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Found Your True Calling (To Action)?
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| Guest post by: Jay Hamilton-Roth |
Article Overview: You already know that every time you market your business, you need to include a call to action. A reason for someone to contact you now. Where should you place it? How should you phrase the call?
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Free Download - Marketing Happiness By Jay Hamilton-Roth |
Found Your True Calling (To Action)?
You already know that every time you market your business, you need
to include a call to action. A reason for someone to contact you now.
Where should you place it? How should you phrase the call?
Think of your marketing copy as a conversation you’re having with a prospect.
You’re at a business event, and meet someone new. You shake hands,
and introduce yourself by name. You mention why you’re at the event,
who you work for, and perhaps an observation or two to build a
connection with your new friend. If you’re savvy, you’ll ask more
questions about your friend’s business than you’ll tell about yours.
You’re listening so you can share relevant information with them. If
you have some knowledge of solutions to your new friend’s business
challenges, here’s the time to mention it. You might ask for their
business card and offer to follow up with them later about your
information (giving your business card in exchange).
In this conversation, your ended your conversation with a call to
action (”give me your card so I can give you the information you need
to solve your problems”).
Your first call to action would be after you’ve clearly identified
your prospect’s problem, validated your expertise, and put a value on
solving the problem (not necessarily what you charge, but rather what
it’s worth to them in monetary or emotional terms). If you have
extended marketing copy, then you’d place calls to action following
each detailed explanation of another problem/solution you handle
effectively. And you’d end your extended copy with yet another call to
action (in case the prospects skimmed over the content).
The phrasing of the call should be natural: “Call TODAY to solve
your problem. Guaranteed.” The call to action must have a mention of
time, otherwise it’s not compelling (”Call when you’re ready to find
out more”). The call is actually worded as a subtle command: you’re
telling your prospect exactly what to do, after you’ve sold them on why
they should care about your offering.
Don’t make your prospects “read between the lines” too much. Make it
blindingly obvious what you’re offering, why they need it, and how they
can get it.
Article Tags: business card, business event, detailed explanation, emotional terms, marketing, new friend, observation, phrase, phrasing, problem solution, prospects
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About the Author: Jay Hamilton-Roth RSS for Jay's articles - Visit Jay's website Jay Hamilton-Roth founded Many Good Ideas (http://www.ManyGoodIdeas.com) to help small businesses brainstorm, design, and implement effective marketing strategies. He combines creativity with common sense to demystify the process of getting great results. He has used his high-tech background from MIT to help him launch five businesses. He consults with companies in a wide range of industries and publishes a monthly marketing newsletter and daily marketing blog (http://ask.ManyGoodIdeas.com). He is the host of the new TV series "Business With Passion" (http://TV.ManyGoodIdeas.com). Click here to visit Jay's website Leggo My Logo Make Your Marketing Personal Marketing 201 Networking Goals Book Review Web Marketing For Dummies Book Review Pop Stand Out In Any Crowd |
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