You don’t have to attend an elite institution to learn how to turn words into money, says multimillionaire entrepreneur Dan Kennedy in The Ultimate Sales Letter. Whether you’re a new business owner or just interested in writing persuasively, you can use Kennedy’s tips and strategies to craft powerful sales letters that will capture customers’ attention and make them want to buy what you’re selling.
Kennedy is a direct-response marketing consultant, speaker, and author of dozens of business books, including 10 in the popular No B.S. business book series. Originally published in 1990 and updated in 2011, The Ultimate Sales Letter provides time-tested foundational strategies in the art of persuasive writing that translate across media in the ever-evolving world of sales and marketing.
In this guide, we’ll cover Kennedy’s strategies for understanding your target customer and product and crafting sales letters that get results. We’ll also compare and contrast his work with updated recommendations from other sales and marketing experts.
Once you have your audience’s attention, you need to keep them engaged. Kennedy says you can do this by using a friendly, conversational tone, showing your personality, and repeating your sales pitch in as many different ways as possible. You can also encourage customer interaction by asking questions at the start or end of paragraphs and by writing partial sentences at the end of each page to force buyers to turn it over to find out what happens next.
Once you’ve engaged your customer, you need to convince them that your product or service is valuable and worth the price. Kennedy says you shouldn’t worry about the length of your letter—take as many pages as you need to make a compelling argument.
Kennedy recommends providing evidence that highlights the benefits of your product or service to your customer, such as testimonials and photographs that show the product is easy to use or that your service delivers great results.
He also says you must address the tricky subject of your product’s price, which you have to navigate carefully because consumers won’t buy a product without knowing its cost, but they’ll also forgo purchasing that product if they don’t like its price. He recommends two strategies to de-emphasize your product’s cost and turn customers’ focus to reasons they should buy it.
Strategy 1: Shift the conversation from your product’s price to the value or savings your customer will experience when they buy it:
Strategy 2: Move beyond the topic of price by focusing on persuasion techniques that compel your customer to buy your product:
After convincing your customer that they need your product, your goal is to get them to respond to your letter as quickly as possible. Kennedy says this is crucial because when prospective customers put your letter down to “read it later,” they rarely do. He offers the following tips to compel consumers to respond to your letter immediately:
Now you have a letter that will capture your customer’s attention, convince them you have a product or service worth buying, and compel them to respond quickly. Your last task is to put the finishing touches on your letter, and make sure your target customer receives it. Kennedy recommends the following tips to polish your letter and make sure it gets into the right hands:
Refine, Finalize, and Send a Video Sales Letter
Kennedy’s fundamental processes for refining, finalizing, and getting your written sales letter to your target customer are similar to and apply across contemporary sales mediums, but differences do exist—particularly when you compare written sales letters and video sales letters.
For example, the process of editing a video sales letter requires different skills from editing a written letter. Also, with a written letter, you have to choose physical materials and send your letter by mail, but with a video sales letter, you have to publish and promote your video online.
Kennedy offers some final thoughts on how to strategically use your sales letter, and how to expand its purposes in the future.
Kennedy says that you can improve your brand recognition and increase customers’ response rate to your first sales letter by sending a second (and possibly third) follow-up letter 45 to 60 days after your first.
(Shortform note: Kennedy doesn’t provide specific information on what content should go in your follow-up letter. To get ideas and learn how to boost response rates to email sales letters, consider these templates for a series of follow-up emails. While wording is important, the key is persistence—not quitting until you get a firm yes or no.)
Kennedy says that in addition to using your sales letter to sell products and services to new and existing customers, you can also use it to:
Finally, Kennedy argues that although social media has changed the communications landscape since the first publication of The Ultimate Sales Letter in 1990, the fundamentals required to write a powerful, long-form sales letter translate across platforms—including in online sales letters, TV infomercials, and other advertising. Because of their proven effectiveness, he asserts it would be foolish to abandon written copy sales letters and argues that a combination of offline and online sales letters is the best approach.
The Combined Video Sales Strategy
Kennedy asserts that a strategy combining written and online sales letters is the most effective, but he doesn’t explain why. Other proponents of the approach say it works because it allows you to reach a wider audience, build a stronger brand, reach customers at different points in the buying process, and save money on marketing.
But if a combination of written and online letters is more effective than either technique in isolation, then a combination of video sales strategies may be the best approach. Video commercials, 30- to 60-second ads, can supplement video sales letters by helping you attract customers, create and maintain awareness about your product, and build your brand.
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