8 Ways To Make Your Brochures Effective

business-brochures

How can you make your brochures more effective? How do you write copy that gets your brochures and flyers read and customers to respond?? Use these 8 copywriting and design tips to create and improve your the sales literature you provide customers.

 

If you’re planning to create a brochure to drum up sales or to announce a new product or service, you’re probably wondering what you can do to ensure a good response.

 

After all, when you add up all the costs for developing the brochure or flyer – writing, photography, graphic design, and printing, plus the time you or your staff spend on associated chores- a simple business-envelope-sized brochure can cost 50 cents a piece or more, even if you use a low-cost online printing service to print the flier.

 

Cost isn’t the only thing you need to worry about. Every piece of literature you send out leaves an impression on your prospects. Leave the wrong impression, and you run the risk of losing sales and alienating customers.

So, what can you do to make your next sales brochure or flier a winner? Here are ten important secrets of successful brochures.

1. Understand your customer. Before you spend any time planning a brochure, make sure you understand your customer. Why would they want to buy your product? What’s the most important thing it can do for them? What is the most important problem your product or service can solve for them? If you don’t know the answers to questions like these, go ask. Talk to your salespeople. Talk to customers. Use their answers to help decide which benefits to play up in your brochure.

2. Plan your brochure for AIDA.
No, that’s not your favorite aunt. AIDA is an acronym for Attention, Interest, Desire, and Action. To be effective, your brochure needs to get attention, get the prospect interested enough to read further, raise their desire for the product or service, and get them to take a specific action such as buy now, call and make an appointment, return a post card.

3. Don’t put a picture of your building on the cover of the brochure.
Sure, you’re proud of the building and the way the company has grown. But your customers really don’t care how proud you are of your company, or how big your building is. The only thing they care about is whether or not your products meet their needs. Don’t waste space you should use to sell your products and convince customers to buy now.

4. Sell, don’t tell.
Your customers and prospects aren’t really interested in your company or products. They are interested in themselves and/or their own businesses. To get their attention, your brochure needs to focus on the benefits they will enjoy by making a purchase from you. Remember, people don’t buy telephone answering machines to record messages. They buy answering machines so they will never miss an important call again.

5. Use headlines and graphics your audience cares about.
The average reader takes less than 5 seconds to glance at the cover of a brochure and decide whether or not to read it. If your headline or graphics on the cover of your brochure are boring, few recipients will bother opening it.

For instance, a photo of people watching a presenter writing on a flip chart above a headline that reads, “Matching People and Strategy,” is likely to get a brochure pitched into the recycle bin. But, a photo showing a businessperson giving thumbs up sign to small group of associates and a headline that reads, “Train Your Team To Land Big Sales,” is likely to get attention.

6. Use benefits-oriented headlines inside your brochure, too.
Once you’ve gotten the brochure recipient to open the brochure, the next thing they’ll do is skim the headlines inside the brochure. Use these inside headlines to hold their attention, and move them through the copy.

7. Use bullet points to focus on the key features of your product or service. Consumers and business people alike are pressed for time and have many ads vying for their attention. So they tend to skim quickly through copy. Feature-rich bullet points will help keep them focused on what you offer and lead them towards the action you want them to take next.

8. Tell them what you want them to do after reading the copy.
After you interest the reader in what you sell, you have to take the next step: tell them what they need to do to acquire it. Don’t just assume they’ll look for your phone number and call or visit your website. If you don’t tell them what action to take, they may take the wrong one – calling another merchant or service provider instead of you.