Your Sales Copy Bombed – Now What?
Hiya CopyStar,
If it hasn’t happened to you yet – it will. I promise.
You spend weeks researching a project … coming up with a convincing sales argument … loading up your letter with proof elements – including stellar testimonials … and giving the prospect an offer he can’t refuse.
You work long days and nights with the designer to create a look that makes your copy POP. You’re thrilled with your results and you can’t wait for the client to mail the package.
The mail date finally arrives. You get samples in the mail. Package looks AWESOME! Now you got to wait 3 weeks or more to get the results.
In the meantime, you’re envisioning how you’re going to spend your royalty checks. New car? Dream vacation? Hey – maybe even pay off your mortgage!
Then you get that phone call (or email) with the words:
"Your package didn’t beat the control." Or even worse …
"Your package bombed. We haven’t seen responses this low in over 20 years!"
Aargh!
Now, the negative tape starts going off in your head:
"You suck." You’re a fraud. Nobody will hire you EVER again. Get that Wal-Mart application and fill it out PRONTO. You can’t make it in this copywriting biz."
Sound familiar?
I’m not making this stuff up. That’s how I still feel EVERY time my package fails. Fortunately I don’t experience it too often – but when I do – my day … week … sometimes month is ruined!
How do I pull myself out of my rut and get my butt back in the game?
Well, I learned a few valuable lessons through the past decades of working in this biz that helps me – and I think it can help you too. So listen up …
#1: Get the facts! I’ve got an over-imaginative mind. If I hear "your package didn’t work" – I immediately assume it sucked to high heaven! When the reality is that I may have lost by a few percentage points.
So, don’t settle for generalities. Ask for specifics. Did the package lose by 10%.. 30% … or 50%? Did you have alternate covers? If so, how did they stack up? How many other packages were you competing against?
Getting these specifics can help you decide which way to go. If your package lost by a slim margin – then there’s a chance you could improve the results with a stronger headline.
Offer to write a new cover if the client is wiling to retest – and don’t charge the client for any additional creative test! Your goal is to turn your package into a winner – so you need another shot in the mail. Nickel and diming your client at this point will put you out of the game!
Here’s a little insight from my years of working as a marketing director: If a package loses – the company doesn’t necessarily lose money. Here’s why:
Let’s say your package was 10% behind the control in response. So you’re not a winner – but you’re not a loser either. The client should be able to recoup his losses on the list rental side of his business. This is where he rents out his names to other mailers. This is a HUGE source of income for marketing companies. So, if your package brought in new names – the client is making money off those names on the list side of the business!
#2: Perform a "post-mortem" of your package. It may not be sorry copy – it could be you picked a bad theme. Sometimes clients give you a theme and direction they want to go with the package – but when the package idea doesn’t work – YOU failed! Not fair, but it’s a reality.
Sometimes you just picked a dud theme that didn’t resonate with your market. It happens. It sucks. Oh, well, you move on.
Here’s a suggestion if your client "assigns" you a theme or direction for your package: If you don’t buy into the theme – walk away from the project.
Remember, YOUR butt’s on the line to deliver. If you don’t think you can make it work – it’s better to pass on the assignment.
If you tell your client you’re not "feelin" the theme – then try to come up with an alternative idea to save the assignment.
I’ve said NO THANKS to an assigned theme several times – and I’ve bee happy with my decision every time.
Sure, some times the client hires another writer and gives him that same theme – and it worked in the mail. But I didn’t believe in it, so I knew I wasn’t going to do my best job. I’m still glad I passed.
And also, clients really do appreciate honestly. They’ve got a lot of money invested in these promotional packages – and they want the best writer for the job. If it’s not you – then it shouldn’t be you!
#3: Remember: Clayton Makepeace sucks too! After I’ve had my little pity party about my package losing, I need to get my head back in the game. And the best way I do that is to think about my copywriting hero Clayton Makepeace. And then I say, "If a master copywriter like Clayton isn’t batting a thousand – why the heck do I think I’m immune to failure?
The point is EVERYBODY experiences defeat in the mail. And the way to become known as a STAR copywriter is to have FEWER failures than the other guys!
That’s how Clayton … Gary Bencivenga … and other class A copywriters developed their stellar reputations. It’s not that they didn’t lose – they just had more SUCCESSES!
Here’s another little gem I want to pass on to you:
Clients are more willing to give you another shot at a project if they like you. We’re human. We’re drawn to people we like.
So if you treated the client with respect … acted like a professional … and did the best you could – most likely you’ll get another shot at beating or creating a new package soon!
So don’t give up!
Here’s to Creating Success Your Way!
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Carline Anglade-Cole
Guest Contributor
THE TOTAL PACKAGE
Carline Anglade-Cole writes multi-year controls in the alternative health field for clients including Healthy Directions, Health Resources, True Health, Soundview Publications and Sun Chlorella USA.
She publishes CopyStar – Copywriting ideas and tips for stellar response – an e-zine for copywriters and direct marketers.
She is the author of How to Write Kick-Butt Copy: Straight Talk from a Million-Dollar Copywriter, Anatomy of a Kick-Butt Control: How to Create a Winning Promo from Start to Finish and Which One Won? How to Write Kick-Butt Headlines and Boost Response!
Put her 20 years of direct mail experience in mailing list strategies, new product development and creating kick-butt controls to work for your company!
Contact Carline directly by visiting her website at www.CarlineCole.com
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3 Comments »
Join the Discussion!
Let us know what you think. Or ask us anything. Or offer your own sage advice.
The only rule: RESPECT THIS HOUSE! Postings that contain abusive language and/or personal attacks will be cheerfully VAPORIZED. One cross word and – POOF! – your well-thought-out post will be gone in a puff of smoke.
– Clayton




Comment by John Anderson — July 20, 2010 @ 6:59 pm
Thanks Carline. Great coaching… We all bomb out sometimes so this was really useful on how to get up, dust ourselves up and keep on charging forward.
Comment by mark — July 21, 2010 @ 8:01 am
Thanks for being so honest.
I think some campaigns bomb because of bad timing.
Comment by Idris — July 22, 2010 @ 2:54 am
I remember getting the same feeling when I was working with a Hypnosis client… I helped her get the most number of subscribers in her company history but when it came time to transform the subscribers into actual seminar goers, something happened and she got her lowest number of seminar seats filled.
I thought I was a fake copywriter and I would never make it ever, not even after trying again and again.
Luckily, I was a cooler guy than the owner. I did a post-mortem and found out that one of the employees didn’t do a follow up sequence on the subscribers. Didn’t do a follow up at all!
In the end I didn’t blame myself so much, at least she’s now got all these subscribers to work with for her next seminar.