Increase Traffic
To Your Website
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regarding increasing traffic to your website
Magnetize
Your Advertising
Prevent
Procrastination With Positive Pressure
My wife and I recently bought a
house.
It's currently being built and
moving day is slated for December. So we decided to buy some
furniture in order to fill some of the "extra space." (Our new
home is double the size of our current one.)
Now, something really
interesting happened.
The story is a little long, and
almost unbelievable, but let me cut to the heart of the
matter. (I'll tell you the whole story some other time. You'll
cringe!)
After shopping around a few
stores, we came across a big chain department store that
carried what we were looking for — a bed, a couch, a dinner
table and chairs, all at reasonable prices.
(In fact, they were all on
special. Hey, call me stingy.)
We walked in, spoke to a
salesperson and asked if they had a layaway plan that extended
beyond their normal wait (i.e., since we were in August, we're
talking several months). Not that we needed it, but a layaway
plan could help us temporarily store the furniture
until we move into our new home.
And once we asked him about the
layaway plan, he used the "good cop, bad cop" routine on us, a
common sales tactic I'm all too familiar with.
"Let me check with my manager,"
he said. He left, spoke with someone in the electronics
department who obviously didn't look like a "manager." And
five minutes later, he returned. "Sure," he added, "but only
if you buy today."
I used to be a salesperson.
(I still am.) And I use urgency tactics in my copy all the
time. But I hate pressure tactics when they are glaringly
obvious.
We didn't care so much for the
layaway plan as we did the special. So, realizing the
salesperson's tactics, I looked at my wife, gave her a
nonverbal cue, she nodded and we decided to leave in order to
"think about it."
The salesperson made a valiant
effort to get our money that day. But knowing he was
deceitful, the pressure he used only pushed us away even more.
Needless to say, we never asked
to see "Gerry" again. And we made several trips to the store,
where each visit had its own remarkable story. If you only
knew what we went through, you'll understand what I mean by
"remarkable."
However, we finally did get our
furniture after we met "Jim."
Jim was truly the epitome of
great customer service.
He truly empathized with us.
He was apologetic, never once mentioned anything about him
or his product (the conversation was entirely focused on us),
and even even asked us to pull out our floor plans so we can
correctly measure the space and appropriate layout for the
furniture.
He then extended the layaway
without any so-called manager's approval, gave us free
furniture shampoo, free polish, free installation and free
delivery — all as a gesture of appreciation, according to Jim.
"Mr. Fortin, look at it as our
way of saying 'thank you' for giving us a second chance...
Other people would have never returned like you did. I'll
extend your layaway without question since you're kind enough
to give us that chance."
Thank you indeed.
The lesson?
This situation says a lot about how to write good copy. Being
empathetic, being concerned and, above all, being interested
in the prospect.
But the greatest lesson, that I
want to pull from this, is this:
When writing copy, use scarcity
and add a sense of urgency. As Jim Rohn once said, "Without a
sense of urgency, desire loses it value." But NEVER
use underhanded tactics, and NEVER make it so
blatantly obvious.
(For instance, how many times
have you come across a salesletter where the offer had a
deadline, which seemed to "magically" bump ahead each time you
visited the website? That's what I mean. People are not
stupid!)
Here's the lesson: never
pressure people to PUSH them into purchasing...
Instead, use pressure to
PREVENT them from procrastinating.
There is a fundamental
difference between the two.
Of course, you can and should
use pressure tactics in your copy. But not to pressure the
prospect into buying but to prevent her from
procrastinating, which is a typical, "knee-jerk" reaction
to any offer... Money means security to most people, and they
don't want to part with their security.
When you use pressure and
scarcity tactics, be truthful. Make your offer quantity-bound
or time-limited. Not your product or service. The offer. And
always — always! — back it up with a real, genuine and
logical explanation.
People are becoming more and
more educated. So using obvious and deceitful tactics, such as
a script that modifies the date, or a quantity that seems to
remain the same for ages, is going to work against you.
Hard.
Each time you use pressure in
your copy, always back it up with a logical explanation as to
why you're doing so. Tell your reader why you are limiting the
offer. And don't just be genuine and truthful, but also
be unique. Place a limit on your offer using a tactic that's
not duplicated all over the Internet.
For example, say you add a
bonus from a third party. You can explain that the bonus comes
from another source and you only secured permission for a
certain quantity. Or put a deadline on your offer — a real
date! — and explain why. Then change the offer once that
date has arrived.
Procrastination is the biggest
killer of sales — particularly online where the chances of a
prospect staying or returning to a website (in order to think
about buying), in today's click-happy world, are scarce.
Takeaway selling is in fact based on the concept of supply
and demand.
As the saying goes, "People don't know how much they want
something until it's about to be taken away from them." Look
at it this way: if you give a chance for your prospects to
procrastinate, they will. Guaranteed.
So, add a deadline or some kind of constraint, since such
limitations implore at some unconscious level, "You better
read this and take action now!"
But always make sure to back up your limitation with an
logical reason in order not to appear misleading or
disingenuous. That's the REAL key. (In fact,
what will push them will not be the limitation in itself but
its justification.)
Adding a deadline or a cap on the number of new clients, or
even making the offer something that's secretive, exclusive or
otherwise unavailable to the general public, can arouse
stronger motives in the psyche of your readers.
But give your added sense of urgency some level of
credibility. For example:
"We were overshipped on these cassette tapes and, in
order to clear out inventory, we are discounting them by [X]
dollars... However, we only have 541 left in stock, so
please act soon."
"One of the bonuses includes [X] hours of individualized
coaching worth $[X]. But there are only so many hours in the
day... So I must limit the number of coaching students to
50. Therefore, I urge you to act now."
Or, "During our recent move we slightly damaged 178
pieces of our stock — while the damage is hidden and
insignificant, I can't sell them as new and must let them go
at a one-of-a-kind discount."
It's all about customer service. Because, if you use
pressure to prevent prospects from procrastinating, they will
thank you for it. You reduce buyer's remorse, get less refunds
and returns, and increase repeat sales.
Plus, they will believe more in you and your product, they
will feel happy with their purchase and they will even use the
logical explanations you gave them to justify THEIR
own decisions to buy.
As you know, customers like to buy. They don't like to
be sold.
Remember, people buy on emotion first and then justify
their decisions with logic. If you give them logical
explanations, many will in fact use your suggestions as a way
to back up their purchasing decisions.
As Brian Tracy once noted.
"A man convinced against his will
is of the same opinion still."
About the Author
Michel Fortin is a direct response copywriter, author,
speaker and consultant. His specialty are long copy sales
letters and websites. Watch him rewrite copy on video each
month, and get tips and tested conversion strategies proven to
boost response in his membership site at
http://TheCopyDoctor.com/
today.