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Top Tips to Write a Persuasive Case Study
Case studies, when written and used correctly, can be very
powerful marketing tools. The reason being, a good case study
can bring even the most abstract concept to life, illustrating
how your company, product or service solved a real business
problem for a customer. In other words, the proverbial "proof
is in the pudding." Our friend and email markeing expert,
Debbie Weil, gives us the recipe.
"Top Tips to Write a Persuasive Case Study"
by Debbie Weil, president of
WordBiz.com
Insert the words case study into your subject line
and most online readers will snap to attention. White papers
may get a yawn, but a case study promises real-life solutions
and insider tips on how it all really works.
We're not talking Harvard Business School, although the HBS
case study approach has revolutionized business education.
Short case studies fashioned as marketing vehicles can be
surprisingly effective.
So what is the formula for a case study
that packs a punch but is digestible enough to appeal to
an online reader?
- Organize your information with sign posts
- Reveal real business pain
- Include specific, quantifiable results
Whether it's the lead article in your e-newsletter or
featured content on your site, a well-written case study
should:
- Build suspense
- Have a satisfying conclusion
- Solve a generalizable business problem (make money or
save money)
If the objective is to showcase your organization's
capabilities, it may also propel the reader into the first
step of the buying process for your product or service.
Compelling content
In other words, good content isn't just fun to read. It should
set in motion a sequence of visitor thoughts and actions that
ultimately lead to a sale.
Customer profiles, success stories or case studies
It doesn't matter what you call them. Just be consistent. And
recognize that visitors to your site aren't dumb. They know
why you're including case studies.
Personally, I like "case study." It suggests a story with a
beginning, middle and end - a tidy resolution.
Is it a challenge with a result? A problem with a solution?
Whatever nomenclature you decide on, stick with it. Three
subheads work well as signposts for your readers. As an
example:
- Challenge
- Solution
- Result
Or,
- Issue
- Approach
- Current situation
A consistent organization to your case studies makes them
easier to grasp - and also easier to write. If the case study
is on your site, use a consistent layout on the page as well.
Snack, bite, meal
(Thanks to E-Write Online for this phrase which is a good
reminder of how to write for the Web.)
In other words, consider writing a case study in several
levels. The top one is your signpost subheads with a summary
blurb under each. Readers who want to know more can click
through to a complete version that goes into more detail.
What makes a great case study
I asked Ellis Booker, editor of BtoB magazine, for his tips.
He's been publishing a "from the trenches" case study in BtoB
Hands-On, the print pub's free weekly e-newsletter, since
January, 2002. He swears by his formula.
Short, candid and revealing
The best case studies, Booker said, are ones "that sound like
a legitimate problem. The reader wants candor. They want to
see the pain point. Readers want something to be revealed."
Even more effective is a story that says, "We screwed up." It
should offer "a dialectic. Readers like opposing points of
view."
The case study "has to be specific and easily digestible. It
has to be tactical information that can be generalized," he
said. "Unless you have results, the case study is not nearly
as powerful as it should be."
Stick to a word count
Booker assigns a limit of around 300 words to his writers,
although most of BtoB's case studies are a bit longer. A more
reasonable word count is 500 words. If your readers can't skim
quickly to get the gist, you're wasting your efforts.
Beware of letting PR folks write your case studies
GE Commercial Finance is a mega, content rich site filled with
case studies (GE calls them success stories) that showcase the
conglomerate's many corporate financing capabilities.
Unfortunately, someone included the sub-head "GE Advantage" in
every one of them. This significantly undercuts their
usefulness as credible marketing tools.
If you must delegate the writing of a case study to your PR
folks, be prepared to take an editor's pen to the copy they
submit. Strike out the Pollyanna, oh-we're-wonderful tone. And
slash the marketing speak.
Developing case studies is part of knowledge management
Whether your company is large or small, you've got stories to
tell - about customers, competitors or yourself. Generating
case studies for your Web site or e-newsletter is one way to
harness your knowledge-based assets.
Copyright © 2002 WordBiz.com, Inc., All rights reserved.
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