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Everything we do involves an ‘underlying motivator’ that drives the motion or action taken. For example, you might take up running to lose weight, in which case, the ‘lose weight’ is the underlying motivator.
Similarly, underlying motivators play their part in getting people to do certain things — whether that be encouraging your bank manager approving your overdraft account, persuading an event organisation to take you on as a guest speaker, or enticing a prospect into buying your products.
The better you understand your clients or customers’ motivating factors or ‘motivators’, the easier it will become to convince them to buy from you…
As well as closing sales, understanding and addressing what motivates your customers will help create clearer and more effective communication.
There are five major motivating factors:
1. Recognition
Those motivated by gaining ‘recognition’ are essentially interested in gaining greater admiration, esteem, celebrity, notoriety, regard or respect.
For example, let’s say you are an image advisor. One of the main recognition motivators your target group shares is that they want to look and feel good. Some might go one step further and aspire to follow the style of, say, Sienna Miller.
Often, people who improve their physical appearance are more successful because of their confidence boost. If you can tap into this prime motivator and understand it well enough with regard to how your product or service fits in, then you will be a lot closer to motivating your prospects to buy from you.
2. Profit
Your prospective customers might be influenced by the ‘profit’ motivator. This involves people striving for success or gaining more acquisitions, growth, income, money, possessions or wealth. Are any of these provided by what you offer?
3. Urgency
This is a good one, but it is often overlooked or underplayed. Just think what would have happened if there were only 10 copies of J K Rowling’s follow-up to the first Harry Potter release! People are more inclined to take immediate action and justify their purchase decision if there is a sense of urgency about whatever it is that they are buying.
4. Efficiency
This is an enormous motivating factor — and an important one to consider, especially with today’s frenetic-paced society. Perhaps you can demonstrate that your product or service will save your prospects time and effort…
5. Internal
Some people are motivated by ‘internal’ factors. So focus on things such as creativity, duty, intellect, honour, morals and philanthropy are important to this group.
Finding out what your visitors want is vital, but finding out WHY they want these things reveals their innermost motivations. Target these motivations with your marketing, advertising, PR and web content. When you write words that tie into the emotions of your readers, and about what really motivates, you will never lose their interest or attention.
In my years as a PR exec, journalist, editor, copywriting and marketing I’ve discovered that telling people the truth and giving a reason WHY you’re saying what you’re saying is one of the most powerful psychological motivators to get people to take action. That might translate into your prospects picking up the phone to place an order, send back a reply card for more information or just simply reading all that you have to say.
I’ve also discovered that pain is perhaps the biggest motivator of all.
All animal life revolves around two powerful psychological motivators: pain and pleasure. And every single minute of the day, we are trying to either seek pleasure (through dreaming, thinking or attaining our goals, aspirations and desires) and/or we are trying to avoid pain (steering clear of traffic jams, not getting frustrated by anything or one, and so on),
People will do pretty much anything to avoid or get out of pain.
So you tie this into the specific pain your target audience — your prospective customers — are concerned about and the pleasure they hope to achieve and whether your product or service can help them.
You could ask questions like, “What would this person lose if she fails to buy my product/service?” “What is the cost of failing to act or delaying to buy?” and “What if this product/service wasn’t available anywhere?”
Just think of ways to slant your marketing messages to include motivational triggers to the emotions generated by carefully chosen and placed words. However, never be aggressive, arrogant or pushy in your presentation. That would only damage your motivational trigger . . . and your prospect will walk away.
And bear in mind that you are NOT creating pain for your prospects. You are simply helping to see the pain — that is already there — for what it really is, and comparing it to what could happen/would be if the pain was removed and ‘pleasure’ was put in its place.
Essentially, it all boils down to playing detective. Find out what motivates your current customers as well as what motivated them to do business with you in the first place, and use this knowledge to tap into your prospects’ ‘hot’ buttons. That way, you’ll be much closer to closing the deal — and way ahead of your competitor, paarticularly so if they fail to acknowledge the importance of motivators themselves.
By Tracey Dooley, Creative Consultant | PR Doctor | Marketing & Alliance Strategist

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Tracey Dooley is a freelance copywriter, editor and marketer. She has spent 18 years crafting compelling concepts and copy that successfully sell, inform, educate or entertains. Her expertise runs across many different sectors and her client list includes marketing agencies, a leading supplier of personal computers, semi-conductors and telecommunications equipment and the UK’s largest TV and interactive production company. =====> www.mediaminister.co.uk.
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