Search
Recommended Products
Related Links


 
 

 

 

Informative Articles

10 Elements Every Direct Mail Piece Should Have
Don’t want your direct mail to end up in the trash with the rest of the unread mail? Studies show an effective direct mail campaign should draw a .5 to 1 percent response. These 10 tips will help you get the results you want: 1. A clear, bold...

Deliver Profits with Direct Mail
If you are in business, you might want to consider using direct mail to find new customers or drum up more business from your existing ones. If using a print broker or a direct mail agency isn't within your budget, you might opt to do the mailing...

Direct Mail
Direct Mail The web is a most versatile and often misused medium for direct marketing. In this email, I will share tips and techniques to make the web a major advertising tool for your sales and marketing efforts. Do you have a website? A Web...

Direct Mail Advertising: A Key Ingredient For Successful Business Growth
Direct Mail Advertising: A Key Ingredient For Successful Business Growth By Keturah Whitaker In today’s highly competitive economy, it is essential that you promote your business with marketing materials that strategically position your...

Eight Common Direct Mail Mistakes.
Some companies that use direct mail to sell their products and services are like the blind man in the dark room looking for the black cat that isn't there. They repeat the same mistakes, and enjoy the same poor results. Here are their eight most...

Improve Your B2B Direct Mail Response Rates With Premiums.
Premiums are an effective way to increase your direct mail response rates. Whether you are selling a product or service directly through the mail, or whether you are using a sales letter to generate leads, premiums can help you boost...

Reach Wealthy Prospects With Direct Mail Marketing And A Good List.
Do you need to reach wealthy prospects using direct mail? Then work on your list. Who you mail to (your list) is the single most important thing that determines your success. There are two main ways to target affluent buyers: where...

Smart Alternatives to Direct Mail
From LAND OF ODDS We at Land of Odds get many questions about what glue to use with rhinestones and other beading and jewelry-making projects. We're craftspersons and silversmiths, and we have a shop where we sell rhinestones, beads,...

Tales of Email Misdirection
Article: It's wise to remember how easily email -- this wonderful technology -- can be misused and misdirected, sometimes unintentionally, with serious consequences. Unless you are using encryption, the privacy of your message cannot be...

Your Direct Mail Sales Letters Must Differentiate You
For two winters I heated my house with an old fashioned woodstove. I learned the art of reviving a bed of dying coals each chilly winter morning, adjusting the kindling, firewood and dampers just right so that the stove would heat my turn-of-the-...

 
 
 
Read This, Sell More: Direct Mail Marketing Is About Benefits, Not Features

Your customer wants a cleaner kitchen, not a kitchen cleaner.

Your customers are interested in benefits, not features. So sell benefits in your sales letters.

The difference between a feature and a benefit comes down to this: A feature is what something does. A benefit is what something does for you.

Everything you have to say in your direct marketing sales letters boils down to features and benefits. With every piece of copy you write, however long or short your copy, you are always talking in terms of features and benefits.

When I worked on the Bell Mobility account, I discovered that the marketing folks at Bell have a policy of always presenting the benefit first, followed by the feature. I had usually written things the other way around. But they had a good policy.

For example, I would have said, "Digital Data2Go lets you receive email with your cellphone, saving you the hassle of finding a phone jack for your laptop whenever you need to check email while travelling." Bell insisted that I present the benefit first, so I instead wrote something like this: "Never again waste time hunting for a phone jack when it's time to check email while travelling. Digital Data2Go lets you receive email with just your cellphone."

I think Bell has the right idea, although there are times when the feature needs to come first.

The tough part in all of this is translating features into benefits before you start writing. Some benefits are obvious. Others require some detective work to uncover. I learned that lesson all over again when I taught copywriting at the University of Toronto School of Continuing Studies.

I gave my students an exercise that always turned up a surprising benefit. I told my class that the CN Tower in Toronto, Ontario, Canada was 1,815 feet and 5 inches tall. Their assignment was to come up with as many benefits as they could that

 


related to that feature. Most of them stared at me.

Then they picked up their pens.

Slowly, they started to write.

Each time I ran the exercise, a student or two came up with a benefit that I had not thought of. Here are a few of the benefits of having the world's tallest free-standing structure in your city:

* attract tourist dollars by charging for tours * see the whole city from one vantage point * generate revenue by selling souvenirs * impress your date with dinner at the revolving restaurant * host fundraisers (a race up the stairs to the top is a popular annual fundraiser) * generate revenue from organizations that monitor the weather * navigate around the city easily because the tower is a landmark visible from almost everywhere * generate revenue from TV and radio companies by hosting their antennas on the communications deck * improve the flow of traffic along the nearby Gardner Expressway by locating traffic cameras on the tower * generate publicity by hanging a banner down the side of the structure

There were many more benefits, some worthy and some just wacky, but all of them were benefits of one kind or another. Together, they demonstrated that products and services, including yours, probably have more benefits than are apparent at first glance.

So hunt for those benefits that are relevant to your potential buyers and current customers. And remember this, every time you craft a sales letter: your client wants a 5/8 inch hole, not a 5/8 inch drill bit.

© 2005 Sharpe Copy Inc. You may reprint this article online and in print provided the links remain live and the content remains unaltered (including the "About the author" message).
About the Author

Alan Sharpe is a business-to-business direct mail copywriter. Sign up for free weekly tips like this at www.sharpecopy.com.