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The
23 Best Lines In Marketing
by Jeffrey Dobkin
Like
old friends, these lines are of great value to have at your
side. This reoccurring arsenal of words is a center point
in almost all of my campaigns.
In
Direct Mail:
“Gift
Certificate Enclosed”
How many times
have I said this? Whew. My very favorite line for
getting my clients’ direct mail packages opened.
Reasons?
- Gift
certificates are inexpensive to print, at 1/3rd or 1/4 of a
sheet of paper - or less.

- May
be printed on the same sheet as the letter, catalog or the
order form - for extra savings in printing costs.

- Ship
flat, and adds very little weight to your mailing
package.

- They’re
much more upscale than coupons.

- Gift
certificates have a high perceived value.

- Cheap
to redeem - in fact, have no cost at all until redemption.

- May
be targeted to specific merchandise or offers - good for
overstock or high margin items.

- Naturally
easy to track.
Any
arguments?
“Free
Offer Inside…”
This works
almost as well. When a gift certificate just won’t
suffice in a business-to-business mailing, this is usually my
next choice. And more often than not, the other writing
on the envelope is:
“OPEN
IMMEDIATELY!”
There’s a
saying around here in Direct Mailville that states you must tell
the recipient exactly what you want him to do for the best
chance of having him do exactly what you
want.
“Just
Call and Get…"
How many times
have I said this phrase? Hummm, nope, can’t count that
high. I mix it in with one of my other key phrases:
“Call
Us TOLL FREE…”
In a copywriting
assignment for an envelope printer, I asked readers to call 16
times in a 2 page letter. 16 times in one letter! So
don’t feel bad about asking customers to call three
or four times on the same page. If you’d like to see how
I weaved this into the letter copy without being too obnoxious,
just drop me a note and I’ll send you the letter. Yes,
the
letter definitely made his phone ring. You bet.
“Dear
Colleague”
It’s one of my
favorite salutations. So much better than ‘Dear
reader,’ which is always my last choice. And who’s to say
your reader isn’t a colleague in some fashion.
“…and
Friend.”
I like to offer
this phrase after the salutation, to make it friendlier and more
personal. And it does. “Dear fellow Pharmacist and
Friend”. “Dear Pet Lover and Friend”. “Dear
Chevy Owner and Friend”. About 50% of my letters have
these two words after the opening salutation. In any type
of local mailing, my favorite opening is “Dear Neighbor and
Friend”. Sounds kinda’ nice, n’est pas?
Readers usually think so, too.
“Thank
You.”
You know, you
can never say ‘thank you’ enough to your customers.
Never. Almost every letter I send has the word thanks in
it at one point. Another way I express this is:
“Thank
you for your business, and your trust.”
If you don’t
thank them, how are your customers to know you care, or
appreciate their business? Chances are they won’t.
That means if they have the opportunity to go elsewhere, they will. I ran monthly advertising with a
magazine for 6 years, they never thanked me once in a letter.
When the ad became marginal, I dropped out, and never felt one
bit of remorse, despite their pleas. Contrast this to the
form we shipped our product with: our shipping form measured
41/2” x 71/2”, and I thanked our customer 6 times on this
form. You can call me on this one too, just drop a note
and ask for our old Merion Station Mail Order shipping form.
Thanks.
“Thank
you for your kind referral.”
One of the best
ways to get business is through referrals. One of the best
ways to get more referrals is to send a thank you letter to the
person who made a referral. No, a phone
call is not the same. When you hang up after a phone
conversation you cease to exist. A letter, well, that can
hang around for a while - to be appreciated over time. I once
wrote a nice ‘thank you’ letter to a retailer who installed
my car radio. They framed it and hung it on their wall -
for about a year.
Face
it, when someone calls to say thanks, you say “That’s nice,
they called.” End of story. But when you receive a
letter of thanks... well, that’s big time. Someone
actually took the time to sit down and write a letter of thanks.
Wow, monumental effort. They know you appreciate it.
To our firm, a referral means someone gave our name with the
silent pledge of their trust. It is an honor we don’t
take lightly.
“Thank
you for the opportunity and the privilege to be of service.”
Business rule number one: it is a privilege to serve your
customer. Let them know this is how you feel, and
customers will remain loyal to you for years. Not only do
I say this
frequently, I believe it. So does every person in our firm
- it is part of our company creed.
“New
Product Offers Benefit!”
This formula is
unusual in that it works almost everywhere. In direct
mail, it’s a safe bet for envelope teaser copy, especially
when coupled with the three great lines at the top of this
article. New product offers benefit also is one of the
best, time tested formula for the headline of ad, or a press
release headline.
It’s
also my very favorite formula for the “Jeff Dobkin
Benefits-First Press Release.” I’ve found if you use this
formula for the first line of your press release the benefits
never, ever get cut out. Editors cut from the bottom, and
sometimes from the middle, but the first sentence is always left
intact. Since benefits sell the product and increase the
response, it’s a hard-hitting direct marketing technique to
squeeze them in anywhere you can. They’ll look just
great up at the top of your press release.
“Free
Booklet offers how-to information.”
This headline
attracts readers with a free offer, but also limits the
attraction to the specific market segment you are targeting to
better qualify respondents. This saves you time, and money
by not having to send literature to a non-buying, poor-prospect
market. On the up-side: “Free booklet shows you how to
pack glassware for moving!” produces good
response, but only from people who are going to move. Very
targeted marketing. This type of headline produces tons of high
quality, highly qualified leads.
“Objective:”
Before writing
any copy, including sales letters, brochures, direct mail
packages, catalogs, everything - first write “Objective:” in
the upper right hand part of a clean sheet of
paper. Then write the objective. I do this at the
start of every writing assignment. This reminds me why I am
writing, and what the writing must accomplish. Unless
I’m drafting
a catalog or hard hitting package that sells products directly,
my objective is usually to make the phone ring; so my copy is
written to sell the phone call. Objective: to make the
customer pick up the phone and call.
Writing
the objective first, clarifies my writing. The objective
is usually a surprise to most of my business-to-business clients
who think I am trying to sell their products. Heck, it’s tough to sell from a sheet of paper. I generally leave
the selling to them. I just make the phone ring - with warmed-up
prospects.
In
PR: “Are you the person I should send this press release
to?”
I don’t think
I’ve ever met an editor who isn’t incredibly sick and tired
of press agents or product developers who call up and say,
“Did you get my press release?” Sure they got
your press release. They receive all the press releases -
which one was yours? This is usually followed by a flurry
of activity: the editor having to fumble through the stacks of
papers, half-written stories, half-finished coffee, and
occasionally toward the deadline of the month — half-eaten
pizzas — sitting on their desk to find your release. I
guarantee by the time they found it, your press release has one foot in the
grave - er… wastebasket. Still in all, more likely than not,
you’re going to have to send another press release to make sure they have it on-hand and at the ready.
Yet
it’s much more likely your press release will be published if
you speak with an editor. So here’s the plan: Call
the editor BEFORE sending him or her a press release, and ask, “Are you the person I should send this press release
to?” You see, this sets up a ‘can you help me’
relationship with the editor, and editors by their nature - like
school teachers - are a very helpful lot. If they say yes, give
them a short, one minute pitch (they’re also a very busy lot)
and then send your release to them. This will increase
your chance of being published from 5% to 50%, maybe 70%, maybe 80%.
If
the editor isn’t the right one, and says “Oh no, you’ve
got to send that to Jeff Rogers, our chief editor down the
hall.” You then pick up the phone and knowing full well Rogers is the one, you call and say to him. “Are you the
person I should send this release to…” You see, this
sets up a ‘can you help me’ relationship…
“Nice
speaking with you.”
Even if it
wasn’t, “Nice speaking with you, thank you for receiving my
call.” should be the first line of the letter you include with
the press release that you send to an editor after
you’ve spoken with him or her. (Yes, I believe all press
releases should be sent with a letter). Since most press
releases are sent without phone calls, this subtly reminds the
editor of your conversation, and that the publishing of this
particular release has great importance to you. Also remember not to say in your letter, “Enclosed is our
release…” they can see that. Instead, your letter
focus should be on “Thank you so much for your consideration
to publish our release. Your readers will get this
wonderful informational booklet, shipped promptly, filled with
terrific ideas and tips on…”. Letters with press
releases build your credibility.
Still More Great Marketing Lines
“See
Page...”
In catalogs I
always like to refer customers to other pages. Whether
it’s accessories, similar items, or just stuff that goes well
with other stuff, the best thing a customer can do is
thumb through the pages. The longer the customer stays in
your book, the better the chance he’ll order something, or
order something else.
“See
Order Form on Page...”
If the objective
is to have customers order, it never hurts to remind them.
Pointing to the order for is a subtle reminder. A nice
phrase is “It’s easy to order - see Order Form on
page...”
“What’s
New Inside…”
In newsletters,
catalogs, long copy packages, and other longer publications I
like to entice readers with a bulleted list of fascinating
places to go to inside. If we can just spike a
couple of high interest notes and get the reader inside, we’ve
accomplished the cover objective and have a good start toward
our goals of additional time in our package and
increasing sales and brand loyalty.
“And
how did you hear of our company?”
Built into every
advertising and marketing program should be a tracking system.
When your marketing is purely through the mail it may be easy to
track through a priority code number, response sent to a particular department, or simply a
color coded envelope. But some marketing programs, and
most retail operations need to figure out which ad their customer saw or which offer they are responding to. I
always recommend this simple method: leave a small pad of paper
or stack of 3” x 5” index cards next to each phone, and when it rings - early in the conversation - ask “And how did
you hear of our company?”
Take
all the filled-out slips of paper and put them in a selected
drawer. At the end of the month you’ll have a good idea
which ad or program is working. At the end of 6 months
you’ll know for sure which ads were profitable and which
mailing worked the best.
“It’s
a little over, is that OK?”
OK, so it
isn’t used in direct mail. But I don’t know of a deli
counter man this side of New York who hasn’t used this
up-selling line at least a thousand times a week. Pretty
effective marketing, eh?
“Satisfaction
Always Guaranteed”
Heck, you’re
going to get stuck with it anyhow if it comes back, might as
well be a nice guy and say this right up front. It’ll
increase your sales.
“Kindest
regards,”
I sign off of
every letter this way. Kinda’ nice, don’t you think?
©2000
Jeffrey Dobkin
Jeffrey
Dobkin is a copywriter with a strong background in graphic
design. He writes and designs letters, collateral,
catalogs, and direct marketing packages. He is also a
speaker and direct marketing consultant who writes efficient and
effective promotional plans for any budget. Send your
direct marketing packages for review and constructive
critique, call him to ask questions, or call for his free
instructional booklet of direct marketing tips: 610/642-1000.
Dobkin is the author of two books, Uncommon Marketing
Techniques - 35 articles on direct marketing, just like the one
you just read, and How To Market A Product For Under
$500!, a
400 page direct marketing how-to manual. Call and get both
books from the publisher, Danielle Adams Publishing, Box 100,
Merion Station, PA 19066. Call TOLL FREE: 800-234-IDEA.
Thanks. Satisfaction Always Guaranteed
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