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Prospective customers will not buy unless
they feel good
about you, your company and your product or
service. Here
are 4 simple ways you can stimulate their
good feelings
...and motivate them to buy.
1. Personalise Your Marketing
Prospects are more likely to buy from you
when they feel you are talking directly to them about their unique needs.
Look for ways to make your sales message more specific to the needs of
prospective customers.
For example, subdivide your targeted market
into several more narrowly defined niche markets. Then
customise your sales approach so it appeals to the specific
interests of prospects in each niche market.
Tip: You can narrow the appeal of your web
site without losing its effectiveness with your broader
market. Just create customised web pages for each niche
market you target. Then add a link to each of these
specialised pages on your home page.
2. Emphasise Good Feelings
Prospective customers usually
base their buying decision on how they feel about your product or service.
Get them excited about using it and they won't
hesitate to buy.
One way to get them excited
is to convert the benefits provided by your product or service into a
vivid word picture. Put your prospect in the picture by
dramatizing what it feels like to be enjoying those
benefits. For example: If you sell financial products,
describe what it feels like to enjoy an affluent lifestyle
without debt.
3. Confront Buyer Scepticism
A prospective customer will
not buy if they have any doubt that you will deliver exactly what you
promise. Here are 3 of the many ways you can confront and
overcome scepticism in your customer's mind.
* Use testimonials. They prove you've
already delivered satisfaction to other customers. To be
effective, they should describe a specific result your
customer got by using your product or service. For example, "In just 2 weeks
I lost 9 pounds, felt years younger and still continued to enjoy my
favourite foods".
* Provide specifics. Convert general
statements into specific descriptions. Instead of "quick and
easy", explain exactly how quick and how easy. Also, reduce
round numbers like
"15 pounds" into specific odd numbers like "13.7 pounds". It sounds more
authentic.
* Tone down your claims. A bold claim
creates doubt in your prospect's mind and jeopardizes the sale. Avoid using
any claim that sounds exaggerated - even if it is true. Reduce any bold
claim to a more believable statement.
4. Eliminate the Need To Make Decisions
Try to structure your selling process so
prospective customers do not have to make decisions.
Every decision they have to make interrupts the buying process. It diverts
their attention away from the action of completing the sale.
This can be especially hazardous when
customers have difficulty making a clear choice among
several options. Some will avoid the risk of making a wrong choice by making
NO choice ...and you lose a sale you already had.
That's why you should promote only one
product or service each time you advertise. You can use
separate promotions for each product or service. But limit your prospect's
decision to only "Yes, I will buy" or "No, I will not buy". Don't risk losing them over a "Which One"
decision.
Tip: Sometimes you can successfully combine
2 or more related products or services into a special
combination offer. But limit your customer's decision to
"Yes" or "No". Don't include an option to buy the items
separately.
Prospective customers must feel good about
you, your company and your product or service before they will buy. Start
using these 4 simple tactics to stimulate their good feelings and motivate them to buy.
Bob Leduc spent 20 years
helping businesses like yours find new customers and increase sales. He just
released a New Edition of his manual, How To Build Your Small Business Fast
With Simple Postcards and several other publications to help small
businesses grow and prosper. For more information:
Copyright 2003 Bob Leduc
http://BobLeduc.com
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