The Online Copywriter's Most Valuable
Resource
In this issue:
- One of the strangest days of my selling life …
- What your prospects silently crave but seldom get – give it to
them and the world is your oyster …
- One of the biggest reasons copy fails …
- How to create truly empathetic marketing …
- And more!
Dear Business Builder,
When I was a green-as-a-head-of-cabbage
commission sales rep, I made a startling discovery. My job was to
barge in on local industrial, retail, and service businesses and
extract a small check for $30 and a signature that meant the local
gas utility would deliver their natural gas through my company’s
supply contracts.
One day, while driving from one town to
the next I came upon a very large building sitting by its lonesome
on an almost deserted stretch of highway. I detoured down the
lengthy service road to check the size of the meter and piping on
the outside of the building. It was HUGE!
What this meant was I could earn a fat
commission if I could get the owner of the building to sign up. I
went inside and inquired as to who was in charge, and was directed
to an address nearby in the countryside. I found the man’s name on
a mailbox on a narrow and heavily wooded side road in the middle of
nowhere.
I entered the long winding driveway and
eventually came upon an extremely large stone home and guesthouse
that could only be described as a mansion surrounded by wondrous
gardens, duck ponds, and what must have been no less than 5 acres
of beautifully landscaped grounds.
I rang the doorbell, and was met by an
elderly man who turned out to be the man I was looking for. I
introduced myself, and was about to make my customary pitch, when
somehow at the last second before I opened my mouth I sensed that
the man wanted to talk to me. Instead of speaking, I simply looked
at him, and waited for him to speak.
Sure enough he invited me in, offered me
refreshments, and began sharing his various hobbies and interests.
And for the next couple of hours I barely said a word. I simply
listened to him and nodded occasionally. Eventually he said, “I
know you’re busy, you mentioned you where here from the gas company
…”
I told him what I was selling, and asked
for his signature and a check. Without hesitating, he complied. I
thanked him, got in my car, and left.
In those two hours, I made more
commission than in the previous two weeks, and I hadn’t said more
than a few words to get it. The whole experience was surreal.
What your
prospects silently crave
but seldom get – give it to them
and the world is your oyster …
Here was an extremely wealthy man who had
everything except someone who would listen to him, and
make him feel understood. Something about my countenance made him
believe I was that person, and I had enough intelligence to play
along.
Later, when I got involved in high ticket
technology sales that involved multiple interactions, I always
remembered this strange lesson, and it paved the way to tens of
millions of dollars in sales.
I never again found anyone else who
opened up to me quite as easily and enthusiastically as the strange
rich gentlemen, but I discovered that with a little encouragement,
almost every one of my prospects and clients could be read like a
book through an honest expression of interest and a few thoughtful
questions.
And every single one of them conveyed the
same unspoken message. “Help me to feel understood.”
Isn’t this the silent plea of most
people?
I’ve found few other skills as useful in
sales and marketing as helping people to fulfill this need. It
gives you a competitive advantage that is difficult to decipher and
even more difficult to duplicate.
Allow me to draw a distinction between
understanding your target audience, and helping them to feel
understood. What I’m suggesting here is a much deeper level of
communication than most people think about.
It is literally the difference between
trying to sell somebody something, and getting them to
want to buy from you. Do you see the difference?
What I discovered was that when I did
most of the talking people were much more difficult to lead to a
positive decision. But when I made an effort to get them talking
about what they wanted to talk about – if I listened carefully
enough – I would almost always hear them telling me exactly
what they wanted me to say to convince them to buy.
Each customer had things they wanted to
talk to me about more than communications networks and software
systems. My rare talent for listening helped me to develop strong
relationships with them. What I was selling could have been
purchased from several other salespeople and companies, in many
cases for substantially less, but helping my customers to feel
understood, made them want to buy them from me.
In time, I had customers sharing their
deepest personal problems with me. Problems with their children …
their employees … their bosses … their golf game … you name it.
Everyone has a need to talk about their
problems, concerns, joys, hobbies, or special interests. But very
few of us have enough people willing to listen. The secret is
knowing the right questions to ask, and being able to shut up and
actively listen.
As I began listening to people in this
way, I began learning many interesting things about them. It was
fascinating to widen my understanding of different people. I felt
closer to them, and they seemed to trust me and to buy more from
me, more often.
Most importantly, they revealed their
mental maps to me. They told me how they viewed the world … what
they wanted from life … and exactly what they needed to hear to buy
my product.
One of the biggest
reasons copy fails …
Now you may be wondering what all of this
has to do with online marketing and copywriting. Plenty. You see
one of the biggest reasons a piece of copy fails is because the
copywriter misunderstands his or her role. Few copywriters
appreciate just how far the “salesmanship in print” analogy
extends.
To successfully market a product, you
must help people to feel understood, just as a successful
salesperson does. In a very real sense your spokesperson becomes a
part of them and their world.
The most effective marketing conveys a
deep, accurate, almost uncanny understanding of the prospects that
it is targeted toward. The result is an intense psychological
bonding and rapport that will ultimately result in something that
can only be described as “a relationship”.
Your spokesperson’s voice can literally
go with your prospects wherever they go, haunting them whenever
they think of the area of their life the product or service you’re
selling touches. Do you see the power in what I’m saying?
This does NOT come about by accident.
Copy that is truly empathetic comes about as a result of feeling
with another person. It is seeing the world through their
eyes and viewing it as they view it. It is not a product of online
research, surveys, or interviewing your client. These things are
helpful, but they don’t give you an opportunity to strip away the
veneer and gain an insight into the deeper structures of people’s
experience.
How to create truly
empathetic marketing …
If you want to create truly empathetic
marketing, you must develop an intense interest in helping the
people you are called upon to sell to. And go to the trouble of
engaging them in intimate conversation. There’s no other way.
I see this as no different to the
“discovery” calls I would engage in as a consultative salesperson.
The only difference being that I am looking for common themes and
threads across a number of prospects that point me to the most
universal appeals that are likely to resonate with the target
market I’ve identified.
This process must bypass the logical and
intellectual layers of communication. In talking to these people my
number one goal is help them to feel understood. Only then will
they tell me how to communicate my empathy for them, and what they
need to hear to be sold.
The Bottom Line:
Empathy is a powerful force. It breaks
down barriers, cements relationships, and makes people want to buy
from you. It silently moves you past their outer defenses,
nourishes their sense of self worth, and causes them to mentally
say, “You mean something to me.” “You make my life better.” You
help me to be the person I want to be.”
It is interesting to note that a company
without a spokesperson – and there are a great many of them
– will never enjoy this kind of super profitable relationship
with its clients. The one-to-one connection, and your ability as a
copywriter to help people to feel understood should never be
underestimated.
Until next time, Good Selling!

Daniel Levis
Editor, The Web Marketing
Advisor
THE TOTAL
PACKAGE™
Daniel Levis is a top marketing consultant & direct response
copywriter based in Toronto, Canada and publisher of the world
famous copywriting anthology Masters of Copywriting
featuring the selling wisdom of 44 of the "Top Money" marketing
minds of all time, including Clayton Makepeace, Dan Kennedy, Joe
Sugarman, John Carlton, Joe Vitale, Michel Fortin, Richard
Armstrong and dozens more! For a FREE excerpt visit
Sellingtohumannature.com
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