Suppose you had responded to
an advertisement from a manufacturer of forged steel valves and requested
more information. How would you react to this reply?
Dear Sir:
Chemical Equipment magazine
has informed us of your interest in our line of valves for the chemical
process industry. Enclosed please find the literature you requested. We
will await with interest your specific inquiry.
Sincerely,
Joe Jones, Sales Manger
XYZ Valve Corporation
That letter doesn't call for
action, build trust in the letter writer or tell the reader why he should
want to buy valves from XYZ. There's no salesmanship in it, just a blunt
acknowledgment that an inquiry has been made fulfillment package that
should help move the sale along will not.
The tragedy is most letters
mailed to fulfill business/industrial inquiries are just about as bad. Too
many marketers treat a cover letter as an afterthought, once the pros at
the ad agency have written the "important" elements of the communications
program - ads, brochures, and catalogues.
That's a big mistake. As
creative consultant Sig Rosenblum aptly puts it, "Ads go through a long
process of rough, comps, and finished art. But those are just devices to
put ideas into the reader's mind. Your simple letters can carry powerful
ideas just as easily as your complex ads."
Do they? Circle some bingo
card numbers and see for yourself. The responses you receive will include
weak, dreary cover letters that rely on hackneyed expressions like
"enclose please find," "pursuant to your request," and the ever-boring "
as per your inquiry." That's not selling. Which clichés substitute for
copy that expresses a company's desire to help prospects solve problems,
hot leads can quickly turn cold.
Part of the problem is that
nonwriters such as product mangers and engineers often write cover
letters. Management reasons that the copywriter's time is better spent on
ads and collateral. Yet the letter provides the toughest writing
challenge. It must sell on words alone, without the embellishment of
color, photos, or artwork.
Seven Letters Tips
The key to successful cover
letters? Be friendly, courteous, and helpful. Tell the reader how you will
help him solve his problem better, faster, or cheaper than the
competition. Here are seven letter writing tips:
1. Thank the prospect for the
lead. "Thanks for your interest" is a common opener. It may be becoming a
cliche. But it's still a necessary courtesy.
2. Highlight key sales
points. Don't try to summarize your sales literature, but instead pick one
or two of the important sales points and emphasize them in your letter.
Letters are handy supplements to literature because they can include any
recent developments that a color brochure, with its longer life, may not
reflect. Your letter can focus on a recent case history, a new
application, a product improvement, or an addition to your manufacturing
facility.
If you must include more than
two or three sales points, you can use "bullets" or numbers to set them
apart (as this article does). Here's a sample from the Spartan Co.:
Dear Mr. Guterl:
Thanks for your interest in
our Dry S02 Scrubbing Systems for industrial and utility air pollution
control. Unlike conventional "wet" Dry Scrubbing removes chemical and
particulate waste products as a free-flowing dry powder that is easy to
handle and safe to dispose of. The system produces no sludge-so you don't
need expensive thickeners, clarifies, or other wastewater treatment
equipment.
In addition to eliminating
the sludge problem, Dry Scrubbing give you these advantages:
Less energy consumption
Lower operating and capital
costs
High system reliability;
less maintenance
No reheat required
The enclosed brochure
provides a fairly complete description of how the system works. Our
representative in your area, listed on the "Spartan Reps" sheet, will be
happy to answer your questions.
Sincerely,
Gary Blake, Product Manger
Dry Scrubbing Systems
Notice how the writer
structured the letter to give one feature ("no sludge") top billing, while
still touching lightly upon other important advantages of the system. The
letter makes some sales points and whets the reader's interest in the
literature he requested.
3. Tell the reader about the
next step in the buying process. Make it easy for him or her. A portion of
a good cover letter illustrates the point. The writer suggests a course of
action (sending in a material sample for evaluation) that can solve the
customer's problem and result in the sale of a mineral pelletizer:
The key question, of course,
is the cost of equipment to handle the volume required at your plant.
Because the capacity of our Pelletizers will vary slightly with the
particulates involved, well be glad to take a look at a random five gallon
sample of your material. We'll evaluate it and get back to you with our
equipment recommendation. If you will note with your sample the size
pellets you prefer and the volume you wish to handle, we can give you an
estimate of the cost involved.
From this point on we can do
an exploratory pelletizing test, a full day's test run or will rent you a
production machine with an option to purchase. You can see f or yourself
how efficiently it works and how easy it is to use. Of course the
equipment can be purchased outright too.
4. Write in a conversational
tone. Your sales letter is communication from one human being to
another-not from one corporate entity to the next. Warmth, humor,
understanding, and an eagerness to be helpful are what make you the super
salesperson you are.
Why not endow your letters
with those same positive qualities? Note how the letter above uses a
casual almost folksy tone to win the reader's confidence and attention.
CLUMSY FAVORITES
One way to achieve an easy,
natural style is to eliminate "whiskers" from your writing-those hackneyed
expressions that drain the life and personality from sales letters.
Antiquated phrases from the vocabulary of the bureaucrat make a person
(and his company) come across as a stuffed shirt.
Here are 10 hackneyed
expressions to avoid:
• Enclosed please find...
The reader can find it on his own. Just say "I'm enclosing" or "Here is."
• When time permits...
Poetic, but inaccurate. Time doesn't permit; people do.
• Please don't hesitate to call.
You really mean "feel free to call."
• We are this date in receipt of...
Say instead, "Today we received."
• As per your request...
• Of even date...
Translation: "today."
• Pursuant to your orders...
That's too formal. Just say, "As you requested," or "Following your
instructions."
• Whereas. . .
Use "where" or "while."
• Kindly advise...
As opposed to "unkindly"? It's unnecessary.
5. Have a "you orientation."
Good letters writers know that the word "you" may well be the most
important word in their vocabulary. A "you" orientation means thinking
about what the reader needs, wants, and desires. It means not tooting your
own horn. It means translating the technical features of a product into
benefits that help the reader do his job, serve his customers, and please
his boss. And, it means addressing the reader directly as "you." Remember,
a sales letter is a personal communication, not a cold recitation of
scientific technicalities.
6. Be concise. Use small
words and short sentences. And break the writing up into many short
paragraphs. Brevity makes writing easy to read. Run-on sentences and long
chunks of unbroken text bore and intimidate readers.
It's best to get to the point
in the fewest words possible. Here's how the Acme Slide Rule Co. gets its
message across in just two tightly written paragraphs:
Dear Ms. Sherman:
Thanks for your interest in
the Acme Slide Rule. It has been used by thousands of scientists,
technicians, and engineers throughout the world. We feel that you, too,
will find it a handy reference tool in your work.
The Slide Rules are $10.00
each in quantities of under 100, or $8.00 in lots of 100 or more. If you'd
like to obtain one or more of the Slide Rules, just send your check or
money order for the number you desire. We will see to it that your order
is handled promptly.
Cordially,
S.D. Jameson
Customer Service Representative
7. Make it look professional.
Type the letter on a good electric typewriter. Proofread to eliminate
errors in spelling, punctuation, grammar, and content. Or reproduce the
letter on your stationery using a high-quality offset press.
A WORD ON BOUNCE-BACK
In addition to the literature
and cover letter, a fulfillment package should contain a reply element. It
can be a specification sheet, an order form or a questionnaire known as
the bounce-back card.
Bounce-backs are postage-paid
postcards addressed to the advertiser. They ask the prospect to qualify
himself by answering a few questions. Typically, a bounce-back question-naire
asks the prospect's phone number, name, and address, the name and size of
his company, whether he specifies or recommends a particular type of
product, current buying plans, applications, the names of others in the
company involved in the buying decision, whether the prospect currently
uses the advertiser's products or those of a competitor, whether the
prospect wants a salesperson to call and whether the inquiry is for an
immediate need, a future need, or reference information only.
Bounce-back postcards may be
separate from the rest of the package, or they may be printed as tear-out
inserts in brochures and catalogs. Some companies comb combine the
bounce-back questionnaire, cover letter copy and catalog information on a
single sheet.
Most industrial marketing
experts agree that the bounce-back is an integral part of the fulfillment
package. "If you're not contacting the respondent personally, you should
have a bounce-back card," says Robert L. Sieghardt, president of
Professional Sales Support, a company that screens sales leads by
telephone. Mr. Sieghardt says the 55% of prospects will respond with a
bounce-back card after a series of three mailings in addition to the
initial mailing.
Some advertisers respond to
inquiries by mailing a bounce-back card without an accompanying piece of
literature. They hope to avoid sending expensive sales brochures to
students, competitors, brochure collectors, and other nonprospects. But
other firms criticize the practice because it delays getting information
to respondents by creating an additional and unnecessary step in the sales
sequence.
"I think you're trying to
kill response by not sending a brochure," says Larry Whisehant, advertising manger of Koch
Engineering, a manufacturer of chemical equipment. "The proper
literature-what the respondent is asking for-is the most important of the
package."
Mr. Sieghardt agrees: "By
trying to screen leads with the bounce-back, manufacturers are
asking prospects to do some of their work for them."
No two marketers agree on what makes the perfect fulfillment
package. But one thing is clear: the advertiser who casually tosses a
brochure in the mail with a hastily dictated cover note is wasting sales
opportunities.
The entire package must be
designed to generate action that leads to a sale. And to accomplish that,
you need three things: a clear, crisp cover letter that motivates
prospects; a brochure that informs them; and a bounce-back or other reply
element that makes it easy for them to respond.