In my last post, I shared my thoughts about why it makes more sense to make just one offer with every promotional piece you send out vs. giving prospects several offers to choose from.
But if you still want to promote multiple offers in a single marketing piece, here are some tips to help you get the most bang for your buck:
1. Are you promoting a free seminar, where you sell your products, services or next (paid) event? Try offering a recording to people who can’t make it to the preview … or who don’t want to attend a live seminar, but are otherwise interested in receiving your information.
Don’t be surprised if you get fewer people signed up for your live event — ordering a recording is easier to say yes to than attending a seminar. (Tip: send the recording to no-shows. That way, you can salvaging the “lost” registrations by still getting your valuable information in their hands.)
2. Are you promoting a live paid seminar? You can safely promote your live preview event or teleseminar in your marketing brochure. Position it as a free trial for people who want to try before they buy.
3. If you insist on making multiple free offers in one promotional piece — for example, offering a report, a free teleseminar, and a free consultation — help prospects quickly grasp what you are trying to promote by using big, bold subheads and formatting. Remember, prospects are spending just a few seconds scanning your marketing pieces. If you bury your offers in dense paragraphs of text, they’ll ignore what you’re saying. But if you can telegraph what you’re trying to communicate (“I have 3 gifts for you — take your pick”), you’ll do a better job of grabbing attention and getting them to act.
My final tip? Test, test, test. By coding your promotions and tracking your results, you’ll know for sure which approach — one offer vs. multiple offers — produces the best bottom-line results.
Monday I was searching for blogs related to Web Promotion and specifically event marketing and promotions and I found your related blog.