Attract More Customers with White Papers - Day 2
"How To Get It Written In 48 Hours -- not Weeks or Months"
For most people, writing a white paper
sounds like a dreary chore. Something handed down from above, perhaps, that lands
on your desk and threatens to consume weeks of time better spent on something else.
I know how you feel. But there's no reason
for that to be the case. Today I'm going to give you two things to think about:
1) IT DOESN'T HAVE TO BE
LONG.
Sometimes a 10-20 page white paper might
be OK, but I like 1 and 2 pagers best. Short little guides, reference tools and problem
solvers that people will keep in their desk. That's a magic formula, and it doesn't take
long to write. You can probably do it in a couple of hours.
You might consider breaking a 10-page
white paper into three small documents, each addressing a very specific issue. (You can
potentially get three times as much PR mileage from the same content, by doing it that way.)
At that point, the key is to have a follow-up system that continues to nurture that prospect
until they take a next step -- call you on the phone, email with a question or whatever.
2) You don't have to give the person an exhaustive
technical treatise, you only need to give them knowledge that enables them to
DO something. White papers are not theoretical. They are action oriented. So make
a list of two or three or five things you want your customer to know how to do as a result of reading
your white paper, then just tell them how.
About ten years ago, there was a very popular
book by Steven Covey called '7 Habits of Highly Effective
People.' Maybe you read it.
In that book, Covey talks about the idea of
an 'emotional bank account' that everyone has.
When you do something good for someone, you
make a deposit into their emotional bank account. When you ask someone to do something for you,
you make a withdrawal. If the account balance is zero, they will ignore your request.
Most advertisers and marketers try to make
a WITHDRAWAL from a customer before they've made
a DEPOSIT.
No wonder sales is such an uphill battle!
A White Paper is a way to make a deposit
before you make a withdrawal -- with useful, problem solving information.
People are VASTLY more responsive to this
kind of information than they are to a traditional ad. It builds trust and credibility like no
other kind of advertising does.
In comparison, telemarketing creates distrust
and annoyance. People just ignore most ads. So the best thing you can advertise is... a White
Paper, guide, problem solver or report.
At the same time, that paper is also a way to help
the customer define the problem in *your* terms,
not somebody else's. There's a lot of subtle power in that.
Tomorrow is day 3. The subject:
'The #1 Most Critical Success Ingredient of Your White Paper'
Talk to you then.
Best,
Perry Marshall
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