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![]() James,
Thanks for the great ideas. I believe I got on the wrong track with this card by trying for a "I've been trying to reach you" type message as suggested by Roy Preece's AdSalespeople newsletter (That's not the right name, but it was a resource Gordon mentioned last week if you remember that.) I just hit a blank wall trying to do that, and ended up with a lifeless message. Maybe I just didn't "get" his concept. Oh, well... Thanks for the super ideas and I will work on the headlines. Best Wishes, Jim Erskine > Jim, > I would start out by changing your > "re." line. This is actually your > headline, and "Small Town Tourism > Ideas!" just doesn't cut it. Fact is, > they really don't want any small town > tourism ideas, they want tourists. > (Actually, that's not even what they want, > but it's a lot closer.) > If I were writing it, I would come up with > at least 50 headlines to choose from. So > something like "re.: How to get > tourists to spend money locally," > "You can instantly learn to pack > tourists into your town," "How to > make your town a tourist magnet almost > overnight" or "Learn how to > quickly and easily pull tourists into your > town." OK, those are bad, I admit it, > but it takes a lot of work, and I'm lazy. > The idea is get their attention with the > main benefit you have to offer them, making > it personal. > You may not be able to do this, but I have > had great postcard results using this > technique: On the message side of the > postcard, personalize the salutation > ("Dear Mr. Smith," "Dear > Jim," etc.) Then personalize the re: > line, "re.: How you can make Podunk a > tourist trap." You could print the > cards yourself using a merge document. Get > heavy card stock, print full sheets four up, > both sides, then cut them with a paper > cutter. > Of course, if you are buying labels, that > might be a problem. But if you are getting > names on disk, it would be a snap. And your > results would soar. > I don't think an email address is good > unless it ties in to your offering nicely. > For instance, [email protected] . > I have had the best results by asking them > to fax the card. The phone is good also. > I don't like the sound of "Small Town > Tourism Ideas!" Maybe just "Small > Town Tourism" would be better. Maybe > "Tourism Gold." I could be wrong > about it though. > You are probably trying to communicate too > much in your body copy. Think about > something simple, but compelling like this: > "There's no reason Podunk couldn't pull > in money-spending tourists like crazy. I > have a FREE, no-obligation copy of Small > Town Tourism Ideas! reserved in your name. > Fax this card today to > _________________________ or call > _____________________ and leave your name > and address. I'll hold your copy for five > days, so go ahead and call right now before > you forget." > I'm too sleepy to clean this post up > properly, but maybe you can get one good > idea out of it. > Good luck, > James |
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