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The 10 Laws for Writing Letters that Get Results
by Joe Vitale
The following is a letter in response to a question about how to write sales
letters. This is something you could model in layout, tone, and ideas, to write your
own letters. By the way, this is where your letterhead should go.
Dear Fellow Chicago Seminar Attendees,
Jerry Jenkins asked me to tell you how to write letters that get read and get
results. That's a tall order! Well, here's what I think the "laws" are:
1. Know what's in it for your reader.
Get out of your ego and into your reader's ego. Complete
this sentence: "Get my book so that you can...(fill in the
blank)." Your book (or whatever you are selling) is the
feature. What people get as a result of having your book is
the benefit. Focus on benefits. Always! Without this, your
letter will bomb.
2. Write a headline that telegraphs the key benefit to your reader.
ALWAYS use a headline. There is only ONE exception to
this rule. When you personalize your letter, the "Dear
(whoever)" opening becomes your headline. There are few
headlines more powerful than the reader's own name. The
headline is THE most important part of your letter! Spend
nearly all of your time on it.
3. Be brief.
Say what you have to say in terms of the reader's self
interest and shut up. This does NOT necessarily mean a
short letter. If you are trying to make a sale, and the reader
has never heard of you or your item for sell, you may have to
write four or more pages to get your message across. If all
you want is a return call, a one page letter may do. Don' be
afraid of length. People will read any length of copy AS
LONG AS IT'S INTERESTING!
4. Always use a PS.
Always. Why do copywriters who charge upwards to
$15,000 to write a sales letter and have weeks to draft it
always use a PS? They are always read. Always.
5. Look good.
Visual attractiveness accounts for 70% of your letter's
impact. Use short sentences, short paragraphs, bulleted
points, indented paragraphs, subheads, etc. Some people
will just skim your letter, so engaging subheads and bulleted
points help reach them instantly.
6. Outline first.
Use a planning tool such as the program Project KickStart to
help you think through your message. Or talk to a friend. Or
to a tape recorder. Or to yourself. This also helps you get
comfortable with speaking your letter rather than writing it.
7. Write first, edit last.
Turn your inner editor off. You can rewrite later. For now,
write spontaneously and quickly to get your ideas on paper.
8. Ask for something.
Why are you writing? You want a call. Or an order.
Something. Say so!
9. Get a reader.
Find one person to read your letter OUT LOUD in front of
you. If he (or she) has trouble reading your letter, if he
wrinkles his brow or stops to reread a sentence, rewrite
those places. Don't skip this step! It's the secret of many
professional writers.
10. Rewrite your letter again.
Is it the best you can do? Be honest! If not, throw it away
and call the person instead. Or hire a copywriter to write it
for you. Why waste your time or your reader's with
something that doesn't communicate in a persuasive and
interesting way? (I rewrote this letter 24 times!)
Well, there you have it. Of course, there are more rules, laws, ideas and
suggestions for writing letters that get results. You should always guarantee
whatever you are selling, for example, and always offer proof for all of your claims.
But the above will get you rolling.
Sincerely,
Joe Vitale
Hypnotic Writing
(Identify yourself. People look here to see who the letter is from.)
PS -- Notice that you read this PS?
PPS -- Notice that you read this one, too?
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