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One of my associates sent me a promotional email she'd received. "I
know this marketing communication doesn't work," she told me, "but why
doesn't this make me want to buy?" I took a look, and what I saw was
familiar and sad. The promotional piece was for a weekend retreat. I
could feel all the good intentions behind it, but the words just lay on
the page like tired puppies. Worn out. No zip. No life. As solo
business owners, we are often at a loss to understand why our words
aren't getting a better response. Although an offer can fail for many
reasons, I always recommend you look first to your marketing
communication. Why? Because if your message doesn't connect, you
won't get much payoff from more exposure. Once your words really speak
to people, you'll get more bang for your buck from more marketing
activity or better alignment. Here then, are the top 5 reasons your marketing communication may fail to strike a chord. 1. No Clear Focus for What You are Offering. When
we aren't clear on the ultimate outcome that we are delivering, we
sometimes try boosting our appeal by offering to deliver everything
under the sun. In this case? The retreat offered: renewal, creativity,
connection, peace, appreciation of life, awareness, balance, and
self-discovery Phew! It's so many different ideas my poor brain
can't wrap around it all. There's no central theme or image I can use
to fix in my mind what she's offering. Instead of thinking "wow! I'd
get a lot from this experience," I walk away thinking, "I am confused,
and I wonder if the retreat leader is too." 2. No Verbal Markers that Say "I am talking to you!" When
we try to be a fit for everybody, we end up being a fit for nobody.
Even when we think we believe in the law of attraction, our words often
reflect our indecision or confusion about whom we want to reach. One
sure sign that you aren't clear? When there are no concrete
"identifiers" in your copy. By identifiers, I mean phrases like "as a
working mom," "as a business owner," "in the workplace," "navigating
the world of academia." These concrete markers confirm for the audience
that your marketing communication was written for them. It makes it
personal. 3. No New Insight into Your Audience's Struggle It's
no longer enough to let your audience know that you feel their pain.
You have to quickly demonstrate that you have valuable insight into
that pain. That you've made some connection they haven't about why they
are stuck where they are. That gives them hope that what you are
offering aren't the same old tired solutions that they've heard of
before. In this marketing piece, I would have liked to have heard
answers to questions like "What is it that leads us to be so
disconnected from ourselves?" "Why is renewal needed now more than
ever?" Even something as simple as "The harder we work, the more we
need quiet, open space to recharge our batteries" would have made me
go, "hmm, could that be true for me?" 4. No Visible Plan for Delivering on Your Promise Once
you've shown that you know your audience, and you have a juicy and
specific outcome to offer them, the communication shifts. Your reader
is no longer asking, "Am I interested?" She is asking, "Do I believe
this person can deliver on what they are promising?" Testimonials
are one way to establish credibility, but what testimonials don't do is
create a picture for your audience of how you lead them step by step to
the destination you've promised. When the way you deliver is a mystery,
you're asking people to take a big leap of faith. When you describe
your logic, process, or philosophy in a limited number of steps, your
audience can see how your steps or ingredients add up to the outcome
you are promising. For example, if the woman offering the retreat
had listed the "five stages of renewal" or the "three ingredients of
creative discovery," her readers would have immediately believed more
strongly that she could deliver. 5. No Fire in your Belly To
me, words are transparent. They reveal every nuance of who you are, how
you see yourself in relationship to the world, and how you feel about
your work. Since so many creative professionals say they hate
marketing, it is a surprise that the communication they write comes
across as strained and tense? On a gut level, you readers will
feel if you are writing from the place of consuming excitement about
what you offer or from a place of caution and ambivalence. The more you
let your words carry your passionate and full-hearted energy, the more
your message will have an indefinable "something" that stirs the
readers' soul and sparks their interest in what you offer.
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