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Business Casual Email

Posted by Carrie Kuempel

What started in the late 90’s as “Casual Friday’s” is now standard dress code all week long for many working professionals. Just as fashion shifts to be more relaxed, so have email communications. Have you noticed? Messaging has become much less stilted, more familiar and conversational. We call it business casual email.

Business CasualCase in point is an email I received from the President, Barack, with a one-word subject line: “Hey”.  The brief message was an appeal for an end of year online donation. I was a prime target because I supported Barack back in 2008 with a micro-donation. Yes, I know Barack didn’t actually write that email. Still, the extreme casualness of it intrigued me. I asked others what they thought. As it turns out, most actually like the colloquial approach because it grabbed their attention.

It inspired me to run an experiment. I signed up to receive email from the Republican primary candidates. I figured this would be a fun way to collect a group of emails to examine.

As the campaign emails arrived, I filed them into a folder and am only just now looking at them as a group to write this post. I only received emails from Mitt and Rick; I didn’t receive emails from Newt and Ron and I’m still not sure why.

Anyway, scan the email subject lines below and take note of the following:

  • simple language
  • one to three words max
  • mostly lowercase
  • written as you might to a friend
  • insider references

InboxThe email subject lines all strike a very casual tone. However, the message style varies by person. Summed up:

  • Barack’s two messages are succinct, text-only, including one or two hyperlinks. One greeting is “Friend” and the other is personalized with my name. Signoffs are simple: “To 2012” and “Thank you”.
  • Mitt’s two messages are also brief and both include links to video.  They open with “Friend,” and close expressing thanks.
  • Rick’s nine messages are published in patriotic image-laden red-white-and-blue html formats (with the exception of one text-only message). None contain a salutation; otherwise, they resemble letters, complete with his scanned signature in closing.

Stripping away politics, what can we learn to apply to our own communications with prospects and customers?

  • Know your target audience
    Wildly different interpretations of business casual attire create wrinkles in corporate dress codes. The same is true for business casual email. Rick’s formal letter message body was likely carefully crafted to resonate with his base. Beware: coming across as too familiar could be as off-putting as wearing flip-flops in some workplaces.
    When in doubt, err on the conservative side of business casual.
  • Be personal
    All of the subject lines in my sampling looked like they came from a friend. Subject lines that read more like titles are out of fashion.
    Next time you send a prospecting email, try adopting a more casual, friendly tone.
  • Spark curiosity
    “Wheaties”. That subject line is both thought provoking and timely for Rick’s constituents who recognize its reference to a positive comment made by a CNN consultant after a debate.
    Be relevant by relating your email messages to current events in your prospects’ and customers’ worlds.
  • Connect emotionally
    Video is a very effective way to connect emotionally, as Mitt’s communications team knows. Video need not be over-produced. In fact, we are huge proponents of more ad hoc and authentic business casual video—a term first coined by Cliff (Pollan), VisibleGains CEO and written about by David (Meerman Scott) in the latest edition of his book, The New Rules of Marketing & PR
    Follow up your next meeting with an impromptu video message and include meeting notes and other supporting documentation. It’s easy. Got an iphone? Download our free app from the itunes store.

Take note of the business casual emails landing in your Inbox. Experiment with your tone, word choice and video to connect more personally with prospects and customers.

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The Meaning and Value of “Content” in Selling

Posted by Carrie Kuempel

Andy PaulThis guest post is written by Andy Paul, a leading authority on sales for small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) and the Founder of Zero-Time Selling. Andy is also the author of the award-winning book, Zero-Time Selling: 10 Essential Steps to Accelerate Every Company’s Sales.  Zero-Time Selling was selected as one of the Top 3 Sales & Marketing books of 2011. Andy is our featured guest in a webinar on Thursday February 9 @1PM EST. You can view a preview and register here. Take it away, Andy…

There is a lot of talk about content in marketing and sales these days. A company no longer has just brochures, datasheets or a company website; it has a pool of content about the products and services it markets. The company makes strategic and tactical decisions about how to most effectively communicate that content to potential customers, whether by blog, tweet, email, brochure, slide deck, webinar, datasheet, phone call or other means.

What does “content” mean for your customer?

When asked to define “content”, salespeople tend to have a very parochial point of view, believing that content is solely the information developed by their company, about their own products and services, that they can supply to their prospects.

Unfortunately that narrow perspective creates a mismatch with the information needs of their prospects. The problem for a sales person is that their potential customers have a much broader definition of and requirement for content. To the prospect and customer “content” is the sum total of the data and information they need to make a fully informed purchase decision in the least time possible.

In their buying cycle, prospects are looking to gather not only the specifics about particular products and services but also information and data that will help create the overall context for the decision they have to make. For instance, an informed buyer may need to know where technology is evolving in your product segment, not only for you but also your competition. They may need to know what their competitors have done or are doing with similar products. They may need to have an understanding of what products will be coming to market in the near future that could impact their competitive position if adopted by a competitor first.

Think Globally, Act Locally

In the early days of the environmental movement, grassroots activists encouraged their followers to ‘Think Globally, Act Locally.’ In other words, you needed to consider the implications for the global welfare of the earth in the actions you took locally in your day-to-day life.

Similarly, salespeople need to think more globally about the content they provide to prospects and the positive impact it can have on their local decision-making. It is no longer enough for your sales team to be a conduit for proprietary content only.

A salesperson can create real value for the customer by taking a broader view of the customer’s need for information and identifying and providing the 3rd party content that assists the customer to make a more informed purchase decision in less time.

3 Easy Steps to Becoming an Effective Content Provider

  1. The salesperson needs to thoroughly map out the entire set of information the customer will need to A) make an informed purchase decision and B) make the decision to purchase your product. A and B are not the same data. Unless a salesperson is new to the company they should have the customer and product knowledge to complete this on their own.
  2. The salesperson defines a list of the 3rd party content they could provide that would create value for the customer. The goal is to make the customer smarter, in a global sense, about their problem, their requirements and the value of the solution that you can provide. Yes, the customers could go online and find this information for themself. But, envision the credibility and trust you will build with the customer if you proactively provide it.
  3. The salesperson goes online and finds the information they need. Here are a few quick ideas about finding relevant content that would be valued by your prospect:
    • Set up Google Alerts for keywords associated with the prospect’s industry as well as for your products/services. Check these daily for content that will provide value to the prospect.
    • Subscribe to key blogs in the prospect’s market space. Provide links to postings from bloggers in their industry that discuss the problems solved and benefits received from solutions like yours.
    • Find 3rd party industry or academic research on your product category. Even if all you can find online is the abstract from a research report, you can usually learn enough information from that to understand what its conclusions are. If you were working on a big enough deal then perhaps it would be worth buying the report for the customer.
    • Search YouTube (www.youtube.com ) for videos that address the installation or implementation concerns the prospect might have for a solution like yours.
    • Check resources like SlideShare (www.slideshare.com ) for presentations that address areas of interest to the prospect.
    • Search online for industry conferences in their space and look for interesting presentations that are relevant to the prospect’s buying cycle. Find a link to the conference proceedings. If not, email the presenters and ask for a copy of his or her slides.
    • Use a tool like VisibleGains for Sales to provide the 3rd party content to the customer in Zero-Time. Track which content the prospect looked at so that you can focus your follow-ups on the topics that matter most to the prospect.

Being an effective content provider requires an investment of time and thought on the part of the salesperson. This investment is usually the difference between a successful salesperson and one who is always playing catch-up with his or her quota.

Please be sure to join me on Feb 9 at 1pm EST for a webinar presented by VisibleGains: The First Seller with the Answers Wins! 4 Essential Elements of Effective Sales Lead Follow-up. I’ll be speaking about the steps every company should take to maximize their returns on the sales leads they generate. Click here to register for the webinar. Everyone who registers for the webinar and completes a free online assessment on my website will receive a free copy of my award-winning book, Zero-Time Selling.

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Why Email Attachments Don’t Work to Engage Customers

Posted by Carrie Kuempel

Gerhard Gschwandtner is founder and publisher of Selling Power Magazine and host of the Sales 2.0 Conference series. A post by our very own Bill Carney was recently featured on Gerhard’s blog, Selling Power Blog: News and Insight for Sales Leaders. We want to share it here, too.

SellingPower

Why Email Attachments Don’t Work to Engage Customers

Permalink: http://blog.sellingpower.com/gg/2012/01/why-email-attachments-dont-work-to-engage-customers.html

Today’s blog post is by tech marketing and sales veteran Bill Carney, VP of Marketing at VisibleGainsCheck out the VisibleGains blog at http://blog.visiblegains.com/.

Face it: we’re always selling and using whatever materials we can get our hands on to get our message across, typically through email. I recently received an email with 18 links and 5 attachments! I was amazed it got past the spam filter; it scared the hell out of me! I know why it got through, though. The sender (who shall remain nameless) was on my approved list. He worked at a company where I’d previously purchased services. I assume my sales “friend” figured I’d educate myself on his new company and offerings by reviewing all the info he spat at me. Problem is, from where I sit, we’re starting over. Sending attachments my way, never mind how many, was way too soon for our relationship. I hit delete.

Dating Hasn’t Changed That Much

Have you ever seen that movie in which the gal – and often the guy – has some objective to meet someone and says, “Let’s skip all the time-consuming ‘getting to know yous’ and become a couple now”? Zero to marriage in three minutes flat. I’m sure we can all agree that, while it may be entertaining in the movies, it’s definitely out of whack in the real world.

Sending email attachments, unless I specifically request them, is like getting married without dating. I’m not ready for that type of “relationship,” and it’s rather presumptuous of you to think I am. Have you had a conversation with me yet to determine why I’m special? Why would you think collateral created in a generic way is ideal for me when you don’t know me or my primary concerns? Are you a spammer? Maybe not, but without any evidence that you know me and what’s important to me, I’m going to classify you as “that guy (or girl)” and ignore all subsequent content you try to send me. I might even just block you. The point is, you haven’t earned the right.

Your Place or Mine?

Those who have earned the right still may have trouble sending me information. In today’s world, getting an attachment through the various spam and security filters is difficult, especially when emails contain large-file attachments. It’s interesting that such a simple concept as FTP with a nice UI has spawned several companies. These companies are growing by leaps and bounds and changing the culture (although not completely) into a “come to my place to get it if you want it” mentality.

If you’ve earned the right to have a conversation with me, don’t blow it by NOT agreeing on how we’re going to share information. We need a personal “one-to-one” place to work together – not a file cabinet or deal room (our relationship’s not there yet). People who have earned the right to have the conversation don’t clutter my inbox; they collaborate, giving me options for easily accessing information they’ve selected just for me.

Sure, such online tools as DropboxBoxWeTransfer, and YouSendIt are helpful when we want to share files with established colleagues, partners, and customers, but they’re prematurely inappropriate for delivering content to prospects. Simply put, it’s too early in the relationship.

Treat Me Right

So what’s a salesperson to do when looking to create that relationship? Send me off to their Website? Might not be a good strategy, as I could get lost pretty easily and feel overwhelmed. We have customers with more than 500 different product SKUs, and the complexity of their site just might cause overload. Usually, people are looking for specific information to help their process along. Why dump your prospect on a generic site and make him or her more confused?

It’s really hard to fake authenticity and create a connection. Focus instead on getting to know me and my company over time through various channels. Then, once you’ve earned your way into a conversation with me, we can both agree on how we are going to transfer materials and information. Don’t just send something over; I’m not gonna read it. I’ve already deleted your email.

“Engagements” and “attachments” are part of both romantic and seller-to-prospect relationships. The difference is their order. Engaging with clients respectfully, ensuring that you add value at the right times in the right ways, will help you earn prospects’ trust and lead to mutually beneficial interactions. Done right, sales conversations built on trust lead ultimately to buying decisions and repeat orders.

In full disclosure, VisibleGains helps salespeople use their email to cultivate prospect engagement and understand which conversations will turn into sales.

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Do you know if Santa read your wish list? Johnny does…

Posted by Carrie Kuempel

Happy Holidays from the VisibleGains Team!

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My prospect doesn’t read my email – how do I engage them?

Posted by Joe Eldridge

An email at the top of the funnel is a compressed version of a face-to-face chat that you wish you could have. To be effective, you need to combine:

  1. A pleasant hello (Subject Line)
  2. One simple concept that someone wants to understand (Body)
  3. A non-threatening way for someone to learn more (Additional Content via link or attachment)

Just like in the real-world, there are subtleties in the approach and execution of each of these that can lead to great success or complete failure.

reading-emailSUBJECT LINES

Creating email subject lines can be intimidating. However, it need not be if you follow four guiding principles:

#1: Start your conversation in the subject line.
#2: Be personal.
#3: Offer something of value.
#4: Make the reader curious to learn more.

See our full blog post on subject lines.

EMAIL BODIES

Most email bodies at the top of the funnel fail because they include too much marketing gobbledygook and they assume that your prospect cares about you or your offering. They don’t. They simply care about meeting their own goals and learning more about their areas of interest. Here are the key things you should do here:

#1: Pick one concept to share
#2: Convey it simply and clearly
#3: Plant a seed with a 1 sentence value proposition
#4: Be brutal when editing (based on an honest assessment from an external source)

Of the above items, the most important is the last one. Listen to someone you trust answer the question “How would you react to this?” or use one of the tools from a market-leader, like:

ADDITIONAL CONTENT

When it comes to additional content, it’s hard to predict what the prospect really wants and how much time they really want to invest. The best approach is to combine:

  • One short and focused item that you link to or attach that is an extension of the concept from the email body
  • Within that one shared item (not in your email), you can also provide a few other links to other items that might pique their interest.

Think of it like the tasty morsel you are offered while wandering in the food court—you want them to take a bite and then take a look at other things that might be of interest. Patience here is critical—push too hard and they are gone.

Emails are more engaging when your message succinctly offers value, is conversational in tone and piques their interest with additional supporting content references.

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Use email subject lines to open doors

Posted by Carrie Kuempel

Knock, knock.
Who’s there?
Santa.
Santa who?
Santa email but you never opened it.

Does your email stand out in your prospect’s Inbox with a clear, attention-grabbing subject line?  If not, your killer email won’t ever be opened, never mind read. Your prospects are crazy-busy, says sales expert Jill Konrath. They’ll likely spend 2.7 seconds—tops—evaluating your email. Make sure your subject line instantly conveys the value of your message to the reader.

Creating email subject lines can be intimidating. However, it need not be if you follow four guiding principles.

Guiding Principle #1: Start your conversation in the subject line.

Treat your email subject line more like a conversation starter than an article headline. Ask yourself, what is the first sentence I would say to this person if I were meeting him or her in person?

If this is the first time you sent email to the prospect, identify who you are in the subject line by stating your connection upfront. If you’re connecting through a mutual contact, be sure to state the person’s name in the subject line.

Examples:

  • Subject: Saw this blog post and thought of you
  • Subject: Enjoyed meeting you at Sales 2.0
  • Subject: Bumped into Sue Johnson…

Guiding Principle #2: Be personal.

Subject lines are instantly more personal simply by keeping the tone casual and including the pronoun “you”. Be conversational—don’t capitalize each word like you might for the title of a paper.

Examples:

  • Subject: You asked an interesting question
  • Subject: Your ears should be ringing

Guiding Principle #3: Offer something of value.

Sharing timely, relevant information helps prospects want to engage with you. If a web site visitor converts after downloading a white paper, for example, seize the opportunity to offer your insights into the business issues likely inspiring the prospect to download the white paper in the first place.

Note: People generally do value “free” and you can use the word in subject lines without triggering spam filters as long as it’s not capitalized, the first word or used in conjunction with an exclamation point.

Examples:

  • Subject: Here’s my aha after reading the GIS report
  • Subject: Determine your co’s readiness using free assessment

Guiding Principle #4: Make the reader curious to learn more.

Clever subject lines pique interest and so does compelling content. Ideally, your email is comprised of both. However, rather than getting stuck striving to be oh-so clever in the 50-60 characters of most subject lines, focus your efforts on being relevant. Appeal to your prospect’s natural curiosity about content:

  • they’ve expressed interest in
  • aligned with their business objectives
  • linked to a current frustration or common industry challenge
  • educating them to work smarter and faster (How-to’s)
  • keeping them current with trending topics
  • providing perspective for reflection

Examples:

  • Subject: What your peers are saying about the GIS report
  • Subject: New benchmarking data to plan 2012
  • Subject: How to turn social media into sales
  • Subject: Your competition is in the news
  • Subject: Metrics to optimize your supply chain

Writing email subject lines that open doors requires doing the homework a good salesperson must always do to earn the first meeting. Your email subject lines will open doors when you convey to the reader you know their personal interests; understand their pain points, tune into their specific business priorities; want them to succeed; are in-the-know; and offer a balanced viewpoint.

Bottom line: Pay attention to the subject lines of emails your prospects open and those they don’t. Experiment over time and you’ll improve your “door-opening” and email-opening rate.

Ever wonder why your email wasn’t opened? Take a second look at the subject line.

P. S. Email subject lines must pass through your crazy-busy prospect’s relevance-for-me filter AND also through software filters—or they won’t even land in your prospect’s Inbox. It’s worth the extra minute or two it takes to test your subject lines using free analyzers available on the web that check for clarity, wordiness and likelihood of triggering spam filters. Testing programs aren’t perfect; use their feedback to make quick tweaks. For example, we choose to override suggestions to omit personal pronouns like “you” in subject lines because using “you” feels…well, personal.

Here’s one free testing program you can try: Free Lyris ContentChecker for Email

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Is Email Dead? [Infographic]

Posted by Bill Carney

188 billion email messages sent each day?! That’s a boatload of email!

We concur with the Infographic’s conclusion—email is here to stay. However, email is not always the most effective way to transmit your message. New(er) technologies—like Facebook and Twitter—introduce additional ways for humans to communicate. Think about what you’re trying to accomplish and select the best media available to you.

Email gets a deserved bad rap from marketing campaigns and spammers pushing unwanted messages that ignore communication fundamentals—such as this basic truth: the receiver must want to receive the message sent!

When your emails are written to be personal, with timely, relevant information the receiver really wants, they can help you build relationships one-to-one. Make your emails better and create relationships using VisibleGains.

Click to download .PDF version

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Tip: Use Outlook email signature function to create message templates

Posted by Bill Carney

I recently realized we’ve taken for granted a powerful shortcut for creating Outlook message templates that’s been in our company toolkit for a while. I was talking to a prospect recently about email workflows and described our process for sending multiple personalized emails containing a similar core message. He was amazed at this shortcut, even though it seems pretty obvious to me. I’m documenting it here to share more widely. Hopefully you already take advantage of using Outlook’s standard signature setup; this just kicks it up a notch for creating multiple personalized emails containing similar message text.

5 Steps to use Outlook’s signature function for creating email message templates

Step One: Click New E-mail

 

 

 

Step Two: Click Insert, then click Signature

 

 

Step Three: From drop-down menu, click “Signatures…”

 

 

 

 

 

Step Four: Click “New”. Enter a name, as well as text, for a complete email message. (Remember to also include an email signature in this “Signature” template entry!)

 

 

 

 

Step Five: Select the appropriate standardized message by “Signature” name each time you want to send similar text in a new email. Don’t forget to add a subject line and the first name of the person to whom you’re sending the message in the message body. Also, modify the templated text appropriately to ensure it’s relevant to the individual receiving it.

This shortcut saves me time when I want to repetitively send only slightly different emails over and over again–such as a follow-up to a hands-on product demo I’ve just given. Let me know how this shortcut works for you.

Got any Outlook tips to share with us?

 

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Sparking Conversation with Kindle Fire

Posted by Cliff Pollan

I took an hour this weekend to read David Meerman Scott’s new book entitled “Newsjacking: How to Inject your Ideas into a Breaking News Story and Generate Tons of Media Coverage“.

The concept is simple—any company can find breaking news that will get broad coverage and fit themselves into the story. You can see David tell it in his own words in an interview I did with him yesterday.

Important for me was David’s concept of creating this book for digital distribution only, taking advantage of many of the new features offered—including interactivity—for the new Amazon Kindle Fire, as well as the Apple iPad and Barnes & Noble Nook. The interactive elements create a rich, personal experience. A viewer can quickly dig in and learn more. Designing for the medium makes for a true digital experience, as compared to reading a book written for hardcopy and published as an eBook. Also, David intentionally kept the book short so you can get through it in an hour.

Business ebooks will spark more conversations online and offline via shorter, more interactive and easier to share formats like this one. I see this as the future for creating community.

Thanks to David for cutting new ground here.

To learn more about Newsjacking and how to share other real-time data to advance sales, join the discussion on Tuesday November 22 @1PM EST with David and Craig Elias, creator of Trigger Event Selling™ and author of the Bronze Medal winner of the Top Sales Books of 2010 “SHiFT! Harness The Trigger Events That TURN PROSPECTS INTO CUSTOMERS” .

(Note: David is an advisor to VisibleGains).

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Happy Customers + Social Media = Referrals

Posted by Bill Carney

I recently called my satellite TV provider—DISH Network—and asked what they could do for me as a longtime subscriber. I was perfectly happy with DISH Network’s service. In fact, over the years I’ve referred new customers to them by gushing online via social media as well as offline. However, an offer from Verizon for FIOS TV had piqued my interest since we already receive our Internet service through Verizon. Without much hesitation, the customer service rep from DISH Network told me nothing could be done to match Verizon’s offer. Oh, and don’t forget to mail in the last month’s check—thank you very much.

Really? No, really?!

At the time, DISH Network was actively recruiting subscribers and I was truly confused by the service rep’s indifferent response. Guess what I did? I switched to Verizon for FIOS TV, of course.

We’ve all seen statistics on customer retention versus acquisition. Lots of really smart Ph.D’s have explained the concept of Customers Lifetime Value (CLV). In the simplest of terms, it’s a lot cheaper to keep a customer than to get a new one—common sense without the fancy TLA (Three Letter Acronym). Within the past few years, I’ve noticed CLV has been modified to CCLV (Connected Customers Lifetime Value) and CEV (Customer Engagement Value).

Basically, anyone selling anything should expand their thinking beyond their existing customers to their customers’ network and sphere of influence.

Product marketing sometimes casts customer retention in terms of switching costs. Think about what a pain it is to switch cell phone carriers. The Cell Carrier Lobbyists fought tooth and nail against LNP (Local Number Portability) until they could figure out ways to lock up customers. There’s really no reason to have specific phones for specific carriers. Europe doesn’t. Instead of focusing on change penalties, how about improving the value of the services delivered by understanding my needs and what makes me choose to be a loyal customer and refer my friends?

Airlines attracted and successfully retained loyal customers for a while with frequent flyer programs. I know—I booked most of my flights on United even though there weren’t always direct flights to where I was going. But then United and other airlines blew it by instituting too many restrictions.

Most businesses truly do strive to please their customers. Most business people appreciate the power of referral marketing and naturally hope through careful management of customer relationships, we’ll gain new customers via referrals.

I invite you to pause now and honestly ask yourself: when was the last time you reached out to your customers individually? I don’t mean sending a newsletter or some marketing automated message, but making a direct one-to-one connection. And, not when there’s a problem, but when there isn’t—simply as a way to listen, learn and share information.

Connecting genuinely on a more personal level—one-to-one—is a powerful way to cultivate happy customers, and, hopefully, referrals. Here are several tips to help you get started:

  • Tweet a congratulatory note or comments to new customers who use Twitter accounts.
  • Actively participate in LinkedIn groups around conversations you care about.
  • Reward your customers with information that helps them stay on top of their game—even if the data you share has nothing to do with what you’re selling.
  • Offer favors, connections and networking opportunities to advance your customers’ careers.
  • Find out what makes each customer tick—what they’re passionate about. Do this to find common interests you share and can connect through.

Having said all that, my hope is to personally connect with more of our customers. Please DM me @biasforaction or give me an old-fashioned phone call to chat. My direct phone number is 781-350-3416, extension 113. My email is bcarney at VisibleGains dot com (so the SPAM bots won’t pick me up).

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