How Important is Your Marketing Message?
by Charlie Cook
www.marketingforsuccess.com
Bob called last week from Phoenix, Arizona with some stunning news about
his web site. He first contacted me in the fall of 2003. He had a web
site that was helping him generate a healthy income but he sensed he
could be doing even better. He wanted to get more visitors to his web
site and get more of them to contact him about his retail liquidation
services.
Are you interested in getting more prospects to your web site and
prompting more of them to contact you?
Over the two months I worked with Bob to help him clearly define his
target market, identify the problem he solves, and clarify his marketing
message. We improved the copy on his web site and the structure of his
web pages to prompt more people to contact him. I showed him how to
write articles and use them to generate a steady stream of visitors to
his site.
Bob was happy with the results of these changes, but I wasn't. He was
getting more visitors to his site and more inquiries, but I thought
there was potential for even more growth. I knew that Bob could be doing
better if he would just change his marketing
message. Despite my best efforts to persuade, cajole and prompt him to
rethink how he talked about what he did, Bob was happy with his existing
marketing message.
Prior to working with me, Bob had spent ten years regularly
experimenting with his marketing message and had found a sentence that
generated the best response he’d ever had. It was working; he was
keeping busy, making money and didn't want to
mess with success.
We finished our work together almost a year ago, so I was surprised when
Bob called last week. It turns out that he hadn't stopped experimenting.
He had taken my advice to heart after all and been fine-tuning his
marketing message so that it described the problem he solves for his
clients clearly and concisely.
With this new marketing message at the top of his web page, Bob is
getting 3 times the number of inquiries about his services. That's 300%
more people who know the problem he solves and who are contacting him
about his services.
How much more could you be making if you had 3 times as many people
contact you about your products and services?
When your prospects are considering a purchase, they are looking to
solve a problem. They might want to eliminate back pain, fund their
child’s college tuition, sell off their excess inventory quickly so they
have more operating cash on hand, as in Bob's case. In every case your
prospect has a problem or need that prompted their purchase.
Your prospects are hoping you can help them. They're hoping you have the
solution to making them happier, smarter and richer. They are buying the
result you provide.
When a prospect meets you or visits your web site, the first item they
should see is a statement of the problem you solve. Your prospects then
immediately know whether you can help them.
Why is your marketing message – your elevator speech – and the way you
talk about what you do so important?
At ten to twelve words long, your marketing message won't cover all the
problems you solve, establish your credibility or the value you provide.
But if the first thing you say to a prospect doesn't get their
attention, they won't stay at your web site, read the rest of your
marketing materials or listen to the rest of what you have to say.
Bob spent over a decade experimenting to find a marketing message that
helped him generate a steady income and then in a few months discovered
he could improve on it by three hundred percent. Don't wait ten years to
do the same with your marketing. Write, test and use a problem solving
marketing message and more people will contact you about your products
and services.
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2005 © In Mind Communications, LLC. All rights reserved.
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