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Publishing guidelines: Please feel free to publish this   

Publishing guidelines: Please feel free to publish this    by Heather Reimer

A simple classified ad placed in a highly targeted vehicle can

be a great way to kick start your sales, especially if your

company is the new kid on the block with low visibility and a

small advertising budget.

There are two components to this important equation: the ad

itself and the vehicle. Choosing the right ezine or website

is an art form in itself and a story for another day.

For now, let's focus on how to write a your own classified ads

so they jump off the screen and demand attention.

1. The headline is the most important feature of your ad so

spend lots of time on it. A good headline teases, entices and

lures. Here's an example of a headline that DEMANDS to be

read by everyone in business:

Is Your Online Business "Wide Open" to Criminals?

It is if you accept credit cards over the Internet or phone.

Card-not-present fraud is on the rise.

Banks and card companies won't reimburse these losses.

Some merchants have lost everything.

Don't be the next victim. Click here to find out how to

protect yourself. http://www.iib.com.au/

2. Address your target market early and clearly so they know

your message applies to them. "Is Your Online Business..."

3. Use simple language and short, punchy statements.

4. Decide on an appropriate length. Between five and seven

lines formatted to 65 characters per line is most common but

individual ezines may have different guidelines.

5. Focus on benefits. Your prospects don't care, for instance,

that you're "the best in the tri-state area" (according to you).

They don't care if your cheese spread is "The cheesiest and

darn proud of it." Neither your pride nor your puffery will

convince them to buy. All they want to know is, "What's in it

for me?"

6. Give something away. An ebook, a free course, or just the

answer to a question, as in the example above. Anything to get

prospects to make contact and open up a dialogue with you.

7. Be different. Have you noticed lately how many ads promise

"work at home and make $10,000 a month"? Your copy has to be

original to get attention and be remembered. For example, this

headline also sells the work-at-home dream but with a unique

twist: "Commute in your slippers."

8. Try to be realistic. People are skeptical of outlandish

claims and weary of hype. "How to Publish a Book and Sell a

Million Copies." Know how few best-selling authors flog a

million copies? More effective would be: "We make it easy

to sell 150,000 copies of your very own book."

9. Action! Decide what you want prospects to do and then ask

them to do it. Visit your website? Sign up for your ezine?

Request an estimate? Click here? Spell it out clearly or

they'll read your pretty words and keep reading right on down

the page without stopping to act.

10. Write a couple of different ads so you have several on

hand to rotate. Track them to see which ones pull best.

A well-written classified ad can be a great way to launch

your promotional campaign without spending a fortune.




Only $25 for a seven-line classified ad! Contact Heather Reimer at mailto:heatherreimer@codetel.net.do She writes action-inspiring ads, web content, newsletters, sales letters, news releases, and brochures.


Article Source: http://www.newarticlesdaily.com
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