Sunday, March 6, 2011

HOW TO WRITE PROFITABLE CLASSIFIED ADS






Everybody wants to make more money... In fact, most people would



like to hit upon something that makes them fabulously rich! And



seemingly, one of the easiest roads to the fulfillment of these



dreams of wealth, is mail order or within the professional



circles of the business, direct mail selling...





The only thing is, hardly anyone gives much real thought to the



basic ingredient of selling by mail--the writing of profitable



classified ads. If your mail order business is to succeed, then



you must acquire the expertise of writing classified ads that



sell your product or services!





So what makes a classified ad good or bad? First of all, it must



appeal to the reader, and as such, it must say exactly what you



want it to say. Secondly, it has to say what it says in the least



possible number of words in order to keep your operating costs



within your budget. And thirdly, it has to produce the desired



results whether inquiries or sales.





Grabbing the reader's attention is your first objective. You must



assume the reader is "scanning" the page on which your ad appears



in the company of two or three hundred classified ads. Therefore,



there has to be something about your ad that causes him to stop



scanning and look at yours! So, the first two or three words of



your ad are the utmost importance and deserve your careful



consideration. Most surveys show that words or like this. MAKE



BIG MONEY! Easy & Simple. Guaranteed! Limited offer. Send $1.00





These are the ingredients of any good classified



ad---Attention--Interest--Desire--Action...Without these four



ingredients skillfully integrated into your ad, chances are your



ad will just "lie there" and not do anything but cost you money.



What we've just shown you is the basic classified ad. Although



such an ad could be placed in any leading publication and would



pull a good response, it's known as a "blind ad" and would pull



inquiries and responses from a whole spectrum of people reading



the publication in which it appeared. In other words, from as



many "time wasters" as from bona fide buyers.





So let's try to give you an example of the kind of classified ad



might want to use, say to sell a report such as this one...Using



all the rules of basic advertising copywriting, and saying



exactly what out product is, our ad reads:





MONEY-MAKER'S SECRETS! How to Write winning



classified ads. Simple & easy to learn-should



double or triple your responses. Rush $1 to



ABC Sales, 10 Main, Anytown, TX 75001.





The point we're making is 1) You've got to grab the reader's



attention...2) You've got to go "further stimulate" him with



something (catch-phrase) that makes him "desire" the product or



service...4) Demand that he act immediately...





There's no point in being tricky or clever. Just adhere to the



basics and your profits will increase accordingly. One of the



best ways of learning to write good classified ad is to study the



classifieds--try to figure out exactly what they're attempting to



sell--and then practice rewriting them according to the rules



we've just given you. Whenever you sit down to write a



classified, always write it all out--and then go back over it,



crossing out words, and refining your phraseology.





The final ingredient of your classified ad is of course, your



name & address to which the reader is to respond--where he's to



send his money or write for further information.





Generally speaking, readers respond more often to ads that



include a name than to those showing just initials or an the



number of words, or the amount of space your ad uses, the use of



some names in classified ads could become quite expensive. If we



were to ask our ad respondents to write to or send their money to



The Research Writers & Publishers Association, or our advertising



costs would be prohibitive. Thus we shorten our name Researchers



or Money-Makers. The point here is to think relative to the



placement costs of your ad, and to shorten excessively long



names.





The same holds true when listing your post office box number.



Shorten it to just plain Box 40, or in the case of a rural



delivery, shorten it to just RR1





The important thing is to know the rules of profitable classified



ad writing, and to follow them. Hold your costs in line.





Now you know the basics...the rest is up to you.


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