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Welcome to a very special edition of the SEO Elite newsletter.
There's tons of material to cover today, so let's get started.
First, tell me
something:
Do you
own an internet business?
Do you want
to make money out of your website?
Are you
selling a product online?
Silly
questions, right? I can hear the resounding " Duh "
all the way over here. But let's see if you can get the next
question right:
What is the
single most important factor that determines the
success or failure of your online
business?
- Your search
engine rankings
- Your
subscribers' list
- The quality
of your product/service
- After-sales
support
Actually,
none of the above .
Instead
, the one thing that convinces your visitors to buy from
you and converts aimless browsers into enthusiastic, paying
prospects is... (drum roll) .
Amazing
sales copy.
I cannot
emphasize this more - your website's copy will be the critical
factor in converting those hordes of visitors. You can jazz up your
website with Flash menus, hire the best designer in the world to get
a captivating, goddess-like site design, and use the best SEO
services and tools to guarantee your #1 spot in all the search
engines for all your keywords, but if you don't pay
attention to your sales copy.
You might as
well be pissing away all the money down the drain.
Sales copy, good
sales copy, can mean the difference between lukewarm interest and
raging hordes clamoring for your product. It can turn around a
flagging product and revive your website faster than you can throw
visitors at it.
In a nutshell,
copywriting is all about selling . It's that
simple. But before I go any further, I'll make one thing clear:
I usually don't
give much time to copywriting skills because my focus here is to
teach you how to blast your website through the roof in your search
engine rankings, not how to convert that traffic. However, most of
that traffic is no good if you don't know how to use it. A lot of
the websites I've recently reviewed (skimmed over, rather) suffer
from a variation of the same problem:
The
sales copy needed a LOT of improving.
Here's a truth
in marketing - whatever you have, whether its market share or
monthly profits or conversion rates, it can always be
improved.
Now whether you
are pulling in your weight in gold every week or your copy really,
really needs to be improved, read on ahead because you will always
find room for improvement in your sales writing.
But like I said,
this is an SEO newsletter and as such, I will compress a LOT of
strategies, little tips and grand principles into as small a space
as I can. So pay close attention as we dive headfirst into arguably
the most important aspect of selling online.

Keyword
Elite: Generate 1000s Of Keywords In Seconds!
Copywriting,
like selling, is all about selling to the prospect's wants. In this,
you, as the business owner, have to identify your
audience as well as profile them - once you begin
to understand what your targeted audience wants, how they think and
most importantly, how they feel about certain issues, you will have
much more powerful copy.
What they want,
how they think, how they feel. Pretty basic. Identify your audience,
and then get inside your prospect's head, figure out how they tick
so you can build a rough profile and most importantly, write
down everything you learn about your prospect. This may
seem like a tiring mental exercise, and it is in the beginning, but
the key here is to know why this is important (I'll get to that in a
minute).
Have you noticed
how I've not mentioned the features of the product you might be
selling? Do you want to know the reason why?
They don't
really matter.
Of course, they
matter to you, because you've worked really hard and/or spent a lot
of time and money towards creating your product. But they don't
matter to your prospect.
Your
audience doesn't care about features - let me give you an
example:
- Great user
interface on your latest software release.
- The biggest
French fries in the city.
- Pizza
delivery to your doorstep inside 10 minutes.
Blah. Don't beat
yourself up asking again and again why no one looks twice at that
list.
Instead (and
here comes the punch line), your prospects are always
asking:
What's in it
for me?
How can this
help me do this?
And the best
question you need to remember every single time.
How will
this solve my problem?
So the next time
you sit down to prepare your sales pitch / sales copy, take your
list of features, and your new list on which you have profiled your
potential audience, and start brainstorming. Find the links that
connect the dots from what your prospects are asking (how can this
help me?) and what you are offering (the features).
Tell
your prospects exactly how your product can help them overcome a
particular problem.
Sell the
solution, not the product.
Too many sales
letters or websites that I've seen ask the visitor to do far too
much - you'll find a newsletter signup box, a paragraph talking
about all the wonderful articles on the site, maybe another bit
about affiliate products and then something about
selling them a product.
And when the
average business owner gets to the part where he has to convince the
prospect to pull out their wallet and hand over some hard-earned
cash, what do they do?
Umm.how about
nothing?
More precisely,
their sales copy is trying to do too much - like
multi-tasking a 100 things at the same time. Possible, yes, but not
where selling is concerned and you have just a few seconds
to grab the prospect's attention and only a few more
seconds to turn that attention into genuine interest.
A common mistake
is trying to be everything to everyone - either through promoting
the product to a generic audience or worse, writing for a generic
audience.
There are
usually two reasons why a business owner would do that.
- One
, they probably forgot to do any serious research
on their market and they don't know who their audience
really is (and why are you in business again?)
- Two
, they are scared (or greedy) about the product not
pulling in enough money and they want to widen the net
so they can "earn more".
Either way, your
sales copy is going to be the same stale, dull pile of boring "copy"
that graces most websites on the Internet. The sole
reason?
It lacks
focus .
Get inside your
prospect's head. FOCUS on their needs, their wants, their problems.
Focus on providing a solution to those problems.
And focus on
writing directly to that prospect. Sell your
solution to him personally , as if you were sitting
right across the table from your prospect and had to make your best
sales pitch.
Don't try to be
all things to your prospects. Your website is in front of them for a
single purpose - to offer them a solution to a
particular problem. If you cannot convince them that you have the
best answer, they'll walk away with no remorse. And if they don't
have the problem you are solving, they'll still walk
away.
In your writing
and in your research, focus on your prospect, and what you have to
do in order to convince them to buy from you. Everything else is
more or less pointless, and at the best, secondary.
Focus.
Find
High Paying Adsense Keywords!

Here's another
question for you:
What makes
people buy?
Yes, it's sales
copy. And yes, it's because you are selling them a solution and not
the features.
But have you
ever thought about what goes on inside a prospect's mind
, from the time she sees your sales copy till the time the
she has an "aha!" moment and decides to buy your brand of detergent
(or whatever you want to sell)?
Sales copy is a
static medium . You can't use your positive body
language, your disarming smile and a confident voice to sell - all
you've got is words. Jumbles of alphabets.
How the
hell do you sell from that?
The key is NOT
what you say - even the most focused and ingenious copy can fall
flat if it doesn't have "what it takes" to create that desire, that
spark inside your prospect's head.
It's all about
delivery. Not visual delivery of your sales pitch but.
The
words you use to deliver your sales pitch.
Michael Fortin
calls them UPWORDS. Joe Vitale, another great copywriter, tagged the
whole process as hypnotic marketing. Famous marketers of an older
era such as David Ogilvy and Joe Sugarman swore by the
principle.
It's dead
simple. You have to translate all that positive body language, all
your confidence, all your energy, into a tightly written, powerful,
visually stimulating sales copy.
Visual
stimulation. Painting pictures for your prospects to imagine
. This is what separates the great from the merely good in
marketing and copywriting. If you want your prospect to be fully
convinced that you are the best deal in town, use your words not
only to sell the solution, but to paint that solution
as a powerful, eyeball-grabbing picture in their
minds.
And once you're
inside their heads, you just have to connect the dots and show them
(once again using words as a visual tool ) how they
can use your product to erase that particular problem that had
plagued them until that very moment.
Build your sales
copy using your words as visual aids - to support,
represent and ultimately sell your solution the prospect.
That's it for
now. Go back to your website and take a good, hard look at your
sales copy. Are you missing the whole point? Does your copy lack
focus? Are you just selling the features and assuming that
the prospect will do the mental legwork for you and become motivated
by herself?
Are you
selling to her emotions or are you selling to her
mind?
| Next Issue - The Anatomy Of
A Sales Letter... |
Coming up in the
next issue.you'll get the most intensive crash course in writing a
sales letter using exactly the principles we've talked about today.


Brad Callen
Professional SEO
Purchase
SEO Elite: SEO Software
Secret
keyword software that took me from $3.25/day to $236/day
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