7 Ways To Grab People With Your Postcard!
Have If you're reading
this sentence, you've just supported the point I'm
about to make. Direct mail postcards with numbered
headlines offering solutions work!
The formula is simple:
First, pick a goal or an accomplishment (saving
money, increasing performance, energy efficiency,
curb appeal, etc.). Then tell the reader how to
accomplish this goal in X number of steps. Or give
them X number of ways to achieve the same goal.
Here are seven tips for
using numbered headlines on your direct mail
postcards:
1. Use odd numbers.
With all other things being equal, odd numbers have
been shown to outperform rounded, even numbers. They
appear more legitimate and scientific. That's why
Listerine "kills 99% of germs" instead of 100%.
2. Write numbers as numbers.
Numbers catch the eye better in numerical form (7),
as opposed to written form (seven).
3. Crank up the benefits.
To increase the motivating power of your numbered
headline, simply increase the reward promised by the
headline. For example, instead of "7 Ways to
Decrease Your Debt," you might say "7 Ways to
Eliminate Your Debt." Only one word has changed, but
now the promise of value is much greater. "Decrease"
is vague. "Eliminate" is absolute.
4. Write clearly.
Keep your headline simple and straightforward. The
reader should understand the benefit right away. She
should not have to read the headline twice or puzzle
over it. Number and benefit … it doesn't need to be
any more complicated than that.
5. Use strong action words.
Instead of telling readers how to "lower their
utility bills," tell them how to "eliminate high
heating bills and protect your home's value" Strong
words conjure up strong emotions. Boring words yield
boring results -- drop them from your direct mail
vocabulary.
6. Deliver on your promise.
If your postcard headline mentions "9 Ways to To
Lower Your Bills" you better follow up with (you
guessed it) 9 ways to lower the reader's bills. At
the least, offer a summary or excerpt of those tips
and then point to a full report that offers the
rest.
Stay away from "bait and switch" headlines that
don't deliver on the promise. Trickery and deceit
will get you nowhere.
7. Follow a formula.
Develop a formula when creating your headlines. This
will help you ask all the right questions and shape
a headline around the answers to those questions.
Example formula:
Audience
Product
Number of parts
Benefit
Headline
Bonus Tip: Write a Dozen, Keep the Best.
Headlines can make or break a direct mail postcard.
So don't settle for your first attempt. Even
professional copywriters rarely hit the mark on the
first try.
Personally, I'll write at least a dozen versions of
a direct mail headline. Then I'll eliminate half of
them (the weaker half) right off the bat. Then I'll
put them aside for a day or so, and when I review
them again I'll pick what I think is the best one.
If you are a Footbridge client, and want to learn
now, please
contact your marketing consultant and they will
help you implement it for you.
