Why does everyone seem to hate the concept of selling? Because everyone is doing it, and so few actually do it well.
You can’t sell anything to someone who isn’t paying attention. Most advertising fails because it’s expected and boring, lulling the audience to sleep. The majority of company advertisements are the equivalent of the same tired pick-up lines a girl has heard from every desperate guy who’s approached her, used over and over to the point of cliché. They’re safe, repetitive, and easily dismissed.
According to Adalytics.com, the average American is hit with between 6,000 and 10,000 advertising solicitations PER DAY, and only about FIVE per day are noticed at all (yeah, that’s a whopping 0.0006%).
How do you differentiate to get your ads noticed and draw a reaction? Here are a couple of tips:
Interrupt the Pattern: A “pattern interrupt” is a marketing technique where something is done to jolt the audience out of their normal routine and make them take notice. Our minds are busy processing so much at any given moment that it takes something unexpected in advertising to wake it up from sleep mode. Think about the number of billboards and signs you pass in an average day. How many commercials do you hear? And now, how many do you actually notice, and how many are just background noise for your commute? Ask yourself why some stood out, and I can almost guarantee it wasn’t because they looked or sounded like all the others. The commercial that used real humor, the sign that was purposefully printed upside down, or the one who took an edgy risk will get the most eyes and response.
Don’t tip your hand immediately: If I asked you to imagine an average contractor ad, what comes to mind? Probably a photo of some equipment with a spotless technician (who looks like he’s never worked a day in his life) standing next to it, some annoyingly big starbursts offering $X OFF!, and probably as many random specials as can be crammed onto one postcard. If we can immediately recognize the cookie-cutter style most of the industry promotes with, how much quicker do our target homeowners turn up their noses? Remember, when a prospect sees your ad, most don’t think they have a need for a contractor. It’s the job of your advertisement’s copy to convince them otherwise. However, if they see your piece and immediately cross it off as boring and unnecessary, you won’t ever get that chance.
Here’s the alternative – don’t reveal what you’re selling immediately. In a world of microscopic attention spans that might sound counter-intuitive but remember to use the unexpected. Picture a homeowner sorting their mail and weeding out everything quickly identifiable as a new credit card offer or unwanted coupon, bound straight for the trash. Then they see a card that gives them pause. Maybe this one is larger than the rest with appealing graphics, but they don’t know instantly what it’s trying to sell. While they take a second or two just to figure out what this is and why this piece is even in their mailbox, you’ve got their attention and good copy should take over to lead them to the pitch.
It’s the same with your social and email marketing – a good and interesting headline with a link to the read rest of the article where you can work up to a sales pitch and build reasons they should respond removes distractions and will outperform a hard sales email or up-front Facebook Ad hands down. The difference is by not letting the prospect say no before they even see your offer you are now given the shot to actually SELL to them.
There are millions of creative ideas out there to set your business apart, so why does everyone seem to look the same? Well, setting yourself apart takes risk and creativity that most are not willing to invest the time and energy into. But if you want to wake up your service area, see more success, and get them to start taking notice of you, you’ve got to implement strategies and differentiate yourself to become more than white noise. Remember, your Hudson,Ink marketing coach is here to help. Reach out for a marketing plan and ideas at [email protected]