Here’s a fun story about an interesting experiment.
A world class violinist decided to see what would happen if he took his $3.5 million dollar Stradivarius and went outside to play for people on the street. He was completely ignored…
Absent the framework that accompanied his typical command performances, people were completely oblivious and disinterested.
In the context of “street musician”, the the most finely crafted instrument of its kind known to man, played by an absolute master of the art was decidedly unappreciated and almost completely TUNED OUT.
Can you think of any aspects of your marketing where your buyer’s experience is incongruent with their expectations? If you’re honest, you surely can. And there’s money there for you…
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F.E.A.R.
False Expectations Appearing Real…
I was reading a new post on Jason Moffatt’s blog today about the dangers of operating from a scarcity mindset.
It got me thinking a little about the underlying reasons WHY people cling to the safety of scarcity and hide from the freedom of success.
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“I’m new to copywriting. I’ve seen a lot of people talking about how direct response copywriting was different from every other form of writing.
If you had to make a list of the “fundamentals” of direct response copywriting, what would they be?”
I don’t have a “list” per se… But here’s a couple of random thoughts that could prove invaluable to you as you try and turn words into dollars for yourself and for future clients:
1) People don’t buy things; people buy imagined future experiences of using those things.
2) Attention, Interest, Desire, Action – in that order.
3) Headlines have only ONE purpose, make the reader continue reading.
4) In your calls to action, state SPECIFICALLY what you want people to do and EXACTLY what they can expect when they do as you’ve directed.
5) Always be “one thought ahead” of your reader, then blow their mind by answering their questions right as they form them.