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The two most powerful words in advertising and how to use them to explode your response fairly easily and consistently.


First, to illustrate these secret words. can you guess which of these two magalog headlines was the big winner for a financial newsletter?

HEADLINE A: (next to a photo of Charles J. Givens Charles J. Givens, a.k.a. "The $100 Million Dollar Man" was born February 5, 1941 and raised in Decatur, Illinois.

He died on July 12, 1998, at the age of 57.
):

If you've got 20 minutes a month, I guarantee to work a financial miracle in your life.

(Caption under photo): Charles J. Givens, the self-made $200-millionaire, entrepreneur and best-selling financial author of all time.

HEADLINE B: (same photo and caption): The Millionaire Maker

Subhead sub·head  
n. In both senses also called subheading.
1. The heading or title of a subdivision of a printed subject.

2. A subordinate heading or title.

Noun 1.
: Can he make YOU rich, too?

Avoid triggering sarcastic response

One way to avoid triggering the YEAH, SURE response that many outlandish claims solicit (such as "Get rich quick!" and "Lose weight fast!") is to sandwich your big promise inside an IF ... THEN construction in your headline.

When you say IF (followed by a requirement your prospects have to meet), it seems to magically switch off and bypass their YEAH, SURE alarm and usher you right to the front door to sell.

Surprisingly, it even works when you make the requirement easy to meet.

The winner

And now you know the winner, headline A:

If you've got 20 minutes a month, I guarantee to work a financial miracle in your life.

I know, the promise still seems so big and hard to believe. But that is the power of the IF ... THEN construction. For some reason, it seems to put the universal YEAH, SURE alarm to sleep, like punching in Punching in refers to a recording technique used on early multitrack recordings whereby a portion of the performance was overdubbed onto a previously recorded tape, usually overwriting any sound that had previously been on the track used.  the alarm code when you enter your home.

The formula: a reasonably easy requirement, followed by a strong promise. Think up ways to use this for your own product.

Of course, be sure to pay off in your body copy why and how the benefit can be achieved by such an easy requirement. And if it is not extremely easy, but only moderately easy, that is even better, as it is more believable. Surprisingly, candor is a gloriously effective technique for boosting response.

Anyway, test this IF ... THEN idea sometime soon, measure the results, and you may be startled star·tle  
v. star·tled, star·tling, star·tles

v.tr.
1. To cause to make a quick involuntary movement or start.

2. To alarm, frighten, or surprise suddenly. See Synonyms at frighten.
 by how much it outpulls the typical big-promise headline most ads rely on.

Beats Richard Simmons For other persons named Richard Simmons, see Richard Simmons (disambiguation).

Richard Simmons (born Milton Teagle Richard Simmons July 12, 1948) is a fitness expert who promotes weight-loss programs, most famously through a line of aerobics videos and
 control

The headline was so successful for Givens, his publishers asked me if they could adapt it for another of their products, a weight loss newsletter by Richard Simmons. Against a strong control package that had beaten all comers, they tested this headline, keeping all other elements in the package the same:

(Next to photo of Richard Simmons): If you've got 20 minutes a month, I guarantee a thinner, healthier you.

It worked like a charm and handily hand·i·ly  
adv.
1. In an easy manner.

2. In a convenient manner.

Adv. 1. handily - in a convenient manner; "the switch was conveniently located"
conveniently

2.
 beat the previous champ. (BTW "By the way." See digispeak.

(chat) BTW - By the way.
, notice the absence of exclamation marks, the overuse overuse Health care The common use of a particular intervention even when the benefits of the intervention don't justify the potential harm or cost–eg, prescribing antibiotics for a probable viral URI. Cf Misuse, Underuse.  of which INCREASES the aroma of hype and a resulting YEAH, SURE response.)

Excerpted with permission from Bencivenga Bullets, bencivengaBullet@aol.com

By Gary Biencivenga, editor, Bencivenga Bullets
COPYRIGHT 2004 The Newsletter on Newsletters LLC
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Promotion
Author:Biencivenga, Gary
Publication:The Newsletter on Newsletters
Date:Apr 16, 2004
Words:471
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