Offers that Turn Lookers into Buyers
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by Marcia Yudkin October 19, 2003
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If you're getting
only a sluggish response for a product or service that people genuinely
need, wake buyers up by spicing up your offer. I've seen losing
propositions become winners with these kinds of changes, which in
most cases cost you nothing:
1. Guarantees.
With a strong, simple guarantee, you can overcome the doubts of
people who have not done business with you before, and calm down
worriers who don't act when they can think of too many "what
ifs." The guarantee does not have to promise a refund. Someone
hiring an exterminator service wants those darned critters out,
not their money back. "We guarantee you'll be pest-free for
a year, or we'll come back and spray again for no extra charge"
is the thing to promise them. Direct-mail professionals tell us
that a one-year guarantee sells better, with fewer refund requests,
than a thirty-day guarantee, and a lifetime guarantee does even
better.
2. Package
deals.
If you sell office supplies, you might think that folks going back
to school know how to select what they need. Perhaps, but why not
make things easy for them -- and more profitable for you -- by shrink-wrapping
three spiral notebooks, two packets of pens, a pocket calendar and
several semi-necessary items together in a Back to School packet?
This often persuades people to spend more than they would on separate
items.
The same principle
applies to services, where you can mobilize people who shy away
from hourly fees with fixed- price bundles: only $350 for a will
and a consultation on estate planning. A name makes your bundle
more appealing: $150 for the "Get Organized Special."
3. Premiums.
Try rousing sleepy customers with bonuses -- spend more than $100
and receive a free whooziwhatsit, which isn't available any other
way. One mail-order company offered a free booklet with any order
from that catalog, and received 13 percent more orders from that
catalog than previously. Similarly, frequent-buyer programs have
now spread far beyond airlines, because they work. If convenience-store
patrons have a card to buy nine cups of coffee and get the tenth
free, they're more likely to consolidate their coffee buying rather
than buying sometimes here and sometimes there.
4.
Payment terms. When you let clients know they can
spread payments out over two or four months, you'll snag some wavering
over the money issue. But changing payment terms doesn't necessarily
mean you get your money later. I know speakers and consultants who
offered a 2 or 5 percent discount for payment in advance, and received
their money a whole year before they would have otherwise!
With
any new offer, test, test, test. You can't know any other way whether
"Buy one, get the second one free" works better or worse
than "Buy two and each is half price." Human beings are
illogical creatures, and nexpected offers can turn this fact to
your advantage. |