Final Lessons Learned from One of the World’s Highest-Paid Copywriters

This is the final installment of a three-part series on how to translate advice from marketing guru Dan Kennedy to a new online environment. One of the smartest things any online marketer can do is to study the “old school” guys who wrote direct mail, magazine ads, and other artifacts of advertising history. Why? Because it took a tremendous understanding of the psychology of persuasion to make those tactics work. When you pair shiny new communication technology with tried-and-true methods to persuade and sell, you hugely increase your odds of success. So let’s continue exploring what old-school guru Dan Kennedy can teach us about 21st-century marketing. This week we’ll cover lessons 11 through 14 from Kennedy’s book The Ultimate Marketing Plan . I can’t promise these tips will make cash start spewing out of your laptop. But they do represent a lot of sound business thinking. (Incidentally, the links to the book are Amazon affiliate links, which means if you buy it, I’ll be able to buy a pack of gum! Put any of this advice into action and you should get quite a lot more out of the deal.) 11. Create a short-term sales surge One of the factors that plagues most small businesses, especially when they’re starting out, is a shortage of cash. Creating quick “sales surges” is one of Kennedy’s specialties, and he has a lot of suggestions for how to do that. (For more ideas, I can strongly recommend picking up his book.) Essentially, though, all the variations come down to one basic strategy: Make a great offer . Limit it in time, number of copies you’ll sell, or both. Make sure you come up with a good story or reason for the promotion. Kennedy, as you can imagine, gives some rather old-school ideas like red tag sales or “My accountant thinks I’m crazy!” He also likes to pluck interesting themes out of current events. For example, at a recent conference he invited loyal customers to bring old copies of his products in a “Cash for Clunkers” promotion. Kennedy’s creativity is mostly involved in coming up with a reason for his promotions. But if selling information is part of what you do, you can also create a brand-new product for your “cash surge.” It doesn’t have to be extensive (it’s annoying how often we’re short on both cash and time). In fact, you can offer something that you develop over the weekend . These “surges” can help any business, small or large, get through the lean times and amplify earnings during the best. And not only do short-term surges bring in cash, they also build your list of customers, strengthening your business for the long haul. 12. Take Advantage of New Marketing Technologies As you might imagine, readers of Copyblogger are well ahead of the curve here. If any of these are missing from your current communication mix, you can very profitably add them to make your business stronger. Audio, Video and Webinars: Record a meeting, training or presentation and post it to the web where you can repeatedly benefit. Autoresponders: With a great autoresponder series, you can write copy which is delivered in a sequence, regardless of when a prospect signs up. This will enable you to automate your marketing and free up time to refine other aspects of your business. And they’re great for creating rapport and trust with your customers. The next hot communication technology. Kennedy is a notorious technophobe; he doesn’t personally use email or the web at all. But like many smart businesspeople, he’s willing to make money with new technology even though he personally dislikes it. In fact, Sonia seemed to have experienced a warm reception when she recently spoke at one of his conferences. As long as a marketing tactic is ethical, be willing to consider it even if you aren’t personally a fan. If you hate Facebook but that’s where your customers are, you may want to suck it up. 13. Avoid employee sabotage For those who use VAs or other employees (whether they’re on a contract or a regular payroll), there are some special areas to watch out for. Employees are a reflection of both you and your business. Whether they are ringing up sales or answering email, they are ambassadors for your policies, and for how you feel about your customers. In my first business, there were times when I would leave my shop on an errand only to come back to a rather unpleasant surprise. “You said WHAT?” “To who?!?!” Delegating is a great thing (and usually necessary if you want your business to grow). But you must be the captain of your own marketing ship, as well as the navigator and the crew. Even the most valuable employees are still just that — employees. And no one will ever care as much about your business as you do. This is one reason the Partnering Profits model makes so much sense in the online world. Small businesses are easier and easier to create. It makes perfect sense to partner with people to run them with you, sharing the workload and the profit. 14. Hiring and firing experts Learn from the best, but take everything with a grain of salt. I’ve bought and absorbed numerous info products over the last year. Some were good, some were great, and a few were barely better than lousy. Nevertheless, even the worst has taught me something. You won’t learn it all in a day or a download, nor should you expect to. Someone asked an awesome question in Sonia’s Remarkable Marketing Blueprint forum the other day. They wondered, “What’s the point in having memberships in different sites, like Lateral Action , Third Tribe Marketing , and the Blueprint?” I’m a member of all three, so I’m happy to share my thoughts on that. There isn’t a single download that holds all the answers. Like life, we pick up a bit here and a bit there, all of it blending to make us who we are. We experience things differently at different times. True success is a slow and steady climb , rung by rung. When you involve yourself with quality people who are putting out quality information, you get a better ladder. You still have to do the climbing yourself.. There is no guru or authority who can give you all the answers. Not Dan Kennedy, not Brian Clark, not Sean Platt. That said, you want to make sure you’re taking advice from someone who’s walked the walk. In Cameron Crowe’s much-quoted movie “Say Anything“, there’s a scene where the hero, Lloyd Dobler, is standing at the gas station listening to a handful of lonely men handing out relationship advice. To which Lloyd says: If you guys know so much about women, how come you’re here at, like, the Gas ‘n’ Sip on a Saturday night, completely alone drinking beers with no women anywhere? Good question. I would strongly recommend Dan Kennedy’s Ultimate Marketing Plan as a powerful resource that should be in any copywriter’s toolbox. He’s “walked the walk” and advised thousands of traditional businesses. And with a little creativity, his advice works just as well in the new online environment. Obviously, the book contains more information than I could squeeze into a few thousand words. But I hope the “Cliff’s Notes” version has been useful! Read the other posts in this series Lessons from one of the World’s Highest-Paid Copywriters: 1 – 5 Lessons from one of the World’s Highest-Paid Copywriters: 6 – 10 About the Author: Sean Platt writes direct response copy , as well as helping authors write, publish and promote their book. Follow him on Twitter .

2aef5f6f2fp cash.jpg 150x115 Final Lessons Learned from One of the World’s Highest Paid Copywriters

The rest is here:
Final Lessons Learned from One of the World’s Highest-Paid Copywriters

14 Lessons Learned from One of the World’s Highest-Paid Copywriters

This is part one of a three-part series on how to profitably translate advice from old-school marketing guru Dan Kennedy to a new online environment. Dan Kennedy is the Sovereign of Sales Letters. (Or maybe that’s the Duke of Direct Response.) He knows exactly how to deliver a marketing message with maximum clarity and zero confusion. As he’ll readily tell you, he’s one of the world’s highest-paid copywriters. His classic book The Ultimate Marketing Plan promises low-cost ideas and high-profit results. This book delivers on both counts, and it’s well worth the read. But it was written in 1991, and at first seems like it’s more relevant to a restaurant or dry cleaner than it is to a web-based entrepreneur. If you have a hard time translating bricks-and-mortar advice to your internet business, well, just be glad we’ve got Copyblogger. The Ultimate Marketing Plan walks you through the 14 steps Kennedy considers necessary to build a bulletproof marketing plan that can help you to explode your business. And this post will tell you how to translate those to what you’ve been up to. Dan Kennedy’s 14 Steps to the Ultimate Marketing Plan 1) Putting together the right message This is your business’s Unique Selling Proposition , boys and girls. The principles behind the USP have been talked to death. You can call it the Purple Cow, your market position, your winning difference, or just the answer to Why Should Anyone Read Your Blog? The reason the USP has been talked to death is that this core idea is essential to effective marketing. Even though defining your USP is one of the best places to start when you’re building a solid marketing plan, it also seems to be one of the easiest places for people to get lost. Kennedy defines the USP this way: When you set out to attract a new, prospective customer to your business for the first time, there is one, paramount question you must answer: “Why should I choose your business/product/service versus any/every other competitive option available to me?” Kennedy, in his characteristically cranky style, has also been known to call this “justifying your reason to exist.” You must know the facts, features, benefits, and promises that your business makes — inside-out, upside-down, backwards, forwards, and sideways. Because if you can’t clearly articulate what makes your business unique, how can you expect anyone else to care? You will need to crow about your business if you expect it to expand, but it’s pivotal that you are trumpeting the right things. The right USP coupled with the right offer , especially at the right time and place, is important for any business. For a business fighting for attention with millions of other blogs all over the world, it’s essential. 2) Presenting your message Regardless of where you choose to market your product or service, there is a right and a wrong way to deliver your message. According to Kennedy, the customer has five mental steps to take between first contact and completing the sale. Awareness of a need or desire Picking the thing that will satisfy that desire Picking the source for that thing Accepting the price/value argument Finding reasons to act immediately Let’s say your particular product is a vacation package that includes a seven-day cruise. Pictures of an island paradise might spark initial desire, while shots of a cruise ship will put a finer point on the new longing. Information about what makes your company’s cruises different will let the prospect know that you’re the right source to satisfy their craving. Copy that paints a picture of all the fun to be had as well as the tremendous value of the package, backed by proof (user testimonials and pictures both work great), will serve to convince your prospect that his money will be well spent. Finally, a special, a limited time offer, or perhaps a coupon or room upgrade, will help to get the deal done today rather than . . . never . Whether you’re online or off, it’s your job to lead the prospect through these five points. Without clear road signs, your prospect will get lost. 3) Choosing the right audience Who you don’t serve is every bit as important as who you do. It is always okay to trim the tribe. Let’s say you’re planning to open a steakhouse. What do you think is most important to a spectacular opening day? Elegant decor? A well-trained staff? Ample parking? A robust menu? Reasonable prices? Delicious food? The answer: None of the above. The best thing you could possibly have when cutting the ribbon at your new steakhouse is a starving, steak-hungry crowd with a growl in their collective belly. Which means you don’t want to send your marketing message to vegetarians or calorie counters. When it comes to reaching your audience online, you’ve got to find the equivalent of those hungry carnivores. A blog that tries to speak to everyone will find few, if any, readers. It’s always smart to choose a general topic that’s got wide appeal. But within that topic, the tighter your focus , the easier it will be to grow an enthusiastic base of readers, then customers. 4) Proving your case It seems every decade makes us more jaded. The Internet has only accelerated the process. Your marketing messages needs to survive a lot of cold, hard skepticism . Some people might argue that you should never put negative thoughts into your customer’s head. You won’t be. You’re simply addressing what’s already there. You cannot ignore this step. Proving your case will get you a lot farther along on your way to making the sale. Address objections. Your prospect may desperately want your fantastic online cooking course, but she’s got a list of objections holding her back. Fortunately, we’re no longer in Kennedy’s 1991, where you had to use a photocopied 16-page letter to tackle each objection. These days you can do it in blog posts, email autoresponder sequences, and with virtually any form of social media. Social proof is key. You’ll notice up there in the left-hand corner, that Copyblogger proudly advertises its 100,000-plus subscribers. That’s not bragging. It’s a decisive emotional trigger. Nothing attracts a crowd like a crowd. Gather testimonials. Happy, satisfied customers can be a magnet for more. What others say about you will always carry a much higher impact than what you say about yourself. While it’s a great idea to put customer testimonials on your own site, you also want to always be aware of what people are saying about you off your site. Pictures tell a story. Before-and-after, shots of the product in use, or bright smiles on the faces of satisfied customers. Seeing is believing. If you can prove your point with pictures, you’ll go a long way toward silencing the skeptic. Images can also set a powerful mood , which gives your copy an instant emotional charge. 5) Putting your best foot forward Like it or not, first impressions matter. If you run a brick-and-mortar business, make sure your store is squeaky clean. Freshly washed windows and a floor you could eat off of will help to create an environment that’s conducive to sales. Believe it or not, the same holds true online. If you’re using WordPress for your business, make sure you’ve got a great-looking theme that’s well optimized for SEO. (As you might guess, we’re rather partial to Thesis .) Even if you’re on a budget, you will still be able to do some basic customization. Make sure your layout is simple and clean. Emphasize your USP with a strong tagline. Be sure your page instantly conveys how you can benefit your reader and potential customer. When you can afford it, have someone customize your site in a way that’s unique to you and your business. Either way, if your website is your business, it should look its absolute best. Fortunately, for a tiny fraction of what bricks-and-mortar businesses pay in rent, you can have a “storefront” that shows you’re serious, professional, and worthy of your customers’ business. (In case you think I’m not too good at counting, the other 9 lessons gleaned from The Ultimate Marketing Plan will come in two future posts. The links to the book are Amazon affiliate links, which means if you buy it, I’ll be able to buy a pack of gum! Put any of this advice into action and you should get quite a lot more out of the deal.) About the Author: Sean Platt writes direct response copy , as well as helping authors write, publish and promote their book. Follow him on Twitter .

869a4418becash1.jpg 150x149 14 Lessons Learned from One of the World’s Highest Paid Copywriters

Go here to read the rest:
14 Lessons Learned from One of the World’s Highest-Paid Copywriters

Is Reading Blog Posts Worth Your Time?

If you’re a regular Copyblogger reader, you get good advice about five times a week. Excellent advice, really. Stellar. Especially on days when I’m posting. (Preens.) Wait, what was I saying again? Oh, right. You get really good advice, for free, five times a week. Very frequently, this advice would cost you upwards of $150 an hour for a consultant to tell you the same thing. So when was the last time you actually put any of that advice into action? Where’s your follow-through? Are you all thought and no action? Many of you might say, “I put advice into action all the time. Why, just last week I read a post right here about how using social media would help my blog, and I went and got right onto Twitter and tweeted all day. And it worked!” Good for you. But did you do it the next day? Did you do it the day after that? Did you make a plan about when you’d get on Twitter each day, what you’d Tweet about, and how you’d tie that strategy to your business goals? (And maybe just as important, did you come up with a plan to keep you from doing something other than tweeting all day?) What about posts that offer advice on what you work at every day? If you thought Jason Cohen’s post on how to write more magnetic copy seemed like sound advice, did you bring his 10-point checklist to your next blog post and double-check to be sure you hadn’t missed any? Do you have Dan Zarrella’s post on the hard data behind Twitter headlines in your bookmarks, so you can pull it up and reference it when you want a tweet to spread like wildfire? Most people don’t actively put a lot of thought into the advice they receive, other than thinking, “That sounds like a pretty good idea.” People read quickly and move on. They have good intentions, but they never do anything about them. The road to hell is paved with good intentions You probably read blogs every day, blogs on marketing or entrepreneurship or Zen or gardening or getting your dog to behave. Are you putting any of the advice you read there to regular, everyday use? Sure, you’re reading the posts, and you’re thinking about the counsel offered. You might even comment. But you probably don’t commit to taking action and maintaining it consistently over at least two weeks to measure the results. Think about it: Is there an action you do every day that you can trace back to a particularly savvy blog post written by a smart person giving good advice? If you aren’t consciously putting good advice into action, you might as well not waste your time reading blog posts. You’re not getting anything out of them. Take that time and find something else to do, like shoveling snow or playing Frisbee. Make a plan The advice you read on blogs is, by and large, useful. Some of it may be information you already know or tricks you’ve tried in the past. But in general, most highly respected blogs offer nothing but really good advice. They have standards and stick to them, making sure they provide value for the reader. But you’re the only one who can actually benefit from that value and follow through on that advice. Nodding your head as you read isn’t really enough. The next time you read a blog post and think to yourself, “I should be doing that,” take action. Bookmark the post. Stick a Post-it reminder somewhere obvious on your computer. Use red pen. Use big, bold capital letters. Grab your to-do list or scheduler and get that reminder in there. Tell yourself that you absolutely, definitely, are going put that advice into action. And do it. This means that if you read a smart blog post about how to write more powerful sales copy, and you know you don’t write very powerful sales copy, you bookmark that post. You take your schedule and block out a 15-minute practice session on powerful sales copy for every single workday for the next two weeks. And when you sit down for that session, go back and look at that post. Step by step, line by line, apply the words of wisdom to the task at hand. If the post says to check for passive language, check your sales copy for passive language. If it says to use dynamic verbs, check every single verb in that copy to be sure it’s dynamic enough to compete in the next Summer Olympic Games. Quit thinking about posts and start putting them into action. Go a step beyond Got the little stuff down? Scale it up. I know at least three marketing blogs that, if you were to take their entire archives, have basically given their readers an entire executable marketing plan. The only work is putting all that advice into the right order. Get a pen and a notepad (or open up a word processor) and start putting the advice in those blog archives into an order that makes sense. Go through every post, and leave out anything that you don’t think will work for you or that doesn’t mesh with your business. By the time you’re done reading through those posts and putting the advice into action, you’ll have a free marketing plan that would have cost you thousands of dollars for a consultant to lay out for you. And your business will certainly already be benefiting from your active efforts. That’s the ironic part. If you had had to pay for this advice — if you had laid a cool three grand on the table and received this marketing plan in return — you would damn sure have put at least some of it into action. Lucky you: you can get that advice for free. But it’s by no means worthless, so put it into action while you can. About the Author : Start rifling through the archives at James Chartrand’s blog, Men with Pens , for great action-minded freelance writing business advice. You’ll find what you need to rev up your freelance business.

efba66c5beinking.jpg 150x149 Is Reading Blog Posts Worth Your Time?

Go here to read the rest:
Is Reading Blog Posts Worth Your Time?