How To Grab Attention With Your
Headlines
By Charlie Cook
You've got just a few seconds to grab your prospects' attention, spark
their interest and motivate them to keep reading whether they're looking
at your web site, your letter or your brochure. Headlines are the first
thing your prospects read. Four out of five people determine whether
they keep reading to learn about your products and services on the basis
of your headline.
Do your headlines capture your prospects' attention or do they confuse
them and send them away?
Are your headlines prompting prospects to learn about your products and
services or click to another web site or throw away your letter?
Avoid the three following headline mistakes.
Don't Emphasize Obscure Company Names
Most small businesses and many not so small businesses names aren't
household words. Unless your name is among the top ten most recognized
brands such as, Craftsman, Waterford, Rolls Royce, the Discovery
Channel, WD-40 or Crayola there is a very good chance people won't
associate your company name with anything.
Have you ever visited a web site or read a print ad where the company's
name covered the top part of the page and it was something like, "Pharos
Partners"? Unless the name of your company describes what you do, it is
not going to grab prospects' attention. Move it to the side and make
room for a creative headline.
Avoid Welcome Statements
On many web sites the first line you read is, "Welcome to our Site".
There is a reason you don't see these in print ads. Welcome statements
are a waste of time in marketing materials; they do little to help
prospects understand what you do.
Delete Vague Descriptions and Statements
Statements like, "Our purpose is to connect you with information and
resources to achieve your maximum potential", could apply to a number of
different professions. It could refer to a cooking school, a management
consultant or an eldercare program.
-
Are you wasting
valuable space where your headline goes to
feature a company name that doesn't describe
what you do?
-
Does your
headline include "business speak" terms your
children or mother-in-law can't explain?
-
Is your
description of product and services specific
or is it so generic that it could apply to
other types of businesses?
-
Does your
headline focus on the selling points that
distinguish your products and services from
the competitions?
Writing Headlines that Get Your Prospects'
Attention
People look at web sites the same way they look
at magazine ads. They scan the page quickly to
see if the product or service is something they
want. On the web or in a marketing brochure, if
you capture their interest, they'll keep
reading.
The best way to do this is to give them a clear
idea of the problems your products or services
can solve and/or the benefits you provide. Use a
few carefully selected words such as:
-
Leverage your
expertise to attract a steady stream of
clients
-
Reliable Office
Supplies, free next day delivery
-
In-home sports
training for exercise enthusiasts
-
Web and print
design that helps your business grow
-
Costa Rica
Travel, Unique off-the-beaten track tours to
jungles and beaches
Your page headline should communicate clearly
what you offer clients, which problems you solve
and the benefits you provide. Do your headlines:
-
Clarify what you
do?
-
Describe the
problems you solve?
-
Define whom you
do it for?
-
Explain the
benefits?
-
Emphasis a key
selling point?
-
Compel your
prospects to keep reading?
Imagine that you
worked at an exercise facility and wanted to
attract clients for your massage business. Here
are some possible headlines you might use for
your flyer and associated critiques.
-
George
Jenkins Massage
(It's your name but so what)
-
Are You
Bothered By Back Pain
(Better, it defines the problem)
-
7 Ways to Get
Instant Back Pain Relief
(Defines the problem and a solution)
-
How Computer
Users Can Banish Back Pain in One Hour
(Defines who your target market is, the
problem and the benefit)
Grab your
prospects attention in the first few seconds
with your headline. Then follow with compelling
copy that clarifies the value of your products
and services and you'll generate many more
sales.