The Power of a Personal Message in Sales
Today something remarkable happened, I got a piece of junk mail that I actually felt compelled to open, and once I read the contents I was even more compelled to give them a call.
This impressed me because 99.99% of the junk mail I get does not make it past my office door where the shredder sits consuming the daily unwanted unopened contents of my mailbox.
I have read that the average American adult receives 40+ pounds of junk mail every year, so what did this company do that was so remarkable to get their one ounce sales message past my shredder?
The small envelope was hand addressed to me with a first class stamp. Inside was a single page handwritten note off of a mini legal pad with a name, pitch and a phone number.
They made it personal, made me curious, communicated their message quickly, and they got me.
In this world of demographic driven marketing-to-the-masses, could simply sending personal messages to targeted groups of individuals be a successful strategy to improve lead quality/quantity and help your company stand out?
I don’t know, but at 75 cents a lead, I can afford to find out.
How personal is your company’s message?
A good first step is to read your own marketing materials. Does the text talk about you and how great your company is or does it talk about how your product benefits the person buying it?
It’s easy to write on our websites and press releases that we are “industry leaders,” or talk about our own accomplishments and how many years of combined experience we have, but that is not a very compelling read to a potential buyer trying to answer the age old question “What is this product/service going to do for me?”
No matter the method, make your message personal and a little bit different to get your prospective buyers attention. Then make the most of that precious attention by delivering a message that does more for the person experiencing it than the marketing department that wrote it.
Image courtesy of zcache.com
