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Improving “Glance Readership” in Post Cards—Part 2
By Jeffrey Dobkin, marketing consultant, author, and professional speaker
In part one of this article, we discussed creating a
great headline to drive readers into reading the
rest of the post card text. This was by using the
Jeff Dobkin 100-to-1 Rule: write 100 headlines, go
back, and pick out your best one. Hey, I didn’t say
you’d like it, I just said it was effective.
Here’s how to continue to drive readers further into
the copy of your postcard to fulfill your post
card’s objective. You do know what your post card’s
objective is, don’t you? Or… do you?
So, at a glance, your reader reads your headline.
Bam. Kapow. Zzzip. Your reader was instantly dazed,
dazzled, and driven to continue reading. Yes, just
like that. In under 2 seconds.
OK, don’t lose him now — to sustain readership,
use bold sub-headlines. You know, the couple of
sentences scattered throughout the body copy to
break it up——with bold, large type that’s not quite
as large as your headline. Yeah, use two or three of
them.
Today’s skimming readers will pass over smaller type
to read the bold subheads before going back to read
the regular text. Man, those subheads need to be
G-R-E-A-T. And, just like the headline, this is NOT
the place to sell your product, either. It’s the
place to further increase readership. That’s the
only objective of the subhead copy. Keep the reader
interested, keep him reading.
Your post card’s sub-headlines create a fascinating
but short storyline of brief bits, bullets, and
bites of boundless bulleted information. Sorry, I
got caught up in my own alliteration.
The subheads, as we call them in the business,
continue to fascinate your audience and make that
final push to get readers to read the rest of the
copy, the dreaded “tiny type” us older folks can’t
really see without bifocals; the meat of your post
card.
The tiny type is the last holdout, the final
frontier for selling on your post card. And do you
actually sell anything here? No. This is still NOT
the place to sell your product.
What?
“EXCUSE ME!” said the client, “I paid good money for
the creative, the printing, and the mailing. What’s
this guy talking about? When do I sell my product?”
Sorry. The entire post card — that isn’t the place
to sell your product either.
My client was mistakenly correct. “That’s exactly
right!” I reply. “YOU sell your product. The post
card does not sell your product.” The post card is
not the place to sell your product.
Your post card is simply the place to ask for
someone to call you. That is the objective of the
card: generate a phone call. If I send you a post
card and you call me… that post card worked really,
really well. It did its job, 1000% successful. Any
questions? And now, it’s time for you to do your
job, to sell your product.
How to get someone to call.
While you can get high response rates by making a
great offer to your own hand-carved specific list,
I’ll make a generality here: To get readers to call,
you can be most effective by offering something for
FREE.
Face it - when you wrote your post card, you kept
complaining “Oh, there isn’t any room to sell
anything to anyone!” Good thing I was listening -
because you were right. The limited space of your
post card really isn’t enough space to sell
anything. And frankly, it isn’t the place to sell
anything.
The Objective.
Remember the objective? All writing is drafted to
fulfill a specific objective.
There is only one objective of your post card: make
the reader pick up the phone and call you. That’s
all. If the reader makes the call, the card
succeeds. If he doesn’t, the card fails. If the
reader calls, YOU sell your product.
One final thought: to make the reader call, offer
something FREE. It’s the last piece of the puzzle,
what you should offer. Know what it is? Hint:
Fulfillment cost is under a dollar - and it works
better than anything else in its price range. Here’s
another hint: get our FREE Booklet: “The BEST offer
you can make to increase response from your post
cards!”
Call 610-642-1000 for your FREE Booklet. Any
questions?
---Source: This is the second part
of “Glance Readership,” a 3-article series written
by Jeffrey Dobkin. Jeffrey Dobkin is a copywriter,
speaker, and direct marketing consultant. Call for
his free instructional booklet of direct marketing
tips: 610/642-1000 or visit his Web site at
www.dobkin.com
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