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How to Write Sales Letters that Sell Drayton Bird

How to Write Sales Letters that Sell By Drayton Bird

How to Write Sales Letters that Sell by Drayton Bird


£17.00
New RRP £25.00
Condition - Very Good
5 in stock

Summary

The right piece of direct mail can produce excellent response rates and have an extraordinary effect on business. How to Write Sales Letter that Sell reveals the secrets of creating successful sales letters and contains examples of real sales letters including plenty of advice on what to avoid as well as what to include.

How to Write Sales Letters that Sell Summary

How to Write Sales Letters that Sell by Drayton Bird

The right piece of direct mail can produce excellent response rates and have an extraordinary effect on business. But why do some sale letters achieve spectacular results whilst others are instantly consigned to the bin? This book reveals the secrets of creating successful sales letters. Containing examples of real sales letters, it includes plenty of advice on what to avoid as well as what to include. Key topics are covered such as: the secrets of persuasion; planning a letter which will get replies; creating offers that get responses and timing mailings for maximum effect.

How to Write Sales Letters that Sell Reviews

"The ultimate how-to book of direct mail letter writing."
"If you manage to take on board just half of the suggestions, you will never write a dud sales letter again."

About Drayton Bird

Drayton Bird is a direct marketing expert named by the Chartered Institute of Marketing as one of 50 living individuals who have shaped today's marketing. In 1977, with two partners, he set up Trenear-Harvey, Bird & Watson, which became the UK's largest DM agency, which he sold in 1984 to Ogilvy and Mather. As international Vice-Chairman and Creative Director, he helped O&M Direct become the world's largest direct marketing agency network, and was elected to the worldwide Ogilvy Group board. Drayton Bird has worked with many of the world's leading brands, including American Express, British Airways, Microsoft, Nestle, Procter & Gamble, Unilever and Visa. He has also worked with major advertising agency groups, including Y&R, JWT, FCB and Leo Burnett. He now runs Drayton Bird Associates, who work with many firms on direct marketing and other marketing matters.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements Introduction Letters that make millions One of your best investments Speak directly to the right people Money squandered by the lazy The personal touch makes the difference How to plan; questions unanswered Study what works and what doesn't Use your imagination 1. Why it's hard to write a good sales letter The wrong point of view How do you make it interesting? Two roads to disaster The good news: people do read and reply No need to be clever: just relevant Allocate your time correctly Five elements in success The most important letter you may ever write 2. Why some letters fail, while other succeed Why are you writing? Describe what you are selling What it is versus what it does Compare strengths and weaknesses Few customers care about technicalities 3. Who is your competitor? Direct and indirect competition At what stage is the market? Compare what you offer carefully Ask what the customer likes The first essential of a good letter 4. A salesman in an envelope Detective work Learn about everything Do what a salesman does Poor brief, poor letter The first part of the creative process Find out what really happened Watch what competitors are doing Four questions to be answered Have you forgotten anything? Don't be put off by negative people Pick up easy money most businesses ignore Extra revenue - for petty cash Why enquiries are usually genuine A reminder gets good results A working aid for you 32 things to ask when you are planning your letter 5. The customer's point of view What is junk mail? Questions you must answer Ten ways to learn about prospects Letters that should sell - but don't Making the best (or worst) of a bad situation Get the easy bit out of the way 6. The right stuff A recipe that works Formulae that produce art Use your imagination Three things that make most difference A more complete argument usually needed 7. Fine writing - or persuasive offer What is most important? Why offers and incentives work Why some marketers don't like offers Give more profit than they cost The two kinds of offer that work best An offer helps you begin the letter When don't you need offers? It pays to say 'Thank you' The 'negative' incentive How a good offer may save a stinker of a letter Some offers that have worked 8. Desperate beginnings Which pile will your letters be in? Message or not? Ten pointers on envelopes Why gimmicks often work Can you demonstrate the product? A flying letter 9. The right approach Questions in the reader's mind Give the reader something quickly Two very successful openings Make it 'newsy' What are they thinking? Who and why? What is the relationship Permission to speak When is a good time? 10. Write to somebody, not everybody Picture your readers Emotion means opportunity A unique group A few ideas to get you started You must get the nod 11. The guts of your letter Keep them reading Ensuring every possible reply Be exact: quantify your benefits Prove what you say is true What is most convincing? Have you missed anything? One letter with guts - two without 12. Close that sale! A boring chore 21 Ways to get more orders A perfect effort Above all, make it urgent Use a PS 13. How to write a better A mysterious change Beware of cliches Be careful with jargon Write the way you talk Tricks that make reading easy How best sellers are written A few minor problems - like how to begin 14. Writing that charms What is tone? The secret of charm A relaxed approach How should you vary tone? Be a chameleon Vary wording More than charm: the relevant surprise 15. How should your letters look? Make it look personal Tricks to make letters work better Judgement is essential Make it look inviting When to use headings What about style, colour, texture? What use is your letterhead? 16. Common questions Long letter or short? Personalized or not? How do you address people? Signing off Do I need a brochure as well? A good example to analyse What should I ask people to do? How many replies can I expect? How to get them spending After they've bought, how do I strengthen the relationship? The easiest source of new business What if they haven't paid? Letters planned to work with other media Index

Additional information

GOR002734867
9780749438760
0749438762
How to Write Sales Letters that Sell by Drayton Bird
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Kogan Page Ltd
2002-10-03
320
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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