No one can deny that sales closing techniques
are absolutely vital in face-to-face selling. But often,
people ask me if they can apply my
powerful closing techniques to online marketing.
My answer is an unequivocal, "Yes!"
Of course, there are some closing techniques that are more
applicable to the Web than others -- but I'll show you magical
closing secrets that can dramatically increase your
web sales, and rapidly increase your online income. This
works best on direct response
websites - i.e., those that focus on getting an immediate
response in the form of an order or lead.
Before we get started, I must emphasize that much of the
sale is made in the presentation.
The close is largely determined by how well you've presented
the product to the prospect. Your objective, then, is to
take the prospect smoothly
past the point of closing, making it easy for him or her
to come to a buying decision. You can accomplish this with
the strategic use of questions.
The All-Important Opening Question
When you're selling online, you don't have the benefit
of interacting with your prospect
the way you would in face-to-face selling. Therefore, the
first thing you say in your web copy has to be something
that breaks preoccupation, grabs
attention, and points to the result or benefit
of the your product.
At any given moment, your prospect's mind is preoccupied
with dozens of things. Therefore, a well-crafted
question will cause the prospect's thinking to be directed
to what you have to say.
Your opening question must be aimed at something that is
relevant and important,
and at something that your prospect needs or wants. What
do sales managers, for instance, sit around and think about
all day long? Increasing sales! Therefore, if your target
market consists of sales managers, here's an example of
a question you can use as a headline or as the first part
of your copy: "How would you like to see a method that
would enable you to increase your sales by 20% to 30% over
the next 12 months?"
When you ask such a question, the first thing that pops
into the mind of the prospect should be, "What is it?"
- whereupon you've captured his or her attention, and you
can then begin to articulate how your product or service
can solve the need posed by the question.
Plan your opening question
carefully. If your opening question fails to break your
prospect's preoccupation and grab his attention, he will
click away before giving you the opportunity to present
your product or service.
Questions That Keep Them Involved
Questions are equally vital during the presentation, i.e.,
in the body of your web copy, for clearly explaining how
your product or service solves your prospect's problem in
an easy, fast, or cost-effective way.
Therefore, install questions within your sales copy that
capture attention. Keep your prospect involved, and keep
his mind from wandering off in a different direction by
using intriguing questions
that grab his lapels and jerk
him toward you. For the length of time that it takes a prospect
to answer a question in his mind, you have his total attention.
The prospect is drawn more and more into the sales process
as your questioning proceeds. If your questions are logical,
orderly and sequential, you can lead the prospect
forward toward the inevitable conclusion
to purchase your product or service.
Tip: Never say something if you
can ask it instead! Think of how you can phrase
your key selling points as questions. The person
who asks questions has control!
Closing Questions that Presume the Sale
Just as questions are important at the beginning and the
body of your web copy, they are even more vital at the end
in gaining a commitment to action.
The key to asking a closing question is confident
expectation. You must skillfully craft your question
to convey that you confidently expect the prospect to say,
"Yes" or to agree to the sale.
For example, you can pose the following question in your
web copy: "When would you like to start using to multiply
your profits?" In other words, you don't ask if
they want to buy your product, but when.
This way, you're asking for the sale expectantly, and the
more confidently you expect to sell, the more likely it
is that you will sell.
Tip: In crafting your closing
question, include the benefit that your prospect will get
from your product.
When you ask a compelling closing question, you diffuse
the tension that normally creeps up on your prospect
at the "moment of truth." A prospect's tension
leads to the hesitance that kills so many sales - both online
and offline.
To be truly persuasive in the selling process, learn to
use questions judiciously throughout your web copy. Instead
of trying to overwhelm your prospects with reasons and rationales
for doing what you want them to do, ask strategic questions
instead. When you take the time to plan
the wording of your questions, your prospect will
become more interested in your product -- and consequently,
you will make more sales.
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