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Apply For Government Grants Or You Will Regret
and what makes your offer so good. How much money is it going to save/earn
them. How will their lives be dramatically improved. Whatever makes your offer
worthwhile must be there.If you've been watching those late night infomercials, you may be convinced that the US government is giving away Free Money to just about anybody who needs some. Your savings and even your home may be at risk if your business fails, so the thought of a free government grant to start your business is very tempting. Grants are given by an organization or local government officers to a business in line with their particular projects success.In return, you have to pay a 2% of your outstanding loan each year to the business service sector of the government who helped you acquire the loan. Small business loans are now By this point you either have their interest or you don't. If you do, the remainder of the letter must answer the basic questions and address the common doubts your reader may have. After all, you've worked hard get them this far, it would be a shame to lose them on a technicality. Fill the body of you Drive Website Traffic Unconventionally, Force Your Children To Do It When Dr. Frankenstein exclaimed "it's alive... it's alive," he thought he had brought
wonderful new life to the world. What he really did was create a monster. He took a
bit from here and another piece from there and sewed it altogether. Then he was
distressed to see how things turned out. Many marketers create their own monsters
in the form of sales letters. They throw everything into them and then are distressed
at the response.If you believe that every little bit helps then keep reading...For the past two summers my son has dabbled in entrepreneurialism.He started by mowing lawns, what kid hasn't done that? It's time tested and money in the bank. (The grass always keeps growing...unless you live in the arctic.)Last summer we brainstormed a little and bought some gear for under a hundred bux and he started going door-to-door asking people if he could hand-wash their cars for 10 bux a pop. (he used the same client list he had built from mowing lawns also, he's a smart kid!)This year we, I should say HE because Sales letters work best when you have something to sell. You make an offer. Too many sales letters from smaller businesses are of the "Hi my name is..." school. When it comes right down to it, I'm busy; I don't care if you just started this wonderful venture because you love to serve people. What can you do for me right now? Why should I take time reading any of your letter? Make me an offer I can't refuse. Quickly convince me that I need what you have to offer. When creating a better monster--er sales letter--start off where Frankenstein made his biggest mistake. He used the wrong head. The right head (or headline) can make or break your sales letter. Focus it tightly on your target market. Address a big problem your target faces (assuming you have the solution for it) or play on their desires. If you can do this with a clever play on words, by all means go for it, but if wordplay isn't your forte, keep it simple and straightforward. There's no perfect length for a headline, but don't waste words. Keep it to one sentence. The point is, make them care. Once you've grabbed them with your headline. Don't let them escape. It may seem odd, but the last words of your letter--the PS--are often read right after the headline. A PS is the best way to end your letter. It sticks out from the body and grabs attention. Don't waste your PS. Say something that will encourage your reader to go back to the beginning and start to read. The first paragraph is crucial, so get to the point. Give them the guts of your offer and what makes your offer so good. How much money is it going to save/earn them. How will their lives be dramatically improved. Whatever makes your offer worthwhile must be there. By this point you either have their interest or you don't. If you do, the remainder of the letter must answer the basic questions and address the common doubts your reader may have. After all, you've worked hard get them this far, it would be a shame to lose them on a technicality. Fill the body of your Falling into a Numbers Trap at Trade Shows ? You make an offer. Too
many sales letters from smaller businesses are of the "Hi my name is..." school.
When it comes right down to it, I'm busy; I don't care if you just started this
wonderful venture because you love to serve people. What can you do for me right
now? Why should I take time reading any of your letter? Make me an offer I can't
refuse. Quickly convince me that I need what you have to offer.Here’s the Scenario – There is an attentive attendee in front of you. You two have chatted for a couple of minutes and now he says –o Sounds good. How much is it ?o What will the maintenance contract cost me ?o What are your financing options over 3 years?o What’s the best deal you can give me ?o What are the dimensions of these three models?o Can you up the capacity 14% ?o How many hydraulic spring return actuator for 3200 psig do you have in stock ?WHAT TO DO?Many folks fluster around if the question is not part of their direct expertise. Maybe you When creating a better monster--er sales letter--start off where Frankenstein made his biggest mistake. He used the wrong head. The right head (or headline) can make or break your sales letter. Focus it tightly on your target market. Address a big problem your target faces (assuming you have the solution for it) or play on their desires. If you can do this with a clever play on words, by all means go for it, but if wordplay isn't your forte, keep it simple and straightforward. There's no perfect length for a headline, but don't waste words. Keep it to one sentence. The point is, make them care. Once you've grabbed them with your headline. Don't let them escape. It may seem odd, but the last words of your letter--the PS--are often read right after the headline. A PS is the best way to end your letter. It sticks out from the body and grabs attention. Don't waste your PS. Say something that will encourage your reader to go back to the beginning and start to read. The first paragraph is crucial, so get to the point. Give them the guts of your offer and what makes your offer so good. How much money is it going to save/earn them. How will their lives be dramatically improved. Whatever makes your offer worthwhile must be there. By this point you either have their interest or you don't. If you do, the remainder of the letter must answer the basic questions and address the common doubts your reader may have. After all, you've worked hard get them this far, it would be a shame to lose them on a technicality. Fill the body of you How To Avoid Getting Unsolicited Email
his biggest mistake. He used the wrong head.Should you gotten hundreds of emails and wondered how do they get into your inbox? You might think that someone you subscribed with had sold your email for a buck profit.Well. dear valued reader, you're wrong in that aspect. No one in his or her right mind. Or any Internet vendor will commit such horrendous and stupid act. Why? Insomuch as an opt-in lists is a precious asset for anyone doing business on the Internet.Let's say I'm an Internet user and I just got myself a new Internet account with an email address for my friends and family to get in touch. Now this is my personal and private email address The right head (or headline) can make or break your sales letter. Focus it tightly on your target market. Address a big problem your target faces (assuming you have the solution for it) or play on their desires. If you can do this with a clever play on words, by all means go for it, but if wordplay isn't your forte, keep it simple and straightforward. There's no perfect length for a headline, but don't waste words. Keep it to one sentence. The point is, make them care. Once you've grabbed them with your headline. Don't let them escape. It may seem odd, but the last words of your letter--the PS--are often read right after the headline. A PS is the best way to end your letter. It sticks out from the body and grabs attention. Don't waste your PS. Say something that will encourage your reader to go back to the beginning and start to read. The first paragraph is crucial, so get to the point. Give them the guts of your offer and what makes your offer so good. How much money is it going to save/earn them. How will their lives be dramatically improved. Whatever makes your offer worthwhile must be there. By this point you either have their interest or you don't. If you do, the remainder of the letter must answer the basic questions and address the common doubts your reader may have. After all, you've worked hard get them this far, it would be a shame to lose them on a technicality. Fill the body of you Cheap Background Checks The point is, make them care.Increased crime, terrorism and employee liabilities have forced employers to avail of services offered by agencies providing background checks. Getting a detailed, in-depth background check by a reputed agency may be a costly affair. There do exist a number of companies providing cheap background check. However, they may not provide adequate and up to the mark information. Another source of obtaining cheap services for a background check is the Internet. A number of web sites offer free and instant online services for selecting job candidates, but these low-budget background checks may not always work.Thus employe Once you've grabbed them with your headline. Don't let them escape. It may seem odd, but the last words of your letter--the PS--are often read right after the headline. A PS is the best way to end your letter. It sticks out from the body and grabs attention. Don't waste your PS. Say something that will encourage your reader to go back to the beginning and start to read. The first paragraph is crucial, so get to the point. Give them the guts of your offer and what makes your offer so good. How much money is it going to save/earn them. How will their lives be dramatically improved. Whatever makes your offer worthwhile must be there. By this point you either have their interest or you don't. If you do, the remainder of the letter must answer the basic questions and address the common doubts your reader may have. After all, you've worked hard get them this far, it would be a shame to lose them on a technicality. Fill the body of you Managers: PR Mechanics or Engineers?
and what makes your offer so good. How much money is it going to save/earn
them. How will their lives be dramatically improved. Whatever makes your offer
worthwhile must be there.If you are a business, non-profit, government agency or association manager, you need both. A skilled public relations “engineer” to assemble the resources and drive the action planning needed to alter individual perception leading to changed behaviors among your most important outside audiences.That engineer will help you as a manager to persuade those key folks to your way of thinking, And then move them to take actions that allow your department, group, division or subsidiary to succeed.But you’ll also want those “mechanics” on board to handle communications tactics like brochures, speci By this point you either have their interest or you don't. If you do, the remainder of the letter must answer the basic questions and address the common doubts your reader may have. After all, you've worked hard get them this far, it would be a shame to lose them on a technicality. Fill the body of your letter with benefits, not features. Give it the "so what" test. If a benefit doesn't answer the question "so what?" for your target audience, it's a feature not a benefit. Dig deeper and discover what your offer really delivers to your target. Speak to your target in their language. Write informally. Ask rhetorical questions. Create as conversational a letter as you can. However, take care when using humour. It can backfire, because we don't all have the same sense of it. Unless you know for sure, keep humour to a minimum. Busy, busy, busy. I know it, you know it. Everyone is busy. They probably won't read everything in your letter, but guide them to the good bits. Embolden the bits they'll care about. It'll encourage them to keep reading. (But don't embolden your company or product name. Your names may be interesting to you, but they're not what's interesting to your target.) Now that you've told them how great your offer is, get someone else to tell them too. It sounds so much better coming from someone else. In the body of your letter, sprinkle a testimonial or two. Write them yourself, and then ask one of your best clients if they would be comfortable having it quoted under their name. Focus on the results your clients have achieved. Testimonials are best if they are believable and don't gush. Once you've covered all the possible doubts and questions in the body, it's time to put your best foot forward again. Repeat your offer. And, if you can, offer a guarantee of satisfaction. Make trying your services a risk-free endeavour. Unfortunately, this is difficult for some service-based companies because often their services aren't directly quantifiable. Just to make your life more difficult, with business-to-business marketing, keep your letter to one page. If your letter is more than one page, re-write it. Before you set your letter loose upon the world, try a test on a limited number of prospects. Fine-tune it accordi
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