The importance of the “bounce-back” catalog.
A bounce-back catalog is a circular containing descriptions and order information for your complete line of related information products. When a customer orders your lead product, you insert the bounce-back in the package and ship it with the order. Ideally, he sees the catalog, scans it, orders more items … and his order “bounces back” to you.
The bounce-back catalog doesn’t have to be long or elaborate. For my mail order business, the catalog is printed on two sides of a single 8 1/2-by-11-inch sheet in black ink on colored paper. (To get a free copy, send a self-addressed stamped #10 envelope to: Bob
Bly, Dept. DMBB, 174 Holland Avenue, New Milford, NJ 07646.)
Additional sales generated by bounce-backs can range in dollar amount from 10 percent to 100 percent of the front-end sales generated by your original ad or mailing. The only cost is a penny or two to print each catalog sheet. There is no postage cost, because the catalog gets a “free-ride” as an insert in your product shipment. (Tip: When you fulfill a bounce-back order, send out another bounce-back catalog…and another…until the customer has bought every item in the catalog.)
Create low, medium and high-priced products.
Different buyers have different perceptions of what information is worth and what they will pay. You will get more sales by testing a variety of prices for your lead item and by offering a number of different products reflecting a broad range of prices.
My front-end product is a $12 book. The back-end consists of a series of $7 and $8 reports, a second book for $20 and a six-tape cassette album for $49.95. Dr. Jeffrey
Lant, who sells business development products and services, has products ranging from a $4 report to a $4,800 consulting service.
Recently, I sent an inquiry to a well-known and successful marketer who specializes in selling information on how to make money as a speaker. I didn’t buy because the only alternatives were a large cassette album or a one-year newsletter subscription, both of which are fairly expensive, and I wasn’t ready to make that kind of commitment to the subject. Most buyers prefer to sample your information with a lower-priced product, such as a book, single cassette or inexpensive manual in the $10 to $50 range.
Let your buyers tell you what products they want you to create.
Always put your name, address and phone number in every information product you produce, and encourage feedback from readers. Many readers become advocates and fans, calling, writing and establish a dialogue with you.
Welcome this. Not only can you solve their problems and answer their inquiries by telling them which current products to buy, but their questions can suggest new products. Most of my back-end reports were written to answer specific questions readers asked me repeatedly. Instead of having the same telephone conversation over and over again, I can simply sell them a report which contains the answers they seek. It saves time and generates revenue.
Be the quality source.
Your strongest advertisement is a good product. A clever or deceptive ad can certainly generate brisk sales, and returns may not be excessive even if your product is poor, but customers will feel cheated and will not favor you with repeat business.
A good product will have people actively seeking you out and will bring in a small but steady stream of phone calls, letters, inquiries and orders generated by the product itself and not the advertising. You will be shocked at the enormous effort some people expend to locate the source of quality information products that are well spoken of by other buyers.