Increase Your
Sales and Profits With Personalized Messages
By Bob Leduc
I paid bills last night. After writing checks on the business
account I noticed a little sticky note on the next check
reminding me to get more checks printed.
My mail this morning included a sale catalog from an office
supply company I use. The back cover included a picture of the
same style business check I've been using. Printed over the
check was the following personal message: "Bob ...Don't be
caught short. Stock up now for the coming year and save up to 73
percent." I immediately called them with my order.
This big corporation understands the value of personalized
messages. Their system "remembers" how often I order
certain items and produces a personalized offer on schedule. I'm
sure this personalization develops sales for them at a rate many
times greater than their nearest competitor.
Personalized messages offer an even greater advantage for
small businesses. Plus, it's an easy and inexpensive procedure
to implement.
The Most Important Word
What's the most important word you know? It's your name. The
most important word your prospects and customers know is their
name. It's a powerful magnet you can use anytime you want to get
their immediate attention.
For example, I always include my customer's or prospect's
first name on the subject line of my outgoing email messages. It
immediately attracts attention and guarantees my message gets
read. I do this manually. But you may want to investigate some
of the software developed to merge different text into the
subject line and body copy of each email message.
You Need A Real Name
You already have the personal names of your customers.
You'll also have personal names when you compile or rent a
prospect list for postal mail. The name is part of the postal
address. But you may not have the personal name for most of the
prospects you collected online at your website or from email
requests. Often you have only their email address.
I discovered an effective alternative to use when I don't
have a person's real name. It's hidden in every email address.
It's the part of the email address to the left of the
"@" symbol. For an email address of " AB6@yz.com",
it's the "AB6" portion. I insert this part of the
email address where I would normally put the person's first
name. It's not as personal as the real first name but it
attracts more attention and produces a higher response than no
personalization.
Make a habit of collecting and storing the real name of each
prospect in addition to their email address so you can use it to
personalize your messages to them. Look for it in the header of
the email message when the sender doesn't "sign" the
message.
TIP: You'll automatically get more real names in email
messages by revealing your real name first. I do this by using
my real name as my email address. Over 75 percent of the email
messages I receive include the sender's real first name.
Don’t Over Do It!
Use a person's name no more than 2 or 3 times in a
communication. Inserting it too many times annoys the reader and
broadcasts that the message is part of an automated mass
mailing.
Sometimes you don't need much more than a prospect's name to
get results. For example, I send a lot of prospecting postcards
by postal mail to targeted lists. The only message on the
postcard is the recipient's name followed by a benefit statement
plus a phone number, email address or website address where the
prospect can get more information. I always get a high response
because each recipient is attracted by their name and can't
resist reading the rest of my brief message. None of these
postcards get tossed without being read.
Start personalizing your communications to prospects and
customers. It will substantially increase the response you get
-- without increasing your costs.
Copyright 2000 By Bob Leduc
Bob Leduc retired from a 30 year career of recruiting sales
personnel and developing sales leads. He is now a Sales
Consultant. Bob recently wrote a manual for small business
owners titled "How to Build Your Small Business Fast With
Simple Postcards" and several other publications to help
small businesses grow and prosper. For more information...
Email: BobLeduc@aol.com
Subject: "Postcards". Phone: (702) 658-1707 (After 10
AM Pacific time) Or write: Bob Leduc, PO Box 33628, Las Vegas,
NV 89133
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