F Scott Fitzgerald famously wrote that “the rich are different from you and me”. Well, high-ticket items are different from other goods too. There are no quick tricks when it comes to selling expensive products. But take the right approach with your marketing and you could seriously improve your sales, as Drayton Bird reveals.
Years ago I wrote the ads for a very high-ticket item indeed. It was called the Airbus.
How much did I vary my approach? Less than you might think. I started with five thoughts.
So, yes, high-ticket items are indeed different. But it is still all about buying and selling. You must use common sense and adapt what you do to how people buy — the process.
Besides the fact that you often have several decision-makers, and that they all have different motivations which you must address with differing messages, there is one very significant difference.
The greater the price, the harder it normally is to get a sale.
A low price usually means a one-step or maybe a two-step sale, without a great deal of reflection. Who broods over spending £5?
But a £1,000 sale — that may be different. And a £50,000 sale, even more so.
In those higher realms, there may be many stages. You run an ad, or send an email or some direct mail. You get a reply. Or maybe they go to your website. You try to capture their names. You may phone them. You may have a salesman go and visit. You may invite them to a seminar.
Then, it may take you months or even years to get the sale closed.
Here are some things to bear in mind.
Good, long copy almost invariably beats short copy, anyhow. But this is particularly true when things cost a lot.
Let me give you a couple of examples: one of our clients sold a product that starts at £85,000. The average spend though, was £170,000.
Their sales process began with a one-page letter. So we rewrote it. When we had finished, it was four pages long.
Here's the rub though: they said they wouldn't send it out as “nobody will read a four-page letter”. But we persevered, and they reluctantly agreed to send it.
The result? Response tripled and sales doubled. You see, when you are asking people to spend substantial amounts, their neck is on the line - they'd read a book on the subject if they could find one.
More recently we sent out a six-page letter to sell a very complex online product to lawyers. It went to under 2,000 people. One firm splashed out over £100,000 just on the strength of that letter, another over £50,000.
The mailing with one follow-up and a whole sales sequence has produced over £1,000,000 in sales so far. We have just created another follow-up for that client.
Remember, though, there's a huge difference between being long-winded and being relevant. In fact I think my first letter to lawyers was a bit flabby, and have cut it back.
Expensive products seldom if ever have one single benefit — usually you'll end up with quite a list when writing your drafts.
Here's what you should do.
Doing this serves two important purposes.
Firstly, different prospects have different needs — and until you are further down the sales process, you won't know what they are. So you have to cover every angle.
Secondly, you stay on their radar without sending out mindless propaganda. And prospects tend to hang on to useful, helpful information.
Another good reason for doing this is it's very hard to stay in touch with prospects when you have nothing new to say and keep repeating yourself.
Mind you, continually sending out the same message to existing prospects is better than doing nothing at all.
Every so often, politely ask your prospect whether they'd prefer if they didn't hear from you again.
This not only saves time and money weeding out duff prospects. Another real advantage is forcing your other prospects to ask, "Are we interested in what you have to say and offer?
Naturally, when you do this, you get more people than normal asking not to hear from you again. But at the same time you get more people letting you know their intentions and where they are in the buying process.
I suspect when you read the bit about long copy you muttered to yourself "Easier said than done".
It's true. So one good trick is to write next to each paragraph a phrase summing up what it says. Then you can see whether the sequence of argument makes sense.
Lastly, here's a point you'll know I'm very fond of:
Don't ignore old prospects — always true but ESPECIALLY true with expensive items. As I said to start with, the decision may take a long time — sometimes years.
Putting the fury and energy most people apply to finding new prospects into existing prospects is always smart. Yet so many still do not do it.
And often, old enquiries are your best prospects. For one thing, you have already been educating them about your merits!
Drayton Bird is a renowned direct marketing teacher, speaker and author. Find out more about him on his profile.
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