Wednesday, December 24, 2008

How To Boost Sales

Writen by Saleem Rana

We are all cluttered thinkers, our minds preoccupied with numerous thoughts, feelings, and unresolved information.

You can see that clearly as you walk down any city street.

Faces are contorted with angst, inner dialogues, and multilayered emotions. People even walk and move in an uncoordinated way.

Examine your own thinking, and you'll see that hidden agendas, conflicts, and internal upsets constantly interfere with the clarity of your logic.

This is both an opportunity and an obstacle for salesmanship.

It is an opportunity because you can offer people something that they need to improve their lives, ease their pain, and end their confusion.

Your product may very well provide the relief that your customers need.

It may be a way for them to make more money following a specific technology.

It may be a way for them to develop will power and self confidence.

It may be something that makes their lives easier to organize, maintain, and evolve.

It may be a way for them to get rest, relief, and peace.

Or it may be a way for them to recuperate energy, health, and well-being.

Yet you also have an obstacle. They can't see you, hear you, or even respond to you—again, because of their preoccupation.

As a psychologist this happens to me quite often.

People write to me about some difficulty they are having. I write back, proposing a simple, common-sense and highly-doable solution.

Then they write back repeating their complaint, completely ignoring the solution.

In other words, they weren't even able to understand that they had been presented with a solution.

The way most marketers try to break through this preoccupation is to increase their marketing signal to break through the customer's internal noise.

They amp up their marketing message—playing on the customer's spectrum of desires with a hammer. It's called hype.

In their desperation, customers often respond in the way that the marketer desired.

Encouraged, the marketer then rolls out the next pitch with the same tactics.

Eventually, however, even this does not work. The customer becomes numbed out, tone deaf, and utterly indifferent.

In addition, everybody else is assailing the customer's sensibility, trying to attract their attention, with the same dramatic techniques.

A better approach is to tone down the customer's inner noise, rather than raise your own marketing signal.

How do you do this?

You simplify and clarify your message at every point of contact.

Rather than hype things up, you present your information in an increasingly simple and direct way.

Whether you're into internet marketing, network marketing, mail order or sales, you will always have a better response if you simplify your marketing message.

This is why USP's, slogans, and other techniques are popular—they give a handle to the brand or product.

Sometimes even an unusual company, brand, or product name can awaken a whole train of familiar associations in the customer's mind.

However, the principle is more important than the technique being used.

And the principle is keep it short and simple.

If your message is clear, it will be received and acted upon. Your sales will improve. And if you get really good at this, they will soar!

Saleem Rana would love to share his inspiring ideas with you. Hunting everywhere for a life worth living? Discover the life of your dreams. His book Never Ever Give Up tells you how. It is offered at no cost as a way to help YOU succeed. http://www.theempoweredsoul.com/enter.html Copyright 2004 Saleem Rana. Please feel free to pass this article on to your friends, or use it in your ezine or newsletter. It's a shareware article.

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