22 Letters = $17,000 profit in 3 weeks.
So it's been a while since I've posted any methods or tutorials here, and that's primarily because the majority of what I'm working on these days is offline and 100% "white hat". To be honest, there really isn't much to it; providing online services for offline clients isn't exactly rocket science. That being said, a quick read around BHW and other IM forums will show you that the problem most people are facing has little to do with the "what" and everything to do with the "how". Getting your offer out to prospects in a way that grabs their attention and provokes action on their part.
So here's one example of how I'm getting my message out to my prospects. This particular snail mail campaign took me about 4 hours to execute (not all in one sitting of course), cost me $38.94, and produced just shy of $17,000 in profit. I was even offered a full time job by one of the prospects I ended up signing. I only reached out to 22 prospects. Of those 22 prospects 5 called me, I met with 3 and closed 3. I'm still working the other 2 and planning follow up letters to those that never made contact.
Ok so a quick backstory - a while back I was talking to Jesusback about reputation management. It's not something I had ever considered offering, but after taking a quick look into it and educating myself a bit, I decided to pitch it to a few existing clients - and they ate it right up. Long story short, I decided to start offering it as a stand alone service.
I landed on snail mail for this campaign for a couple of reasons.
1. I knew I'd be investing time into prospects before they ever received my message, and I wanted to make sure that all that effort was at least going to result in a read.
2. I wanted to personalize every aspect of my initial contact.
See, selling ORM is relatively easy once you push the "this is costing you money" button. Show your prospects how their customers perceive them and how it's hurting the bottom line and they'll be all ears long enough for you to pitch your solution. Don't be afraid to take a swing either. The big dogs charge the moon for ORM - as they should because it's a shitload of work - so you should too. You can always wiggle down to squeeze a fence-rider in.
So where do you find prospects?
Personally I use Google maps and notepad. I know a lot of ORM companies are just F5'ing ripoffreport all day but to each his own. Other methods like bulk email might call for some automation but for our purposes this does just fine.
Here's what you're looking for: Businesses with high lifetime customer value that have poor ratings on their Maps page.
Since G removed all 3rd party ratings from Maps this is super easy to do. Pick a niche, find poor reviews, jot it down. Once you've noted the business name and address, head over to Manta.com and get the owner's name (it's free). Once you've amassed a couple dozen prospects you'll be ready to compose your letters.
My first contact letter is loosely (and I do mean loosely) based on a prospecting letter from the "magic mailers" something or other WSO. I've downloaded a few copywriting cheat sheets like this from the guy Bruce that produces them and while I think they're great for getting the wheels turning, I also think it's worthwhile to mention that they're much less valuable if you aren't putting your own spin on them. The last thing you want is to invest time into a campaign then strike out because some nub is using the same letter right out of the box. With some fluff removed and a heavy emphasis on pushing the prospects money-buttons, here's my revised version:
Straight to the point, just like it should be. Make sure to sign it by hand with blue ink, no handwriting fonts.September 20, 2011
Contact name
Business Name
Business Street
City State 00000
Dear {Name},
I’m going to get straight to the point because I know you’re busy; attached are some unfavorable reviews about your {business type} that I pulled from the very 1st page of Google.
My name is {Your Name}, and I’m a online reputation management consultant right here in {City, State}. I may have even been in your business at one time or even worked with some businesses near yours.
Here’s the Deal:
I can help your {business type} improve your online reputation. Your customers are seeing what others have to say about you before ever walking through your door - and the bad apples leaving these reviews are ruining your good name online. In fact, nearly 70% of your potential customers are consulting reviews and ratings before making a purchase decision. I’m sure if you had your way this isn’t how you would choose to represent your company on the internet. I can work with you to suppress, directly answer, or in some cases entirely remove this negative press.
Costs? I can offer you services from a simple one-time cleanup to an ongoing monthly reputation management strategy. Whichever way you should decide to go, the costs involved are nothing compared to what this kind of negative customer-generated content is costing you every month. Just contact me on my cell at 00-000-0000. If I’m with another client just leave me a message and I’l get back to you as soon as possible.
Sincerely,
{Your Name}
Now here's what really boosts the effectiveness of this letter - take a screenshot of their bad reviews and print it out. Get as many on the page as you can fit. I print them out to fill the entire page, and write on them in red marker in BIG red letters. "You have 10 '1-star' reviews on the first page of Google….this is what your potential customers see when they search for your business!!!" I circle the worst parts and make sure that I'm really driving the point home. You'd be surprised how many businesses aren't even aware that they're getting slammed publicly like this. It really, really pushes their buttons.
Next, take the first contact letter and the printout of the bad reviews and bundle them up in a standard envelope with two, six sided dice. Why? Simply because lumpy mail works. I didn't come up with it, but I've used it before and I know it kills. It also gives your prospect a token that differentiates you from the dozens of other letters they'll likely read that day. Fold your dice into the letter so they can be seen as soon as the envelope is opened. The dice also make the letters to big for automated processing, and they now need to be mailed as a parcel. Even though they'll cost you $1.77 each like this IT'S WORTH IT. They now get a huge barcode label and are very, very unlikely to be thrown out as marketing mail since very few letters arrive with parcel stickers. Hand address your envelopes and use a personal return address, not your business.
Here's an example:
That should be enough to get you started. If there's any interest I'll write up another installment on preparing your ORM proposal, pricing, contracts, and CLOSING etc. Good luck.
Part 2
This thread is a follow up to the original ORM prospecting letters thread I posted back in September. If you haven't gone over that thread yet, go back and start here. The revenue generated per package sent is well over $1000 per package now. I'm employing some new tricks that I might spill the beans on here once I've moved on to something new.
In this installment we'll talk about fulfillment. You have been given all the tools you need to reach out to prospects and catch their interest, but I got a ton of PM's asking about what actually happens next. It's a tough question to answer really, since every client will pose new challenges and you'll need to adapt your strategies and tactics to each situation as they come.
That being said, I've decided to give you an overview of a very simplified version of the basic system I present to what I consider "average" clients with "average" problems. This is a 2 part process, consisting of a standard 4x6 postcard and a landing page.
As mentioned in the first installment, most clients you'll speak to have a reputation problem that can be solved by simply designing and implementing a process to collect and syndicate positive, user-generated feedback. These two components are all you should need to get the ball rolling for anyone who's issue doesn't extend past BAD REVIEWS. If they have a dozen listings on ripoffreport it gets a hair more complex, so we'll save that discussion for another day.
Here's what the process looks like from soup-to-nuts:
1. Business owner hands a feedback postcard to the customer as they leave their business. They ask for a review as a "personal favor" and quickly walk the customer through using the card to leave a review online.
2. The customer visits your custom reviews portal and chooses whether he/she had a good or bad experience with the business.
3. Depending on their selection, they are presented with options to continue. Bad reviews are redirected to a web form where you collect the info and email it back to the business owner in real time. Good reviewers are presented with direct links to sites where the customer needs the feedback the most, ie Google Places, Yahoo Local, TripAdvisor, etc.
There's a bit of psychology at work here and although it's very simple, its very powerful stuff. Listen up because this is important. Here's why:
Customers who want to complain just want to be heard. They want someone to listen to their gripe and acknowledge that their feedback matters. By facilitating bad reviews as well as good reviews, you'll trap this negative feedback and provide the business owner with a channel to self audit and potentially learn about problems they never knew they had. For example, if you're working with a restaurant and Server A never gets a complaint and Server B gets 4 a day, the business owner can use this information and act on data he would have never had access to without your help. Make sure you use this in your pitch, they love this.
Secondly, customers who are happy with their experience generally just go about their business without ever thinking twice about leaving a good review. Why? Because as consumers we EXPECT to be made happy, and it's only when it doesn't go smoothly that we feel compelled to be vocal about it. There's a general rule of thumb that 1% of customers make 99% of the noise when it comes to reviews - all you're doing is facilitating the 1% and giving them a voice.
I'm including everything you need to make this work for you. In the download at the end of this post you'll find the PSD for the feedback postcard and a fully functional landing page that is very similar to what I still use to this day.
Instructions for using these materials:
Postcard - Fill in the business name and a custom url for each client on the card before printing. You can use a dedicated domain per client (like I do) like www.bobscafereviews.com or you can just put each business in it's own directory like www.yourreviewsite.com/bobscafe. I use gotprint for the majority of my printing simply because it keeps costs down.
Landing page - This is all set up for you and pretty self explanatory. Swap out the link so that the bad experience side goes to a web form you control (I use wufoo being a code noob) and swap out the good side to link to the customer's 3rd party reviews sites, like Google Places. You may want to put a short url in between for smaller reviews sites just to cover the traffic source if you're being aggressive with collecting feedback.
Download:
Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?vcvbfv7k3uexhha
I sell this basic program for no less than $399 a month per client and up to $999 per month, with 60 days due up front. I upcharge $50 per month per 500 postcards + shipping if I have to do the printing on behalf of the customer. Almost all will take you up on this so make sure you're marking up your printing. Every penny counts.
If interest keeps up there's another installment on the way. Please keep the questions here so others can read the answers.
This is the 3rd installment in a short series on building an offline business offering Online Reputation Management, so if you haven't read parts 1 and 2 go back and catch up now.
I had initially planned to make this third installment about closing and contracting new clients, but noticed in the previous 2 threads that a lot of people were questioning the statistics used in the initial letter and wondering if I just fabricated them to scare prospects or if they were real numbers. I won't say that I've never massaged the truth to close a deal , but in this case, there's absolutely no need to do so. The numbers pertaining to what you're presenting will sell themselves - all you have to do is present them in a way that business owners can relate to and trust.
In almost all of my other ventures selling online services to offline businesses, I've used research as my primary sales tool. Having hard statistics from trusted sources is a secret weapon that is just there for the taking yet rarely used as a closing tool. Personally I use reports as a primer to in person meetings - give your prospects time to study and absorb the information, the reference it in your presentation and they'll follow along with every word you say like they've been doing this along side you for years. In this particular case (ORM) the research is so clear cut and convincing that I've had clients call me back after receiving the white paper asking to move forward as soon as possible.
I realize that some people reading the first two threads may have thought that we're just selling snake oil to unsuspecting business owners, but I think after you look at the research and get an understanding of exactly what the void is that you fill with these services, you'll feel differently.
Take a look at some quick statistics:
- 55% of Internet users look at other people's reviews.
- 82% of Internet users trust customer reviews over expert reviews (this one is HUGE)
- 50% of ALL internet users over the age of 18 have left a review online
- Customers will are actually willing to pay more for companies who have excellent reviews
- 78% of Internet users believe reviews are the most credible form of advertising
The importance of ORM should become painfully obvious to your prospects (if it isn't already) when reading these statistics. There is no more time to wait to adapt - marketing is a 2 way exchange now and reviews are exploding in popularity and usage every single day whether your prospects like it or not. You're the guy who's going to make sure they're squared up online, 7 days a week, 365 days a year.
The White Paper
I'm including a rebrandable version of the original white paper I used when I started working on this full time. I'm not much of a technical writer so I commissioned this paper from an excellent writer named Joe Ditzel. I gave him some quick details of what I wanted to cover and he pulled it together into this short, albeit powerful little report. You can use this paper as a tool during sales presentations or as a primer to your in person meetings, like I do. I like to educate my prospects so we're not starting from scratch, but only to the point that I increase their pain and don't offer up a solution. You should never be telling your clients how to go about fixing these issues until you're sitting right in front of them.
Here it is in PDF, Pages, and Word format:
Code:
http://www.mediafire.com/?r61x1vxy5uw41oi
I'll write up the next one after the holidays sometime. Have a Merry Christmas. o/
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