Anatomy Of A Direct Response Letter
Ad Writing/Copywriting

Direct
response letters have been around for a very long time. The main
reason for this is because they work! In fact, any sales letter
not written in a direct response "format" is almost doomed from
the beginning to fail.
Many people
on the Internet have turned away from using direct response
letters thinking that it won't work. They think that people on
the Net are some how "different" than the regular John Doe that
receives his "snail mail" everyday.
Nothing
could be further from the truth! The main reason direct response
letters work so well is because they "attack" the emotional side
of the buyer. And you must never forget one thing......
People buy with emotions, NOT logic!
Regardless
of whether you're on the Internet and you have your own Web
site, or you send out emails or regular mail as part of your
promotional campaign - you MUST always attempt to write your
sales material in a direct response fashion.
The
following is a step-by-step breakdown of the perfect direct
response letter.
Let's begin
with...
First,
consider the headline. There is always a headline of some sort
for all sales letters. If you're sending out email sales
letters, the "subject line" of the email would act as the
headline.
The headline focuses the reader's attention on one quick
benefit or promise (or two). It gives the reader a reason to
spend valuable time with your letter. It also helps close out
other random thoughts and provides a context for what is about
to follow.
Try to make a promise or allude to some key benefit. Refer in
some way to the offer, perhaps in a subordinate line.
Remember, the offer is what the reader will eventually act
upon.
Try a "headline group." A headline, subhead and one, two or
three short bulleted phrases that extend the headline message
provides more information in a key location. It promotes
greater involvement than one headline.
The
opening is the first sentence or first two sentences following
the salutation. "I am writing to you about..." or "I want you
to know about..." are not openings. Frankly, the reader
doesn't care what you want. He cares about himself. This is a
key place to say something about him or his needs which your
product will gratify.
Most letters are won or lost in the first sentence. The best
way to lose is to begin talking about yourself and your
organization.
A phrase to keep in mind is, "Talk about my lawn, not your
grass seed!" Another famous saying that speaks to this
situation is:
"Tell
me quick and tell me true or else, my friend to hell with
you. Not how this product came to be, but what the damn
thing does for me."
After the
opening, make a brief reference to the offer:
"...and
you can discover it, (prove it, enjoy it) FREE, without
obligation with the certificate enclosed."
Now the
reader knows you're not going to be asking him for money.
Maybe. The reader can relax. The response device begins to set
up the response behavior.
It's also smart to "merchandise" the offer by referring to it
at several points throughout the letter. "When you send for
your free demo and get it up and running, you'll quickly
see..."
From the
offer preview, get right into the benefits that your reader
will realize when he/she tests, previews, examines your
product. Stay in second person throughout your letter.
You're
talking to the reader (one person, not a market) about the
reader, not you, and you're talking about yourself and your
product only in terms of what it will do for reader.
Remember you're selling the offer, not the product. It's much
easier to sell a 30-day trial, a free download of software or
a free examination than it is to sell the product itself.
You'll discuss payment terms later.
Try to lead off sentences and phrases with benefits.
"You'll
make first-hand contact with hundreds of the most active, most
involved sales prospects in the industry in just two short
days..."
"As one
of America's elite "Million-Plus" pharmacies, you are in a
unique position to increase sales, slash operating costs and
grow your business rapidly with xyz..."
To avoid
eye-glazing, mind-numbing, wall-to-wall copy, use subheads to
introduce new thoughts and to move from one part of the letter
to the next. Write in short sentences. Short paragraphs.
Present a list of benefits or features in list form:
* Each
item
* Preceded by
* A bullet
...instead of in a linear paragraph.
Use words
of one syllable as much as possible. Don't assume that the
person you're writing to is as literate as you are.
Even if
he is, he's distracted, and he's trying to extract the key
information he needs, often by just scanning your letter.
Which is another good reason to use subheads...bulleted
listings...and...ellipses.
Edit out unnecessary words and phrases and "write like you
talk," assuming you can talk like a successful salesman.
Clarity is more important than literary merit. The ability to
sell is more important than the ability to write.
When
you've fully described the many ways your product will benefit
the reader, show the reader how to acquire this fabulous
program. Or, rather, how the reader can realize these benefits
right NOW.
Spell out your offer in detail. What does the reader get? If
you're offering a premium, this is the place to sell that a
bit, too. You may also feature it in the brochure, if you have
one, or in a separate premium flyer.
If at all possible, and if appropriate, date your offer. An
expiration date helps to keep your package from going up
between the lamp and the tape dispenser for further
consideration.
Again,
agreement doesn't do it. Only acting on that agreement right
now results in sales.
No one
wants to make a mistake. Especially not an expensive mistake.
Relieve that fear with your guarantee.
By law
you must refund legitimate requests up to 30 days anyway, so
why not make it a virtue? Don't worry that your guarantee
somehow sheds doubt on your product.
The
guarantee speaks to your performance as a business person they
can trust, not to your product.
But don't hawk it as a "Money Back Guarantee." or "Full Refund
If Not Satisfied" kind of thing. That's negative.
A Free
(or Risk-Free or No-Risk) 30-day Trial is the same thing,
expressed in positive terms. "Examine it, try it, use it for a
full 30 days without risk." That's an invitation, not a
warning.
Even
after all that, you can't assume the reader will do what you
want him to do, right now. But that's what he must do. So
spell it out.
Does he
"click here" to use and order form on your Web site or does he
have to send out an email of some sore?
Does he
complete a reply card, call a toll-free number, complete a
questionnaire, check a box? Detach a reply card? What? Is
there a postpaid or self-addressed reply envelope to use?
Ask the reader to do all that right now because that
expiration date will be here before they know it. Because they
really want to try this, but if they let it go until "later,"
they will forget.
Punctuate
the call to action with the signature, then add a P.S. After
the headline and first sentence, the P.S. is the most read
part of a direct response letter.
Use that
important space to repeat a key benefit, or add a twist or an
another idea to something you've already said. Also repeat
your call to action here, in slightly different words.
The
mnemonic for the basic function of all direct marketing, but
especially for letters, is AIDA.
-
Get Attention.
-
Arouse Interest.
-
Stimulate Desire.
-
Prompt Action.
And it
ain't over until the "fat lady" returns the order form, calls
the toll free order line or fills out your order form and hits
the submit button!
More Marketing
Guide...

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