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 Different Strokes  

Please feel free to use this article as content for your own e-zine or on your website,  as long as you publish it without alteration and in its entiriety, incuding the blurb about me at the end, and my contact information.  And I'd love to know where you use it!

Different Strokes For Different Folks
by Maggie Dennison
Marketing Writer and Consultant

One of the comments I hear most often when talking to clients about their writing projects is this: "Well, my product appeals to all age groups so let's just do one sales letter and send it to everyone. That'll keep my costs down. After all it's the same product."

NO! NO! and again NO!

The core information and features of your product or service will be the same for everyone, BUT:

Each group of people has a special focus that you need to address if you want to be successful in selling to them.

Let's take seniors and teenagers as an example and let's suppose you're selling jewelry boxes.

Language
Even though the jewelry boxes may look the same, each group speaks a different language.

Now I'm not familiar with the language of teenagers these days but I know they have their own jargon. To get their attention and make them feel that you understand them, it's important to use the language they speak every day.

Just imagine what will happen if you use that same language in your letter to seniors: it will sound like gobbledygook to them and they just flat out won't have a clue what you're talking about.

And vice versa. If you try to target teenagers using language that's appropriate to seniors, they won't relate and you'll literally have talked (or written) yourself out of yet another bunch of sales.

Emotional hot buttons
Everyone has an emotional hot button that you have to push when you write. Each market has different needs for the same product or service and the emotional pull to buy is different.

That means if you're selling jewelry boxes, a teenager's hot button will be different from that of a senior citizen.

Your 65-year old Aunt Ermintrude may not care so much about the appearance of the box and may just want a place to keep her antique jewelry safe, tidy and organized, so your copy should focus on the features and benefits that speak to that need and the emotion underneath it.

On the other hand, your 16-year old daughter may be more interested in how pretty it will look in her bedroom, whether the color matches her furniture and other knick-knacks, how she'll be the envy of her friends because she has something they don't, or how she'll be one of the crowd because all her friends have the same jewelry box. So you see, to get her attention, the focus of your content will have to be very different. (Her jewelry may not even find its way into the box!)

So take the time to figure out how to communicate precisely with your target market. If your information is too general, neither Aunt Ermintrude nor your daughter will feel spoken to and you'll have wasted your time, effort and maybe a bunch of money as well.

Now it's your turn: Review the content of your marketing materials and ask yourself "Is this piece trying to be all things to all people?"

Copyright 2006 Maggie Dennison

Maggie Dennison is a marketing writer and consultant. Her mission is to help small businesses get their marketing messages across with impact and clarity. She is a published author with a Master's Degree in Applied Psychology, and a fascination with what triggers people to do the things they do.

http://www.MyMarketingMessage.com
(805) 965 9173

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Marketing and writing solutions that win the hearts and minds of your perfect clients - without breaking the bank

Website content, brochures, sales letters and more for small business owners,
sole proprietors, alternative health and wellness practitioners.

Here is a partial list of the cities my business serves: 

Santa Barbara, Ojai, Ventura, Camarillo, Thousand Oaks, Westlake Village, Agoura Hills, Woodland Hills, Studio City, Encino, Sherman Oaks, Northridge, Burbank, Pasadena,  Glendale, West Hollywood,  Los Angeles, Santa Monica, Marina del Rey,  Redondo Beach, Hermosa Beach, Manhattan Beach, Lawndale, Palos Verdes, Long Beach, as well throughout the United States and internationally.

Maggie Dennison
Marketing and Writing Solutions
For Small Businesses

27 W. Anapamu #295
Santa Barbara, CA 93101, USA
Phone: 805-965-9173
E-mail: click here to email me

Copyright 2004-2010 Maggie Dennison unless otherwise noted. All rights reserved.

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