Are These Sales Killing Mistakes In Your Brochures?
When you go to trade shows you probably pick up brochures.
What do you do with them?
In the majority of cases I'm willing to bet you either leave them to fester in the lovingly designed show carrier bag or you scan some of them and throw them away.
Do you read any of the brochures you get through the post or left by sales people?
If you don't read brochures why do you think your prospects will?
If your brochure is all about you and very little about your customer it wont get read.
A brochure that’s unread can't sell, anything.
That means you've just lost another prospect because your brochure didn't do its job right.
What A Brochure Isn't
Designing a brochure is not simply the managing director, marketing director or Joe Smith simply dumping everything they can think of about your company and its products into a four page 4 colour brochure.
Explaining how your business has grown from strength to strength over the last 5 years, or how the new widget is now also available in puce and lemon is boring.
In fact most brochures are deeply boring. Maybe not to you as the business owner - but to the most important people you know...
Your customers and prospects.
Brochures are not art galleries for your in-house or external graphic design team to show off their brilliance with well produced photos, line art and consistent house style.
After all winning awards for your brochure is not as important as winning sales. Is it?
Have you found salespeople who are unwilling to give prospects your brochures?
That's because good sale staff instinctively know whether your brochure helps or hinders sales.
So How Do You Recognise A Good Brochure?
It's purely and simply just another sales tool. It's part of your marketing tool set. Treat it that way and you’ll receive your just rewards.
To create a good brochure you need to …
Use Sizzling Copy To Hit People Between The Eyes
Don't take up the space on the front, or back, covers with your logo, managing directors head shot or a stock photo of a forklift truck or someone attractive sat gazing transfixed at a computer screen.
Smash Through Buyer Inertia With A Captivating Headline
Instead use a great headline to encourage people to open and investigate what you've got to say.
You could use any of the following headlines:
If you're in the car hire business you could say "7 Reasons Why Car Hire Is Costing You Too Much". Then explain why in your copy inside and further explain how you can make sure the prospect avoids those costs.
Perhaps you're in IT or software services? Your headline could be "How To Sell More to Your Old Customers." Then you explain how implementing a customer relationship management system gives the ability to follow-up properly.
But whatever market you're in tell your customer something you know they want to know.
Write Copy That Tells And Sells
When you're writing the copy inside your brochure make it interesting, arresting and intriguing.
Give your prospects some interesting facts they don't know.
Stir in some great customer testimonials. If you don't have testimonials start talking to your customer to get some.
You're writing the copy to sell your product or service. So the writing is vitally important.
Make sure that you've got all the necessary line art, photos or other graphics at appropriate points in the brochure. Whatever you do remember graphics are there purely to support the copy.
Any graphics you’ve got make sure that you have a caption so that people don't get distracted and keep wondering what it's about.
Make sure that your brochure has all the ways your customer can get hold of you and order. That includes having an order or enquiry form they can fax to you.
Finally, two of the most important elements in the brochure: The Offer and Call to Action.
You need to offer your customer something for doing business with you.
You could offer any of:
· Free bonus reports · Audio CDs · DVDs · Different payment options · Strong guarantees · Bundled with other products or services
Whatever you do make sure you've a call to action with a deadline for your offer.
Your brochure must spell out the next step you want the customer to take.
How Do You Use Your Brochure?
Don't leave it lying around like yesterdays newspaper. You've paid good money to produce it. Treat your brochures with respect and give them or send them to people you want to do business with.
At trade shows a good approach is to suggest that you'll send a brochure to your prospect. That way you can keep following them up with further offers.
Don’t leave them on tables, don’t simply hand them out. Use them to start conversations, get contact details, make sure people understand the value in the brochure.
Jay Abraham is the world's highest paid marketing guru at $5,000 an hour. He notes that sending a brochure to a prospect without a well-written and interesting covering letter reduces response.
Stapling an envelope with an interesting headline, such as "5 Ways To Slash The Cash That Drains From Your Web Site" gets people interested.
They're going to read that letter.
The letter needs to spell out what the major benefits are and where they are in your brochure.
Proof of effectiveness of adding a letter is given by Troy White, writing in Duct tape Marketing, he says:
"...Info USA who sells direct mail database lists started testing this (sales letter, Ed) with their catalogs and saw an immediate 300% improvement in orders. All with a simple letter attached to it!"
Similarly use direct mail and send them out to the companies you'd love to do business with. Make sure you've a personalised selling letter with every brochure you put out there.
Write and design your brochure as if you were standing in your customers and prospects shoes. What’s in it for them?
Do it right and you'll deliver a brochure that gets read from cover to cover and prospects find informative and buy from.
Remember if you're not willing to invest up front in producing a brochure that sells you can't expect anyone to take action from it and you've completely wasted the money to produce it.
About the Author
Jim Symcox is a world spanning business growth coach, marketing evangelist and passionate copywriter. For FREE growth tips and strategies check Jim's blog at http://www.business-powerpack.com
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