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Archive for August 2008
From the desk of Roy Furr, August 18th, 2008
This is a business blog, and I usually talk about business. But not today. (Of course, it all loops back around to marketing.)
There are many ways to measure success and happiness in life.
Many ways other than how much money you earn or how much stuff you have. All these areas — good health, being socially engaged, growing spiritually, and also living in comfort and security — are important to do well in.
Take an integral approach — work on all areas, going for regular, incremental improvement. This all-around, “cross training” type of approach will get you further in each area than if you attacked each area one by one. And you’ll be happier.
In this vein, I’ll let you know…
I hit the gym somewhere between two and four times a week.
Right now I’m doing mostly body weight exercises grouped into super sets, followed by interval training. (Go to http://www.turbulencetraining.com to learn more about this approach.)
And this morning, I added something on top of that.
I found a really cool website that if you’re interested in feeling a little more fit and getting a great sense of accomplishment, you’ll want to check out. And best of all, it’s free.
It’s called “one hundred push ups” and it’s at http://www.hundredpushups.com.
It’s a program to take you… from where you’re at… to being able to do 100 push ups — in 6 weeks.
It won’t be easy (real change never is). But it’s a system that has worked before, and will work again — if you can follow the instructions. And stick to it.
But you do really care about being healthier, more fit, and more successful. Right?
And one way to do that is to set yourself to a task, and see it through. All the better if it involves some physical exertion, and pushing yourself beyond your boundaries.
You can prove to yourself that you’re capable of great things. Even if it’s something you haven’t done before.
Then your new found ability to do great things can transfer into other areas of your life. Like your business.
You don’t have to do “one hundred push ups.”
Not today. Not ever. But I do challenge you to think about where you’re at right now. And where you want to be.
And seriously consider whether doing something like “one hundred push ups” can take you from where you are now, to where you want to be.
And now a quick 180 degrees… to talk about marketing for a second.
http://www.hundredpushups.com is a great example of a micro site.
Micro sites can have many purposes.
This one looks like it’s mostly to make money off ad revenue (I don’t know for sure, I can just guess — I don’t know nor am I affiliated with the owner of the site).
Other micro sites can draw targeted traffic, prime it for the sale, and then drive it to your e-commerce website.
Or they can be purely informational — maybe with a “sponsored by” banner that builds good will toward your company.
No matter what you do for a micro site, be sure it’s incredibly focused on one specific topic.
And that first it’s helpful — long before it asks for any information or action on the part of your visitor. Giving away content like this can do wonders for long term profitability.
So even if you’re not going to go for the “one hundred push ups” mark, check out the website http://www.hundredpushups.com to learn what a micro site is and what it can do.
To your success (in all areas of your life!),
Roy
P.S. — I’m already pretty fit so I’m on the most advanced track of the “one hundred push ups” program. I’ll let you know how my “training” goes as I work through it.
The cool thing about that though is it doesn’t require you to be fit to start — you just have to start! It can take you from barely being able to eke out a couple push ups to being a push up superstar
Posted in Business, Entrepreneurship, Marketing, Website Design | No Comments »
From the desk of Roy Furr, August 16th, 2008
From “Ten things Google has found to be true:”
2. It’s best to do one thing really, really well
As a business owner or internet marketer, when you think of Google you may have 5 or 10 of their different services run through your mind (Google Apps, AdWords, Analytics, Website Optimizer, Google Products/Google Base, etc.). But if you approach the general public, ask 100 people what Google is, and every answer will revolve around “Search.”
Since Google incorporated on September 7, 1998, they’ve been working to perfect search. (Even before that, too.)
They’ve put the best and brightest minds in computing on solving the search issue, to get more relevant results, faster. And even to this day, they’re changing how sites show up in the search results, to continue optimizing this process (remember “optimization” above?!).
They don’t rest on their laurels, even now that they’re completely dominating the search engine market (in terms of percent of searches conducted on their engine vs. competitors). They’re always working to make their search better.
By being the best at that, they can then introduce new, surrounding products into the marketplace. Products that provide a different type of value to the same users that come to their search engine every day.
They have instant credibility with these new products, because they’ve become known as such a behemoth in the search engine market. (And they know as long as they continue to apply their continuous optimization philosophy in these other fields — WITHOUT losing sight of their core mission of search — they’ll dominate there, too.)
So ask yourself — “What is the one thing my company (or I) does really, really well?”
And then — “What are we doing to become known in the marketplace for that one thing?”
And finally — “What can we do to increase the focus on that one thing in our communications, advertising, and media coverage, even if it means spending less time focusing on our additional products or services?”
It sounds counter-intuitive. But you can take Google as proof that it works.
Posted in Business, Entrepreneurship, Marketing, Philosophy of Google, Website Design | No Comments »
From the desk of Roy Furr, August 9th, 2008
Have you ever wondered what the big difference is between advertising copywriters who write highly-effective ad after highly-effective ad, and those that can’t?
I obsess about these things — always trying to hone my craft.
From the language used… To the structure of persuasive communication… To design and formatting… I’m always looking for proven strategies and tactics to increase the response to my advertising.
And something dawned on me a few months back — something that you don’t find in most (if any) books and courses on copywriting and advertising.
The X-Factor Secret
to creating killer advertising
In fact, as soon as I discovered this “X-Factor Secret” A-List copywriters use to create bigger winners, more often, I wanted to shout it from the rooftops — or at least create an information product that would show you how to use this simple (but often overlooked) method to boost the response from your advertisements.
I may still write that product — but I’m going to reveal a huge chunk of the secret right here, and show you where you can get even more information on this unique skill for a mere pittance. (And without slaving over books trying to discover “hidden knowledge” that very few teachers of copywriting want to — or even know to — bring to the forefront.)
You see — before client projects and the wonderful busyness of summer made this project a temporary non-starter — I’d created a name for this unique skill…
“Method Copywriting”
I don’t know how much you know about “Method Acting” but a quick Wikipedia description of it may help:
Method acting is an acting technique in which actors try to replicate real life emotional conditions under which the character operates, in an effort to create a life-like, realistic performance. This is contrasted with a more abstracted, less involved style of acting in which the actor himself or herself remains an outside observer of the character he or she is portraying…
“The Method” was first popularized by the Group Theatre in New York City in the 1930s, and subsequently advanced by Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio in the 1940s and 50s. It was derived from Stanislavski’s ’system’, created by Konstantin Stanislavski, who pioneered similar ideas in his quest for “theatrical truth.” …
Strasberg’s students included many of America’s most famous actors of the latter half of the 20th century, including Montgomery Clift, Meryl Streep, Vic Morrow, Paul Newman, Al Pacino, James Dean, Dustin Hoffman, Marilyn Monroe, Jane Fonda, and many others.
In Stanislavski’s ’system’ the actor analyzes deeply the motivations and emotions of the character in order to personify him or her with psychological realism and emotional authenticity. Using the Method, an actor recalls emotions or reactions from his or her own life and uses them to identify with the character being portrayed.
These methods for getting inside the head of the character being portrayed lead to some of the most convincing, moving, and exciting portrayals in theater and film.
If only…
If only these methods could be applied to marketing and advertising — to write copy that leads to truckloads of checks being dropped off after you write and send out your ads.
Now you can make a bundle
using these methods
in your advertising
What I discovered — and later proved through using it in my advertising — was that if you intentionally and methodically put yourself inside the head of your prospect before you write your advertisement, you can sell to them more effectively.
Duh! … But how?
It’s actually more simple than you may think.
Before I tell you exactly how to do it, I want to point you to a book I found (after I’d convinced myself my idea was completely original) that investigates how some of the world’s top direct response geniuses use the “Method” to get inside the heads of their customers (before they even write a single word of copy) and get incredible response.
This exciting — vastly overlooked — book even breaks down ads and shows how this technique has been applied to create a number of different multi-million dollar businesses. It has 15 examples of companies that did this right and succeeded — and 3 that did it wrong with much less success.
The book that will make you
rethink your marketing
The book? It’s called Method Marketing by Denny Hatch — of “Target Marketing Magazine,” “Who’s Mailing What?,” and Million Dollar Mailing$ fame.
Hatch has a unique perspective into the industry — his company gets and looks at hundreds of pieces of direct mail every day. He has insight into how long a company keeps running a tracked, coded mailing (which is a good indicator of what’s profitable). He knows when companies are testing different mailings for a product or service. He analyzes what techniques the companies are using.
And he knows who knows direct mail, based on the longevity of their sales pitches, and of their company.
He’s used this knowledge — as well as the connections it’s fostered — to do case studies on a number of different direct response companies. A lot like Harvard’s “Case Method.”
It tells you what companies have done right and wrong, and lets you look at the results. You have a lot to learn about the way direct mail works, from looking inside these businesses. And from looking inside Hatch’s head.
The 7 Motivators that
Make Prospects Buy
(and how to use them to
create profitable advertising)
In Hatch’s research, he found 7 factors prospects continually use in their buying decisions. These factors were originally identified by direct marketing greats Bob Hacker and Axel Andersson — Hatch takes it to the next level and shows how some of the world’s best direct marketers have created a foundation for their company based on selling using one or two of these factors.
You can find similar success by identifying which of these factors influence your prospect’s decision making process — then getting into that state of mind through drawing on your past experiences — and writing a sales message targeted to that dominant factor.
The 7 “Method Marketing” buying factors are:
- Fear
- Greed
- Anger
- Guilt
- Exclusivity
- Flattery
- Salvation
Hatch gives an example (pages 11-12) of how each can be used:
The product I am marketing is a book club for very young children. The person who will be reading my copy is the parent of a very young child. If I were that parent, what would make me respond to this offer? What are my concerns? What are my fears? What is it about this offer that would represent salvation in terms of bringing up my child?
What would I respond to most eagerly — a terrific free premium or a great product? Guru Axel Andersson has said, “If you want to dramatically increase your response, dramatically improve your offer.”
Is the premium I am offering the best I can come up with? If one premium works well, won’t two work better?
At the same time, is the offer too good? Will it result in a lot of orders from tire kickers who have no intention of paying — those mail order shoppers consultant Bob Doscher disdainfully refers to as “premium bandits?”
What do I put on the envelope?
What is my lead for the letter?
- Is it flattery (”Because you are a smart parent…”)?
- Is it greed (”Yours Free when you respond…”)?
- Is it exclusivity (”This offer is limited to a very few truly caring parents…”)?
- Is it guilt (”If you don’t help your child acquire good reading skills, you will be party to a failure — in school and in life…”)?
- Is it salvation (”Now, be guaranteed your child will surge to the head of the class because reading is the key to success, and with your free books, your child will start to love reading…”)?
- Is it anger (”Will your child be one of those left to fall through the cracks in terms of reading skills because school systems have too many bureaucrats and not enough teachers…”)?
- Is it fear (”If your child fails to become a good reader, it can mean larger failures later on — in high school, in college, in life; will a failed child be able to take care of you in your old age?”)?
Go through this process. Figure out how these factors affect your prospect’s decision making process (some immensely, some not at all) then use that to create more effective marketing messages.
Do it right, and you’re getting about as close to reading your customer’s mind as possible. And your advertising will work like magic.
What about you? Do you use a process like this when you write your advertising — or any other communications? How has it worked for you? Weigh in below.
And if you’d like Hatch’s book — it’s been in and out of print recently, but you can go to his site at http://www.MethodMarketing.com for more information (including at least one free chapter you can read online).
Posted in Copywriting, Marketing, Persuasion | 5 Comments »
From the desk of Roy Furr, August 7th, 2008
This will be quick.
I don’t normally talk about Search Engine Optimization — or SEO — because my opinion is that it’s an industry teeming with con artists with no real rules.
It’s the nastiest part of Internet Marketing, if you ask me.
Here’s why.
Some things seem to work, and some don’t — but your SEO firm will bill you for both with utter disregard for your bottom line.
There are black hat tactics to get you to the top today — but tomorrow you’ll be banned.
There’s very little white light in the industry as a whole.
But occasionally (very occasionally) I come across a piece of information or article that makes sense.
(Usually what makes sense — and works — takes a lot more time and effort than you’d like it to take, but when it works it WORKS.)
Today was such a day — and I thought I’d pass it on, for your sake.
So without further ado, here’s the link:
Search Engine Optimization — How I Became Number 1, by Mark Ellison from SEO Chat
(Be sure to read through the last page, because that’s where the real good stuff is.)
Cheers!
Posted in Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Website Design | 1 Comment »