SUBJECT: Traffic Conversion Secrets - Create Emotional Impact If you think buying is not an emotional experience, you are mistaken! Every word in sales copy is amplified when it triggers an emotional response and can be the difference between copy that excites the imagination of the potential buyer and that which deadens it. When you engage the buyer's imagination they can even begin to imagine what it's like to own the product you are selling and it stirs up the flames of desire for possessing it. It is true that if you want to sell, you want to sell by impacting the emotions of your potential buyer. Even though you know that the final decision may be justified through logic, the initial way to get by the mind that will think up all sorts of objections to the sale is to appeal to the emotions. The Technique When you are advertising your products or services you will want to pay close attention to the words you choose. Words are powerful tools on the Internet that you can use to frame the way a person perceives not only the value of your product, but also the experience of possible ownership. Words tell stories that inform your readers about how this product or service solved a problem for some other buyer. Stories can pull a buyer into identifying with the other buyers and help them to visualize their own problems being solved, their lives getting easier or better for having made the purchase. You will want to pick words that not only tell a vivid story, however, you will also want to use words that influence the buyer's feelings and gives them favorable impressions. It's really not that hard to do. People have a variety of automatic emotional responses to different words. All you have to do is find out which words create the best results and implement them in your sales copy. You want to create a sales environment that puts people into an emotional mindset. Why? The simple reason is to bypass the logical mind long enough to make the sale. Sure, the final decision to buy will need to be justified with solid benefits, but that's not typically the reason a person ends up making the decision to buy. They may not even be aware that many of their buying decisions are based on how they feel about a product rather than what they think about it. People actually feel thrills when they buy and that thrill acts as a beacon to get them to buy again. Yet, when they are asked why they buy a particular product, they don't talk about how they feel – that's rather personal! Instead, they list the benefits. That's because when people are asked to justify a purchase, the mind automatically kicks in, even if they made the decision based solely on how they felt at the time of purchase. The Secret The brain has two halves and one deals with logic and the other is more intuitive and feeling. The two halves generally don't communicate at the same time in most people. If you have very strong emotions, you're reason is usually blocked from functioning at its highest potential and vice-versa. This can be really useful information in your marketing efforts because if you can get someone to get emotional about your products, you can sell without even really having to work too hard at it. Not only that, but once an impression is made on the emotional mind, it tends to have a longer memory than the logical mind. It is even well known that feelings can be associated to various stimuli that bring back powerful memories, complete with the emotions, sometimes just by smelling something that reminds you of your childhood. Words aren't just letters strung together that have a logical meaning. They also have a personal meaning. If you can tap into that emotional intelligence and bypass the logical critic most people have standing ready to say no, you will find that you can sell things much faster and retain customers with a higher sense of satisfaction after the sale. You don't just have to focus on invoking pleasant emotions, because negative emotions can also be powerful motivators to close a sale. Think of people who are in the market to buy GPS systems for their cars. Why would they want to buy that? On an emotional basis, they may be trying to avoid getting lost. So, the feeling you want to invoke is precisely that confused and lost feeling that they dread. And, then offer the GPS system as a solution to never having to feel that way again! How to Make it Work The way to implement this strategy is to start making a list of alternative, emotion-packed words, that influence your potential buyer in subtle, but powerful, ways. Review your copy for opportunities where you can reach out and literally touch the buyer and comfort or assure them that they are making the right decision to buy. One word that is very powerful and should be used more in copy is the word “invest” instead of buy. When you buy something it almost has the connotation of being taken for a ride. For instance, when you “buy into” something it means you've been convinced, maybe even despite your feeling it may not be such a good idea. However, the word “invest” has the opposite feeling. It gives you a feeling of security and reaping returns, even if you don't have a logical explanation for why that is so. It's just a good investment. People in the real estate industry are masters at this game. When a house is small, they call it “cozy.” When the walls are painted in odd colors, they call it “custom paint.” If it is falling apart at the seams, they call it a “handyman special.” These are euphemisms that don't completely hide the meaning, but reframe it to show off the positive aspects of it. They plug into the emotional impact of the words. Cozy gives you the idea of warmth and being hugged by your mother. Custom paint is a term that can mean anything from a personalized mural complete with the kid's hand prints to a mural vista of the French Riviera by a local artist. It's up to the person reading the ad to fill in the blanks and normally they will fill them in with whatever appeals to them. Handyman special gives you an idea that it's a property that won't last long, being special, and that it only needs a little fixes here and there. So, paying attention to the choice of words is important to implement this strategy. That can be done by pure trial and error or by looking up sales books to find which words carry a positive impact. There are many such words that you see in television ads, like the words “new, improved, easy” and more. Or, you can just start to switch words here and there in your copy and see what impact it makes on your bottom line. The second way to implement this strategy is to bring out your inner drama queen. You want to be able to exude emotion and have that pour all over your sales copy. Try to write up an offer that really engages someone on an emotional level. Use it in your sales presentations by trying to bring in an emotional content that people can quickly identify with and then use it to manipulate people into a frame of mind that makes them buy. Especially, you want to focus on framing the benefits in an emotional framework. This will help your buyer begin to imagine and experience your product more in their feelings. Try to describe the product in emotional language that triggers people into associations that are positive for them. This is the same idea that real estate people use when they advise you to bake cookies or simmer cinnamon sticks in the house before you show it. The scents pull in memories of mom baking in the kitchen and make the sale for you through subconscious emotional associations. Well, you can do the same with words by painting the picture of the emotional trigger for them to be able to visualize it better in their mind. Obviously, depending on your demographics, the emotional triggers for one group may be different from another. It's your job to figure out which emotional triggers will appeal to the people you are marketing. If you are marketing to harried, working, moms then triggering the image of a crying, babies, and the phone ringing, while dinner burns on the stove, would sell anything that makes this scenario go away. It might be easy to make microwave meals; it can be an answering machine that shows you who is calling and whether it's important. It's not always going to be obvious how to associate the emotion to your product, but it should be relevant to your demographic. If you were to use that same imagery to try to sell microwave meals for single professionals, they would not relate to it, even if the microwave meal might appeal to them if it had be framed differently. Do you see how the emotion is triggered specifically by the advertising and the target audience? For some, the emotional trigger will strike them right where they live, and for others, it simply leaves them cold. You have to know who you are marketing to, to understand how to trigger the emotions that you want to associate with your advertising copy. Some emotions are universal because they relate to our childhood. We all equate home with feelings of security (which is good for the real estate market). We all want to feel included and accepted by our family and friends. We all want to feel we are achieving or accomplishing something we can feel proud of. These types of emotions can also be used to mine a larger audience, when you are unsure of your demographics. But, the more targeted your emotional marketing campaign the greater the possibility that it will be a stronger influence to trigger buying behavior. The time to use this strategy is when you are first presenting the product to the public or your website visitor. Don't wait to start to bring some familiarity to the product that the person can begin to identify with it as the solution to their problems. Try to engage all the senses so that they can begin to tie into the sensual aspect of the product – this will lead to the emotional part of their brain and bring forth associated positive memories. Once that first impression is made in the emotional part of the brain, it will be very hard to shake later on. That's part of the reason that many expert sales people will actually take a sample with them to a presentation, something their potential buyer can touch and experience. It appeals to the emotional side of all human beings and gets them to start imagining what it would be like to own the regular product all to themselves. Think of how car manufacturers present their advertising for cars. They typically show a convertible car winding down a stunning coastal highway, sea breeze flying through the driver's hair, as the sun beats down on dazzling water and sand. You can practically smell the salt air and taste the spray of sea water in your mouth, and that's the point. They evoke the emotional response by getting you to imagine buying the car. You then become that person with the perfect life that has the wind wiping through your hair in a breezy, freeing, experience while everyone else is stuck in a cubicle hard at work. It's really quite amusing when we analyze how easily our emotions are manipulated, but that's really the case. There are certain desires that most human beings will do anything to experience: love, freedom, joy, and success. Tie those emotions to your product, and you've got a winner. To Your Success, YOUR NAME