Tuesday, August 25, 2009

[Copyblogger] Educate to Dominate

Copyblogger


Educate to Dominate

Educate

Okay, so maybe dominate it too strong a word…

But hey, it rhymes.

First off, check out this quotation:

It is easier to resist at the beginning than at the end.
~Leonardo da Vinci

Now, let me ask you this… How do you spark the buying process without a lot of high-pressure, high-hype selling?

You do it by getting the reader, listener, or viewer to imagine buying from you, even before you’ve presented the full offer.

Why is that important?

It’s important because once someone imagines buying from you, they’ve made a mental commitment. The size of that commitment will depend on how well your content resonates with that particular individual, but it’s a commitment nonetheless.

And at that point, it’s a commitment voluntarily made, without any overt request on your part.

You may still be thinking, so what?

Well, we humans are funny that way. Once we commit to something, we tend to act in a consistent manner with the prior commitment.

The Six Psychological Shortcuts of Influence

In his famous book Influence: Science and Practice, Dr. Robert Cialdini identifies 6 judgmental heuristics that create mental shortcuts that can drive our behavior:

Note that by giving away free content, you’re invoking reciprocity, which triggers the psychological need to give something back in return.

When people share and comment on your content, you're invoking the power of social proof.

By creating conversational content that builds rapport, you are also bringing liking into play, because people want to do business with people they like, even if another choice might be technically more appropriate.

And by taking on the role of teacher, you’re becoming an authority figure, which makes what you say more likely to be accepted and acted upon.

Then when you get someone to imagine themselves buying, you’re bringing commitment and consistency into play, and this shortcut can tip the scales in your favor.

This is why in-person sales people will constantly ask you “If I can get this price, or this added feature, will you make the purchase?” When you verbally commit, they know they’ve gotten one crucial step closer to the close due to the psychological principles of commitment and consistency.

Even a smaller level of mental commitment can lead to consistency when the prospect makes the commitment based on their own (seemingly) unprompted decision.

At that point, the sale becomes yours to lose. This prospect will view your eventual offer through a more positive frame than someone who sees the offer cold. As long as you deliver what your content created desire for, you’ll sell a lot more.

Now you understand what da Vinci was saying.

When you come rushing out of the gate selling, it’s easy for people to resist. But when you establish yourself as a teacher who people have bonded with, it gets much harder to say no by the time the transaction is proposed.

Example: Shoemoney Tools

You likely know Jeremy Schoemaker from his popular ShoeMoney blog (and that famous 6-figure Adsense check). Jeremy has made a lot of money from Internet marketing, primarily with pay per click, membership sites and domaining.

Jeremy's partner and code ninja Dave developed software tools in-house that helped Jeremy enjoy an "unfair advantage" at pay per click and finding link-rich abandoned domain names. Last year, they decided to release these tools to the public (not an affiliate link) on a subscription basis.

For people already involved with pay per click, signing up for Shoemoney Tools is a no-brainer… these are the tools Jeremy used in his own business. But how does Jeremy move beyond this initial group of relatively sophisticated customers?

Easy… he educates people to the point that they see the value in (and actually use) his tools. So Jeremy offers a free 12-week Internet marketing course (also not an affiliate link) where people get up to speed on the basics on all aspects of online marketing.

By the end of the course, people understand the value of the software tools, and are ready to begin learning specifically how to use them. Educating people in this way is a simple concept, but too many people push the product up front instead of empowering people to buy.

Smart Selling Empowers People to Buy

So many people equate selling with hype and shady tactics to trick people into buying. In reality, smart selling is about empowering people to make the right decision. Often times, people simply need to be thoroughly educated on the basics, which naturally reveals the ultimate benefits of doing business with you along the way.

With Teaching Sells for example, we provide a 10-day education process to everyone who's interested in learning more, even though some people on the waiting list are ready to buy now. We do this not only to provide all the necessary information, but also to make sure we get the right group of people as new members.

The right group for us is a group that will take action. We provide a lot of step-by-step guidance and interaction, but in order for our members to succeed, they have to be willing to do the work.

And if they succeed, we succeed, because their success reflects back on us. And that's ultimately the best marketing around, right?

Check out Teaching Sells for yourself.

About the Author: Brian Clark is founder of Copyblogger and co-founder of Teaching Sells. Get more from Brian on Twitter.


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