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7 Considerations When Making A Business Sales Letter
by Mario Churchill
More Business Skills
Articles

Published on this site: November 25th, 2008 - See
more articles from this month

When making a business sales letter, the primary goal is,
obviously, to make a sale. However, focusing on this bottom line
is ultimately what causes a lot of business sales letters to
fail, simply because customers feel that the letter is all about
trying to seperate them from their hard earned money. The best
business letters are made by people who believe in their
products and know that it is actually to their customer's
benefit to use it over other competing products. Building on
this basic rule, there are 7 factors to consider when making a
business letter that will let your customers know that, while
you ARE out to make a profit, it will be based on THEIR
satisfaction with your product.
- Target Market Type: Consider the demographics of
your intended
market. Know how they think, how they talk, what they need, how
much of a budget they generally have, and what benefits they can
find in using your product. This knowledge makes it easier to
tailor a sales approach that they can relate to. Using fancy
words or "business jargon" when your target market is mostly
composed of people who haven't studied economics, for example,
will only serve to overwhelm and confuse them.
- Product Details: Know your product intimately. This
does not
mean that you have to blab about the endless hours of research
that went into making your product superior to others, or the
incredibly high tech materials and construction methods that
went into making it. Intimate product knowledge from a consumer
point of view boils down to one thing: What can your product do
for the buyer?
- Product After Sales Support: If your product provider
has
after-sale support options, be sure to include those as some of
the advantages of buying what you have to offer. Customer
service lines, extended warranties, and even home service
options are things that show the customers that you will still
be there for them even AFTER you've made a sale. This also
imparts a measure of faith in the product that it won't simply
break down a few months or even weeks after purchase.
- Selling Approach: The most effective selling approach
is to
remain customer oriented. By focusing on your buyer's needs, you
increase the likelihood that they will prefer to buy what you
have to offer over the competition. However, you also have to
consider HOW your target market thinks and communicates; some
demopgraphics prefer elaborate statements, others value a sense
of humor, still others prefer terse and straight to the point
presentations. Know how your customers generally communicate and
make your style suit them.
- Layouting: A good visual presentation is one of
the keys to
any good document. Layouting is essential in any letter because
it makes the document catch the eye at first glance and makes
readers willing to see what you've got. Beyond the looks,
however, layouting also involves the order and manner in which
you present your information. A graphically stunning letter that
has poor layouting when it comes to presenting information will
still fail. Be precise and orderly in your presentation of
facts.
- Timed Response Incentives: This is a fairly classic
method of
getting a quick response from a customer. The most common places
you'll see this will be on shopping channels, with announcers
saying something like "order within the next 30 minutes and get
a 10% discount". Timed response incentives in business letters
should be similar BUT should offer greater leeway for customer
response to special promotional discounts. The failure of
shopping channel program's approach is that customers feel
pressured to buy NOW, which makes them think that all the
company wants is their money, period. Promos on sales letters
should have a much more relaxed time table, like "We're having
a
10% sale all of next week, from 12:00am X date to 12:00pm Y
date. Feel free to drop by and look our products over."
- What Should They Do Next?: Lastly, customers HATE
being left
in a lurch if they wind up liking what a product has to offer
but get little or no information on how to actually go about
buying the product. Always include extensive contact info on the
letter that lets them know the fastest and easiest ways to get
in touch with you when they want to ask questions or buy
something. If you have several contact numbers, try splitting
them off into several types as well and include these in the
letter, like a "product inquiry" number, another for making
personal purchases, another for bulk purchases and/or potential
retailers, etc.

Mario Churchill: Is a freelance author
and has
written over 200 articles on various subjects. For more
information checkout
www.websiteconversionexpert.com/articles.html and
www.websiteconversionexpert.com/testimonials.html.


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