to the
same people – If your sales letter or direct mail package is
generating an acceptable number of orders or leads don’t hesitate to mail
it again and again to the same list. The basic premise for recommending
this strategy can best be summed up in five words: “People quickly
forget,” and, “things change.”
Consider this. The average person is exposed to well over 500 sales,
marketing, and advertising messages every day. And the vast majority of
these messages do not even so much as register a blip on the mental radar
screen. Of the handful that do register, most are forgotten within 2
weeks.
Another reason this strategy works is…change. Your prospects’ lives are
constantly evolving. For example, you’re an insurance agent mailing to a
list of new homeowners. Three months ago Mr. and Mrs. Jankowski had all
the life insurance they needed. So they tossed your envelope without even
opening it. But three weeks ago Mrs. Jankowski found out she’s pregnant –
with twins. Based on this life-changing event, it’s a good bet they’ll be
a bit more receptive to your next mailing.
Many highly successful direct marketing organizations such as Dow Jones
& Co. and Geico Corporation routinely practice this strategy of repeatedly
mailing the same message to the same people. Speaking from my own
experience, I know that every year I get several identical mailings from
the Wall Street Journal, and likewise Geico. Chances are, you do too.
(One prominent example of a company whose repeated mailings of the same
“package” helped make it a huge success is – AOL. Granted, they’re
struggling now, but the last time I checked they still had a market cap of
nearly $47 billion.)
How frequently should you do your mailings? Quarterly, is probably a
good idea for starters. But, as with everything else, test to determine
the optimum frequency.
2. Send a series of mailings to the same people – To quote
consultant Richard Brock, “Sales is a process of communication, not an
event.” That’s why, especially if your sales process involves a long lead
time, it’s a smart move to plan and budget for a series of mailings to the
decision-maker and key decision-influencers.
Particularly in business-to-business direct marketing and “big-ticket”
consumer purchases…a follow-up mailing program to prospects gained through
your lead-generation efforts…will help you convert a substantially higher
number of sales.
Before starting a program like this, give careful thought to what you
want to say and how you want your campaign to unfold. For example:
- In your first letter highlight the 3 biggest benefits of your
product or service.
- In letter 2 take just one of these benefits and amplify and expand
on it; focus the majority of your copy on this one benefit.
- In letter 3 take another key benefit and do the same.
- And so on.
Let’s say, for instance, you market a software package that sells for
$10,000 but the payback time for your product is typically six months. One
of your follow-up letters would focus exclusively on this benefit. You’d
give your prospect lots of details and explain how your product is able to
generate such a fast payback. Plus, you’d include several very credible
testimonials. And the offer in your letter would be an 8-page Case
Study…detailing exactly how a current user achieved payback in half the
normal time…and is now enjoying a highly profitable return on investment.
And don’t stop with just four letters. Depending on your sales cycle
you may want to send six letters, four post cards and 3 cover letters
attached to product reviews or magazine articles. In every mailing, always
give a reason and a method for responding. Always ask for some kind of
action.
When it comes to large-ticket, long lead time sales…it really is a
process of communication. And the program I’ve just outlined is an ideal
way to carry out the communication process while gaining top of mind
awareness and building relationships that lead to increased sales.
A somewhat different approach is to –
Mail a series of post cards – For example, copywriter Rein Nomm
of Rein Nomm & Associates (www.nomm.com) created a series of five post
cards for an environmental engineering firm. Here’s a brief synopsis of
how the program unfolded:
Card One – A full color photograph shows a thickly gloved hand
moving a forlorn looking chess piece (queen, I believe). The headline
reads “Wasted Move?” And the sub-head states, “With waste, a wrong move
can be costly.” The body copy goes on to, among other things, tout the
benefits of the environmental firm’s Corrective Action Group and its waste
assessment and remediation services.
Card Two – This time the post card shows heated action from a
little league baseball game. It’s a close call at home plate and the ump
is giving the “you’re out” sign. The headline reads, “Are The Calls Going
Against You?,” with the body copy singing the benefits of working with the
firm’s Industrial Compliance Group.
The post cards continue in this vein until we get to card number five,
the last in the series. This time the photograph is of a man-eating, great
white shark. Its giant head is breaching the water and its menacing jaws
are open wide, revealing an even more menacing set of teeth. The headline?
“FISH OR CUT BAIT!”
The cards were mailed to prospects and former clients at the rate of
one every 10 days over a period of 2 months. And the campaign’s compacted
and concentrated series of informative contacts…generated substantial
top-of-mind awareness and, most importantly, several new projects.
The bottom line, as any successful salesperson knows, is this: You've
got to stay in front of your prospect through repeated contacts – whether
that's in the mail, by phone, in person or, as is most likely, a
combination of activities. (Not just any contact, mind you, but
meaningful, informative, educational, persuasive contacts that address the
issues and concerns of the crotchety executive in our ad.) And direct mail
– salesmanship in print – is one of the most effective, and profitable
tools any business has at its disposal with which to achieve this repeated
contact.
Ernest Nicastro is a Principal with Positive Response, a
direct response copywriting, advertising, public relations and marketing
consulting company. Positive Response specializes in response-producing copy and
strategy for sales letters, ads, brochures, web-sites, press releases and
lead-generation programs. For more information on Ernest Nicastro or Positive
Response call 614-747-2256,e-mail
ENicastro@positiveresponse.com
or visit
www.positiveresponse.com.
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