Using Your Book to Close Sales

by admin on March 11, 2011

Ah, the close, that magical moment when the prospect agrees to buy! All of the shrewd marketing you’ve been doing has led to this moment.How do you give your prospects that last little push to get them to actually close? One way is to use your book as a purchase incentive.

Dr. Charlie Pellerin, NASA’s Director for Astrophysics does just that with his book How NASA Builds Teams: Mission Critical Soft-Skills for Scientists, Engineers, Project Teams, and Their Leaders (Wiley, 2009). Dr. Pellerin is the NASA scientist who led the Hubble Space Telescope team. In 1990, after the telescope was already launched into space, he and his team discovered that Hubble was useless because of a flawed mirror. They staged a daring space mission to fix the telescope, which succeeded. The experience launched Dr. Pellerin on a quest to understand the leadership and teamwork failures that led to NASA launching Hubble with such a serious flaw. He undertook a 15-year study of leadership and teamwork, culminating in his book, and the creation of 4-D Systems, his consulting firm that teaches businesses how to build and lead successful teams. In order to close prospects on signing up for one of his paid coaching events, “How Did NASA’s $1.7 Billion Screw Up Deliver their Most Effective Team Building Results,” each attendee was offered a free copy of Dr. Pellerin’s book as a bonus for signing up. This purchase incentive both added value to each sign up, and placed a lasting reminder of Dr. Pelerin’s expertise on each attendee’s bookshelf—a very compelling marketing tactic!

You’ve made the close. Can you celebrate now? Unfortunately, no. Any experienced salesperson will tell you that a sale is most vulnerable to being undone right after the close. Immediately after a purchase new customers want (sometimes need) to be reassured that they made the right decision. One of the most effective ways to give them this reassurance is to surprise them with a free copy of your book, given as a purchase reward. This does two things: it lets your customers know that they have your immediate attention and appreciation, and confirms that you are the expert that they should be working with.

A case in point: Attorney Don Loose uses his books Estate Planning in Arizona (Wheatmark, 2008) and Arizona Laws 101 (Wheatmark, 2005) as purchase rewards. After each initial consult with a new client, Mr. Loose gives the client a free copy of one of his books. He observes:

“The clients are always pleasantly surprised to receive something that they didn’t expect to get. Also, it gives the client something tangible that they can take away. In the legal profession, where clients usually only get non-tangibles [results and advice], it is very reassuring to them to receive something tangible. Having the books has done a lot for my business.”

Of course, you probably shouldn’t give the same book as both a purchase incentive and as a purchase reward to the same prospect … which is a good reason to write and publish more than one book!

You make an offer to a qualified prospect. How do you make your offer stand out from all of the competing offers? How do you make the prospect feel safe selecting your offer? The answer to both questions is, by positioning yourself as an expert (preferably the expert) on what you offer. Buyers want to buy from experts. Buyers feel safe buying from experts.

You need to present substantial proof of expertise to truly position yourself as an expert in your field. Proofs of expertise include academics degrees, testimonials, books, keynote addresses, articles, white papers, speaking gigs, etc. Experienced marketers will tell you that of all these different kinds of proofs of expertise, a book is by far the best. It is the ultimate showcase for your expertise, because it demonstrates both your comprehensive knowledge of, and your dedication to, your subject.

Bernie Borges is the founder and CEO of the internet marketing agency Find and Convert, where he helps businesses produce sales opportunities through Internet Marketing. Mr. Borges is also the author of Marketing 2.0: Bridging the Gap between Seller and Buyer through Social Media Marketing (Wheatmark, 2009). He says of his book:

“I regularly compete for new business among other Internet marketing agencies. Without question, when I hand a prospective new client my book (or mail it to them if they are not local), I am immediately set apart from all of my competitors. Nearly each time, I win the new client.”

He wins the new client because his book positions him as the expert to be trusted (rather than his bookless competitors).

Another example: Bad boy chef Anthony Bourdain, host of the Travel Channel’s long running show, Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations, is one of these most recognized experts in the culinary field. This didn’t happen by chance; it happened as a direct result of his publishing the book, Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly (Bloomsbery, 2000). Before the book’s publication Mr. Bourdain had a respectable career managing the kitchens of several restaurants in New York. Since the book’s publication he’s:

  • had two wildly successful televisions shows
  • published nine more books (including a trio of well-selling mysteries)
  • had a sitcom character based on him
  • launched and run an award-winning blog
  • been a guest on Top Chef, and several other television shows
  • had articles published in The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Times, The Los Angeles Times, The Observer, Gourmet, Maxim, Esquire (UK), Town & Country, and many other magazines and newspapers
  • made a cameo appearance in a major motion picture, and
  • been hired as a writer and consultant for the HBO series Treme

The publication of Kitchen Confidential was the watershed event that set Mr. Bourdain apart from the tens of thousands of other chefs out there. It’s what allowed (and allows) him to make offers to publishers and TV producers and have these offers be taken seriously and accepted.

Positioning yourself as an expert is key to marketing your business successfully and nothing positions you as an expert better than a book.

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