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Index Page –› Companies & Business –› Marketing
 

Sales Letter Writing: Boost Your B2B Readability

 

Who do some sales letters put a smile on your face while others put a yawn in your throat?

Why are some sales letters harder to read than others?

Keeping your reader hooked right to the end of your letter is one of the hardest challenges in business-to-business direct mail lead generation. The secret is making your copy easy to read.

Entertain
Successful sales letters arouse your interest, make you laugh, intrigue you in some way or make you want to sit down with a coffee and see what the writer has to say. Without detracting from your main message and reason for writing, try to make your letters entertaining. If you want a good example of entertaining, informative writing, read the column that Herschell Gordon Lewis writes in Direct magazine. Here is a recent excerpt:

Isn't it comforting? The entire marketing superstructure retailing, media advertising and online promotion is shot through with customer elimination management.

In the pages of this publication, over a period of years, I've complained (well, make that ranted) about that strange and elusive goal, customer relationship management, which through its enforcement by overpaid enforcers invariably becomes just plain customer management. Relationship? That's up to us peons, if we can break through the management blockade.

So the wobbly superstructure totters on terminology rather than relationship. Result: relationship disappears under the bulky mass of management. Voil! Springing up in the detritus of relationship is reality: elimination.

This was driven home to me when, responding as the yokel I am to the lure of television glamour, I ditched my trusty cell phone and replaced it with a sleek, expensive and not quite as efficient Razr V3, complete with that goofy-looking Bluetooth earpiece, whose name always reminds me of something that went wrong in the dentist's office.

Match your tone
Think your prospects age, job title, gender and personality type while you write. I just finished writing copy aimed at Fortune 50 bankers. The tone I employed was different from the one I use when writing to small business owners.

Avoid jargon 24/7
Unless you are certain that your reader knows what an AVM is for or why hydrodynamic lubrication starvation is a problem, leave out the jargon. In its place, use plain English that makes your point without patronizing the reader or making you sound like you are a novice to the prospects industry.

Go short
Make your sentences short. Like this. Prefer the short word over the long. Vary your sentence length to avoid monotony, but aim to keep them all readable in one breath. Short sentences are easier to understand.

Say it with fewer
Say it. Stop. Sign your name.

Pitch to the right person
Aim your selling message at the intelligence level of one of your typical customers. Dont overestimate their intelligence, or underestimate it either.

Relax
Dont throw away your Strunk and White. But dont become its slave, either. Break the rules of grammar and Grandmas rules to avoid sounding stiff and institutional. But use standard punctuation. And the accepted conventions for capitalization. Otherwise youll be perceived as a freak. Which youre not. Right?

Author: Alan Sharpe
 
Author Bio:

Alan Sharpe

Alan Sharpe is a business-to-business direct mail copywriter and lead generation consultant. As President of Sharpe Copy Inc. Alan specializes in helping businesses generate leads, close sales and retain customers using cost-effective, compelling direct mail and email marketing. Alan also uses his direct mail advertising services to help charities raise funds and raise awareness of their causes, using fundraising letters. Sign up for Alan Sharpe's B2B Direct Mail Tactics e-newsletter. Every Monday morning, receive in your inbox a short, helpful article on direct mail lead generation.

This article can be searched using: internet marketing, search engine marketing, online marketing, online marketing business opportunity
 
 
 

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