How to Increase Your Copywriting Success
by Building a Super Powerful Prospect List
BY Chris Marlow
NEW - Chris has just published her long-awaited report:
The 2005 Freelance Copywriter Fee & Compensation Survey
Take a look at your prospecting list, if you have one. Where did
all those names come from?
Most likely they're a hodge podge of names from a hodge podge of
sources
with few added to your list solely on the criteria
that they're especially good leads.
Now ask yourself how successful your clients would be if their
lists were compiled in such an unscientific manner?
When you consider that the single most important element of a direct
mail campaign is the list (followed closely by the offer, and THEN
the copy), it becomes painfully apparent that a sloppy list is a
liability indeed!
So how do you go about creating a solid list of quality prospects
that you can mine for years to come?
There are some methods you can use and sources you can tap, and
I reveal a few of the best here. However, It always boils down to
looking in the right places for your particular specialty.
MY FAVORITE STARTING PLACE
Roughly half of my coaching students are new copywriters and when
it's time to share my list building strategies with them, I always
introduce them to Who's Mailing What http://www.whosmailingwhat.com/,
a rich online archive of more than 130,000 direct mail packages
collected from more than 7,000 companies since 1994.
For $24.95 per year, you can go into the archive and literally
see "who's been mailing what," which can be a real boon
for copywriters who specialize in the dozens of categories - publishing,
financial, collectibles, technology, and more - covered by WMW.
For instance, I specialize in software. And while there are more
than 7,300 software companies in the U.S., I need only 300 to keep
busy. So which 300 should they be? Well, the BEST 300 of course
the
300 that I know are direct mailers
the 300 that I know are
financially stable
the 300 that I know are well respected and
trustworthy.
When I started compiling my list, I mined Who's Mailing What to
discover the names of software companies that had mailed over the
past two years. As "sure mailers," these companies became
the richest names on my list, and remain so today.
OTHER GREAT PLACES TO LOOK
Nearly every large industry has an association, and most associations
have member lists. To get your hands on the list you often need
to join the association, but unless the price is really exorbitant,
it's usually worth it. Remember, time is money in the freelancer's
world, so the faster you can put together your list, the faster
you can market to it.
The library is another place to look for lists. In addition to
my "sure mailers," I added the world's most profitable
software companies to my list, tracked down at the local library
in the Computer and Software section of the Dunn and Bradstreet
Gale Industries Handbook.
I completed my goal of assembling 300 strong names by surfing the
Internet in search of newsletters, Web sites, and publications that
serve the software market. There I found lists like "The Top
50 Software Venture Capital Investments," which listed software
companies that had recently been infused with millions of dollars
each, in venture capital.
SOME STRONG SOURCES FOR GENERALISTS
Although I believe that every business freelancer should carve
out a niche for him or herself, many start out as generalists. If
you fit this category, you'll find some excellent list-building
sources at the library.
Chuck Thompson, one of my early coaching students, discovered the
"Mail Order Business Directory" at his Chicago-area library.
It lists over 5,000 names, addresses, and basic facts about U.S.
firms doing business by mail.
Library sources I used in my early days of freelancing included
the "Standard Directory of Advertisers" and "Standard
Directory of Advertising Agencies." Also known as "the
red books" by industry insiders, you should be able to find
them at any main library; I've had less luck finding them at the
local level (and they're too expensive for most freelancers to buy).
The "Standard Directory of Advertisers" contains information
on over 24,000 U.S. and international advertisers who each spend
more than $200,000 annually on advertising. Each listing includes
advertising expenditures by media, contact information, address,
and more.
The "Standard Directory of Advertising Agencies" contains
detailed profiles of nearly 13,500 U.S. and international advertising
agencies, including accounts represented by each agency, fields
of specialization, contact information, and much more. These directories
are truly exciting sources of information for the freelancer who
recognizes the value of smart targeting.
Finally, you never know what you'll come up with while searching
the Internet for lists and directories. One of my coaching students
wants to specialize in catalog copy. We found several databases
on the Internet, and last night I happened across "Mail Order
USA," a guide to 2,000 of the top mail order catalogs in the
U.S. and Canada.
Compiling your own personal prospect list is never fast or easy,
but there is a silver lining. And that is that no other copywriter
will be marketing to the same exact list that you are. So do your
homework and make your list as strong as it can be. Because most
of your success will flow from your list, it pays to make it as
powerful as it can be.
Related learning materials:
The 2005 Freelance Copywriter
Fee & Compensation Survey
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