In Marketing, Enthusiasm Connects
by Marcia Yudkin
Published on this site: February 20th, 2006 - See
more articles from this month

Two incidents in one week got me thinking about an ingredient
in persuasion that we don't often hear about.
In the first incident, an accomplished copywriter
asked for feedback on a letter he intended to send to members
of the local Chamber of Commerce that he'd just joined. The
letter was technically excellent. It contained all the ingredients
that a sales letter should have, in the right proportions
and in the right places - except for one. The letter came
across as cold and mechanical. The tone was distant and impersonal.
Inevitably, the reader would be conscious that the writer
was trying to make a sale, not trying to help out new friends
and by doing so, to make a sale.
In the second incident, a woman in my copywriting
training program showed me an email she sent to an entrepreneur
who was looking for a ghostwriter for a collection of spiritual
stories. My trainee had no ghostwriting experience and had
never been published. Without any nod toward the usual credentials
someone might expect in a ghostwriter, my trainee's letter
expounded on other reasons why she would be perfect for this
assignment. She opened with a paragraph on the power of stories
and created further rapport by mentioning involvements that
would show how in tune she was with the spirit of the project.
From beginning to end, the second letter showed a sincere
desire to connect with its audience. The entrepreneur wrote
back that of all the responses she received, the one from
my trainee "spoke to her heart." They arranged a
meeting. This letter persuaded because it made a connection.
A third incident came to mind as I continued to ponder
the element that the second letter had that the first letter
lacked. Three or four years ago, a personal coach asked me
to review his web site, and I told him that he had done a
masterful job of coming across as different from all the other
coaches whose sites I had looked at. His site breathed with
uniqueness and life, as few web sites do. So when another
coach or consultant asked how it would be possible to position
himself as distinctive in such a crowded industry, I wanted
to refer him to the site that had impressed me so much.
But when I went back to look, the site had changed. The wording
now had a slick, remote veneer. Instead of sincere enthusiasm
and confidence, the site projected a self-conscious and somewhat
formulaic attempt to attract coaching customers. "Uh-oh,"
I said to myself. "He's been knocked off center. He's
trying too hard. He's going for polish and professionalism
instead of, rather than on top of, who he is and what he really
does for his clients. Too bad!"
Unlike most of the other ingredients in persuasive copywriting,
this one is pretty elusive. It has to do with presence and
animation and a whole-hearted desire to connect with readers. Sometimes there's playfulness in it,
and other times it's plain, straightforward earnestness personified.
In either case, the voice has no fakery in it. The impact
of this element resembles that of charisma, but here the connection
occurs through words and without in-person contact.
I cannot prove that the full-blooded verbal magnetism I am
writing about sells more products and services than lifeless
or mechanical wordsmithing. But I know that it attracts ideal
clients, and that it can enable someone who's new in business
to outshine someone with many more years of experience. The
way to get it into your writing is to communicate with a confident
desire to connect. Before sending or posting your text, smooth
away most of the rough edges. I also know that it's sometimes
very easy to capture the right spirit, and other times it
takes crumpling up a draft and trying again time after time
after time.
When Ingredient X is there, I feel it. Customers eager for
something real feel it, too. They read this kind of copy with
interest and attention. And they respond.

Marcia Yudkin ([email protected]) mentors copywriters
and helps business owners communicate their unique essence
to ideal customers. For more information on her copywriting
training program, see http://www.yudkin.com/become.htm.
Learn more about how she works with business owners here:
http://www.yudkin.com/seminars.htm.

|