What
Not to Display on Display Signs
by J.Conners
If you are promoting a product and you are doing
some advertising with displays, don’t allow for your customer
to know everything. Otherwise, they won’t
have a reason to call you, or come visit you.
For instance, when I was working in the banking
industry, we displayed our rates on a fancy looking board in the
middle of our main lobby.
Customers would come in, take care of their business,
glance at the rate board, and walk out the door.
Than one day, some genius decided to take the
rate board down, forcing the customer to come into an associate’s
office, have a seat, and verbally ask for the rates.
This gave the sales associate an opportunity to
sit down with the customer, discuss rates one on one, and also have
the opportunity to go over some other products the customer might
be interested in.
When you put together an advertisement, put on
just enough information to peak your customers interest. Enough
to get them to pick up the phone and call you, or come into see
you.
Never underestimate the power of meeting one on
one with a potential customer.
And remember, props
don’t sell, people do.
If a customer has gone as far as contacting you,
they have pretty much placed the ball in your court. You now know
that they are interested, and it becomes your responsibility to
finish the advertisement and close the deal.
When putting an advertisement together, you want
people to be wowed by it. But you also want to save some of that
magic for when they contact you.
So when you get their attention with your products
great features, make sure you save some of that magic to peak their
interest even greater once they contact you.
An example of this would be a bank advertising
a free checking account.
The advertisement would
read:
Open a free checking account
today, and receive a free gift.
The customer would take interest because they
would be getting a free checking account, but it is the free gift
that will spark their curiosity. And of course they wouldn’t
know what the free gift was until they came inside and sat down.
So once again, don’t let your advertisements
do all of the selling for you, only allow them to kick open the
gates, so your customer can come inside, sit down and talk to you.
This
article may be reproduced by anyone at any time, as long as the
authors name and reference links are kept in tact and active.
Jay Conners has more than fifteen
years of experience in the banking and Mortgage Industry, He is
the owner of http://www.jconners.com,
a mortgage resource site, he is also the owner of http://www.callprospect.com,
a mortgage lead company.
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