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Let Me Get Right to the Point

October 8, 2015 by Dennis Fischman 1 Comment

I’m on your website right now…and baby, I know what I want. Where do I find it?

You can make it easy for me with a landing page.

John Haydon explains, “A landing page is a page on your website where you want visitors to complete a specific transaction, such as donating money or joining an email list.” Or even buying a book, another product, or a service.

The landing page is where I do what you want.

You’ve won me over.  You’ve seduced me.  I’m ready to give in.

So, don’t make me search up and down your home page. That might spoil the moment.

Don’t hide your offer on a back page.  When I find it, I might not be in the mood.

Create a page that does nothing else but what you brought me here to do.  The minute I walk in the joint, I should see it.

And then say thank you.

Because I don’t pop my cork for every website I see.

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People Will Pay Attention If You Help Them Solve Their Problems

October 6, 2015 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Phoenix Hospital Car Seat Helper“What’s the right car seat for my child?”

I know a lot of parents who’ve wondered about this question.  Some have done extensive research online to figure it out.

The Phoenix Children’s Hospital created an app for that. According to Jay Baer in his book Youtility, “Parents enter the height and weight of their child, and it instantly recommends the appropriate type and size of car seat.”

The Car Seat Helper is free, and it solves a pressing problem for parents.  But what does it do for Phoenix Children’s Hospital?

  • Answers a question that would take too much time to answer case by case.
  • Prevents injuries, which is part of the hospital’s mission.
  • Creates a glow around the hospital that leads parents to choose it for their children.
  • Shows the hospital’s expertise and commitment to grantmakers and donors.

Nonprofits struggle to reach through the murk of messages people receive to make our own message heard.  But there’s a simple answer.

Solve people’s problems and you’ll get their attention.  Solve a problem that’s related to your organization’s mission, and you may win a friend.

 

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How to Deliver the Sun

October 5, 2015 by Dennis Fischman 2 Comments

Sun cookie

Your writing can deliver the sun!

All right, I’m taking a poll here.  You receive a newsletter in the mail from someone with whom you do business.  Which of these opening paragraphs makes you want to read the rest of the newsletter?

Choice #1:

We are constantly striving to improve our service to our customers and our referral partners. This is a tough industry and it is hard to define good customer service when providing an extremely regulated, highly technical and complicated service.

Choice #2:

Recently, some of us were lucky enough to be sent on an award trip to the Four Seasons in Palm Beach by our parent company.  One of my coworkers was teasing one of the pool folks that it was their job to deliver the sun–moments before a sudden shower drove her back to her room. Fifteen minutes later there was a knock at her door and she was presented with oranges sliced into sun shapes and lemon cookies with a note that said, “I told you, you could count on me to deliver the sun” signed, Chris, assistant pool and beach manager.

I’ll bet I know which one you chose.

Choice #2 wins hands down, right?  But why?

  • It grabs your attention.  “Palm Beach! Why doesn’t my company send me on trips like that?”
  • It tells a story.  There’s a calm starting situation, a challenge (“deliver the sun”), a setback (the rain shower), and a triumph.
  • It takes the point about good customer service that Choice #1 buries in bureaucratic prose and brings it front and center.

So why do so many of us go with Choice #1?  Look at your own newsletter, or appeal letter, or even the last email you wrote.  Be honest.  Are you bringing them oranges and lemon cookies sliced into sun shapes, or are you making them trudge through a long stretch of shifting sand before getting to the point?

Someone once said that the key to writing a good book is to write what comes to mind and then throw away the first two pages.  When you are writing for your organization,  consider throwing away the first two paragraphs.

Do whatever it takes to bring them the sun.

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