I write a lot of articles about
copywriting and marketing on the Internet. I
have always believed you're best at what you love to do,
if you spend your
time doing what you love. Here are what many may believe
are obvious rules,
but these are the 7 rules I have most often seen broken.
Since I'm far..
very, very far from perfect, many of these rules I have
repeatedly broken
myself as well.
Knowing the rules does not necessarily mean following the
rules. Read,
Recite, Retain and Recycle. 4 words a previous professor
used 1000 times. He
constantly stressed the point, and I quote, "Just because
you've read it in
the book young blood, doesn't prove you've learned a thing.
1. Know your Audience.
The first rule of advertising is to know your Audience
or better put,
"Target Audience". Know where and how to find
them. I know this seems to be
a simple and quite obvious rule, but never a day goes by
that I don't see it
broken. I read and scan approximately 10-20 newsletters
each day, and each
day I see those ads, thinking to myself, "what are
they doing here"?
OK, maybe you will find someone reading a B2B newsletter
that is interested
in Antique Crystal, but don't you think your efforts and
advertising budget
would be better served finding a newsletter on Antiques?
You may even gain
exposure to a businessperson who likes old crystal, but
more than likely
they don't have that on their mind at the time. Now, I may
be a little on
the dramatic side, but you get the point. Know where your
advertising will
best suit the readers and their present state of mind.
2. How do I really know they have that
many subscribers?
Well friend, I may be cutting my own throat here just a
little (as I use an
email publishing program of my own design), but the one
sure way to know, is
to advertise with newsletters who use a neutral service
such as eGroups
or Topica . There are many
services free and paid. Some editors also use a bonded service
that tracks
and guarantees an honest count of a subscriber base. Being
what I consider a
small fish yet, I do not yet worry that much about the advertising
quite
that much. I don't yet use a service of any kind. At the
present I'm more
interested in gaining a loyal readership, than selling advertising.
That's
not to say I don't sell advertising, I just don't push it
that hard....yet.
But what it comes down to is that if the newsletter doesn't
use an
independent service that keeps and displays the subscriber
count, then you
have to rely on trust. Trust, my friend, can sometimes be
a hard thing to
come by these days.
3. Avoid Nuisance Publications.
This could be anything from an opt-in ad list, to solo-ads,
to a monthly
service mailing. Although many of these have large, sometimes
very large
subscriber bases, they get a great deal of no-show readers.
These are
publications that quite often get deleted by a large portion
of the people
receiving them. I get them all the time. How many other
opt in advertisers
do you think really read those endless emails of advertising
garbage.
Solo ads do get read, but think about it, how many do you
read? I may read 1
out of 50. As soon as I see a Solo Ad or any of those other
names they're
given I delete on contact! What about you? You do get premium
space and
exposure, if enough people read them, but after talking
to other webmasters,
I found that a great deal of them usually delete them without
ever being
read. So consider what you have to pay for that premium
space, and that
probably only 10% of the people see it.
Suppose you sign up for a free service and one of the stipulations
is that
you agree to receive their "occasional" mailings.
You know; those are the
ones you receive every month, week or even daily that you
tolerate only
because you enjoy the privilege of their service. If you
are deleting these,
how many other subscribers do you feel may be doing the
same?
This is not to say that you won't get a response, but too
many of these
mailings demand higher rates for their advertising space.
You must decide
just how much exposure you will really get and whether the
price is worth
the service.
4. Bad Contact Information Sucks.
Another obvious but often abused rule. This is as common
sense, as common
sense can get. Make it easy to respond. I don't know about
you, but it
really irks me to read and respond to an ad, only to find
that there is no
such web address or I've emailed an unknown address. Oh
well, their loss.
I've encountered everything from the misspelling their email
or web address
to having none at all. I've even seen one Einstein who published
his social
security number in place of a fax number. Hey, I guess (most
of) it happens
to the best of us, but it still sucks!
5. How Are Your Headlines, Sunshine?
The main purpose of the headline is to gain attention!
People scan
newsletter advertising the same was they flip through the
pages of a
newspaper. They most often are trying to avoid reading your
advertising. The
key to the headline is to catch their eye before they get
by you, to make
them stop and read what you have to say. How do you stop
those quick,
averting eyes? Well, everyone has his or her own ideas about
this.
IMPORTANT INFORMATION FOLLOWS FOR MEN
AND WOMEN OVER 50
This headline promises important news, and if I were over
50, I would have
to stop and look. I recently wrote an ad for a friend, with
a headline
similar to this. The first thing she asked me, was "what
about my other
clients"? She asked me this even though she knew her
product served a
certain demographic niche. She herself told me that 75%
of her business
served men and women over 50. Sounds like great odds to
me. After doing some
brief research of her business and a few questions, I concluded
that her
target audience are men and women over 50. I advised her
to target this age
group. If you get others outside of this demographic category,
great! But
let's stay focused on where the majority of the business
comes from. The
rest is icing on the cake!
6. Headlines Won't Help, if they're not
seen.
Before buying that ad space, know where that ad will be
placed. Unlike the
traditional newspaper, digital newsletters vary quite a
bit in pricing and
placement quality. I would much rather buy a $20.00 ad at
the top of a good
newsletter, than spend $10.00 for two at the bottom of one
of the same
quality. Ask your editor or webmaster if they can tell you
where they will
place your paid ad.
Get accustomed to only advertising in newsletters you know
or have at least
viewed. Do you read the advertising? How many ads will accompany
yours?
Would you easily find your ad here? Watch and count the
amount of ads that
surface in newsletters you are considering. You don't want
your ad lost in
a maze of headlines, probably never to be heard from again.
If your
prospect's advertising quantities fluctuate, again, ask
the editor. Many
will be courteous enough to offer approximations.
7. Follow Basic Copywriting Rules.
If you're like me, you write your own copy and advertising.
There was a
time...long, long ago, I had a formal education in business
and marketing,
so I know (or have hidden away in the cob webs I call a
mind) all the old
rules and have met many new ones along the way in these
last 4 years of
being on the Internet. Here are some quick rules on copywriting
as it
pertains to print and newsletter advertising.
- Appeal to the reader's emotions and instincts.
- Must convince even the most hardened skeptics.
- Overcome any objections the buyer may have.
- Use power words that literally force people to act.
- Capture and keep the reader's interest.
- Appeal to the reader's ego and self-interest.
- Show the facts and proof of your claims.
- Help the reader justify the purchase.
- Write copy that coincides with current attitudes in your
target group.
- Motivate you reader to buy NOW.
- Use "special" benefits to make your product
more attractive.
- Make your reader believe in you.
- Ad copy must relate and communicate like average people.
- Know what your target market really wants.
- Be able to easily lead into your back-end offers
- Emulate other successful (but not over used) ad copy structures.
- Make your product so attractive that your reader has no
choice but to buy.
- Write, re-write and re-write and re-write and re-write........
This article is not meant to cover all the many trials
of finding the right
newsletters to advertise in, but to help point you in the
right direction!
Thanks for reading! |