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Sales Letter Readability: Improve Your Response Rates Conversationally (Free Sample Included).

By: Alan Sharpe

Article Word Count: 1028 words  [Comments (0)]
Total Views: 93 Views






I am doing what you do, sitting at my computer, trying to get my



thoughts out of my head and into a written form that will help



you make a decision. In this particular case, I am trying to



write a few intelligent remarks about sounding conversational on



paper. You know, how to write a sales letter that sounds like it



came from the mind of a person and not an institution.







I suppose the first thing I can tell you is that you should



write the way you talk, unless, of course, you talk in halting



sentences punctuated with "ya knows" and "like, you know what I



mean?"







And if you usually write sales letters that are signed by



someone else, your marketing manager, for example, then you need



to write the way that person speaks.







The secret to sounding personal and conversational on paper is



to imagine that you are actually having a conversation with your



customer or prospect. A back-and-forth exchange where your



reader asks questions and you supply answers. That way, your



letter sounds like it is written by a living, breathing person,



since it addresses issues that are important to the reader, and



does so in a warm, lively style.







Which reminds me, try to keep your sentences short. Not like



the one that ended the last paragraph.







What else can I tell you? Rhetorical questions are one device



at your disposal. Rhetorical questions, as I am sure you know,



are questions that are asked for rhetorical effect, not



expecting an answer. You can use one or two in your letter if



you like. Rhetorical questions create the sense that a



conversation is taking place between you and your prospect or



customer.







I don't have to tell you that another way to sound



conversational is to use the first person a lot. That means you



say, "Your business means a lot to me," instead of saying "Your



business means a lot to us," or, even worse, "Purchases made by



your company are appreciated by my firm." Remember, business



people buy from people, not businesses, so you want to sound



like a business person, not an impersonal business, when you



write your sales letters.







I just thought of another one. Without being fake or insincere,



mention that you thought of your client today, or yesterday, or



recently, showing that there is a relationship between the two



of you. Naturally, only say "I was thinking of you this morning"



if you actually were. Otherwise you will be making stuff up.







You may be relieved to know that you can be colloquial, too,



which is a humdinger of a way to establish rapport and sound



genuine. If your buyers know what a humdinger is, then by all



means throw one into your letters at least once a year.







Your goal in all of this, if I may say so, is to sound



authentic without being overly familiar or coarse.







Another way to sound conversational is to be open in the way



you talk about things. Give your customers a glimpse into what



life is like at your organization.







You probably want an example of what I mean, so here it is



(here are two examples, actually):







Commercial-ese: "Shipments are dispatched from our warehouse in



a timely and an efficient manner in accordance with our ISO 9000



designation."







Conversational: "Our warehouse manager, Bob Fletcher, will make



sure your shipment is headed towards your plant by end of day



today."







Commercial-ese: "Our sales department is in receipt of your



order of Jan 23."







Conversational: "Kathryn in our sales office told me about your



recent order. Thanks for your repeat business, Alan!"







Another sure way of avoiding "bureaucratic-speak" is to say



everything in the active voice. Don't say "money is saved" when



you can say "you save money." Avoid writing "operating costs are



reduced" when you can instead write "we reduce your operating



costs." See the improvement? Passive voice sounds institutional.



Active voice sounds conversational.







I suppose if you went back to the start and began reading this



message again, you'd pick up a few methods that I did not



mention (using parentheses like this, for example, which looks



as though you are lowering your voice and whispering a piece of



inside information to your reader).







I hope that these tips help you write effective sales letters.



Ones that come from your heart, and are effective mainly for



that very reason.







© 2006 Sharpe Copy Inc. You may reprint this article online and



in print provided the links remain live and the content remains



unaltered (including the "About the Author" message).



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