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        HOW TO WRITE ATTENTION GETTING ADVERTISEMENTS

The most important aspect of any business is selling the product or 
service. Without sales, no business can exist for very long. 

All sales begin with some form of advertising. To build sales, this 
advertising must be seen or heard by potential buyers, and cause 
them to react to the advertising in some way. The credit for the 
success, or the blame for the failure of almost all ads, reverts 
back to the ad itself. 

Generally, the "ad writer" wants the prospect to do one of the 
following: 

a) Visit the store to see and judge the product for himself, or 
immediately write a check and send for the merchandise being 
advertised. 

b) Phone for an appointment to hear the full sales presentation, or 
write for further information which amounts to the same thing. 

The bottom line in any ad is quite simple: To make the reader buy 
the product or service. Any ad that causes the reader to only pause 
in this thinking, to just admire the product, or to simply believe 
what's written about the product - is not doing its job completely. 

The "ad writer" must know exactly what he wants his reader to do, 
and any that does not elicit the desired action is an absolute waste 
of time and money. 

In order to elicit the desired action from the prospect, all ads 
are written according to a simple "master formula" which is: 

1) Attract the "attention" of your prospect. 

2) "Interest" your prospect in the product 

3) Cause your prospect to "desire" the product 

4) Demand "action" from the prospect 

Never forget the basic rule of advertising copy writing: If the ad 
is not read, it won't stimulate any sale; if it is not seen, it 
cannot be read; and if it does not command or grab the attention of 
the reader, it will not be seen! 

Most successful advertising copywriters know these fundamentals 
backwards and forwards. Whether you know then already or you're just 
now being exposed to them, your knowledge and practice of these 
fundamentals will determine the extent of your success as an 
advertising copywriter. 

CLASSIFIED ADS 

Classified ads are the ads from which all successful businesses are 
started. These small, relatively inexpensive ads, give the beginner 
an opportunity to advertise his product or service without losing 
his shirt if the ad doesn't pull or the people don't break his door 
down with demands for his product. Classified ads are written 
according to all the advertising rules. What is said in a classified 
ad is the same that's said in a larger, more elaborate type of ad, 
except in condensed form. 

To start learning how to write good classified ads, clip ten 
classified ads from ten different mail order type publications - ads 
that you think are pretty good. Paste each of these ads onto a 
separate sheet of paper. 

Analyze each of these ads: How has the writer attracted your 
attention - what about the ads keeps your interest - are you 
stimulated to want to know more about the product being advertised - 
and finally, what action must you take? Are all of these points 
covered in the ad? How strongly are you "turned on" by each of these 
ads? 

Rate these ads on a scale of one to ten, with ten being the best 
according to the formula I've given you. Now, just for practice, 
without clipping the ads, do the same thing with ten different ads 
from a Wards or Penney's catalog. In fact, every ad you see from now 
on, quickly analyze it, and rate it somewhere on your scale. If 
you'll practice this exercise on a regular basis, you'll soon be 
able to quickly recognize the "Power Points" of any ad you see, and 
know within your own mind whether an ad is good, bad or otherwise, 
and what makes it so. 

Practice for an hour each day, write the ads you've rated 8, 9 and 
10 exactly as they've been written. This will give you the "feel" of 
the fundamentals and style necessary in writing classified ads. 

Your next project will be to pick out what you consider to be the 
ten "worst" ads you can find in the classifieds sections. Clip these 
out and paste them onto a sheet of paper so you can work on them. 

Read these ads over a couple of times, and then beside each of 
them, write a short comment stating why you think it's bad: Lost in 
the crowd, doesn't attract attention - doesn't hold the reader's 
interest - nothing special to make the reader want to own the 
product - no demand for action. 

You probably already know what's coming next, and that's right. 
Break out those pencils, erasers and scratch paper - and start 
rewriting these ads to include the missing elements. 

Each day for the next month, practice writing the ten best ads for 
an hour, just the way they were originally written. Pick out ten of 
the worst ads, analyze those ads, and then practice rewriting those 
until they measure up to doing the job they were intended to do. 

Once you're satisfied that the ads you've rewritten are perfect, go 
back into each ad and cross out the words that can be eliminated 
without detracting from the ad. Classified ads are almost always 
"finalized" in the style of a telegram. 

EXAMPLE: I'll arrive at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon, the 15th. 
Meet me at Sardi's. All my love, Jim. 

EDITED FOR SENDING: Arrive 2pm - 15th - Sardi's. Love, Jim. 

CLASSIFIED AD: Save on your food bills! Reduced prices on every 
shelf in the store! Stock up now while supplies are complete! Come 
on in today, to Jerry's Family Supermarkets! 

EDITED FOR PUBLICATION: Save on Food! Everything bargain priced! 
Limited Supplies! Hurry! Jerry's Markets! 

It takes dedicated and regular practice, but you can do it. Simply 
recognize and understand the basic formula - practice reading and 
writing the good ones - and rewriting the bad ones to make them 
better. Practice, and keep at it, over and over, every day - until 
the formula, the idea, and the feel of this kind of ad writing 
becomes second nature to you. This is the ONLY WAY to gain expertise 
in writing good classified ads. 

DISPLAY ADVERTISEMENTS 

A display or space ad differs from a classified ad because it has a 
headline, layout, and because the style isn't telegraphic. However, 
the fundamentals of writing the display or space ad are exactly the 
same as for a classified ad. The basic difference is that you have 
more room in which to emphasize the "master formula." 

Most successful copywriters rate the headline and/or the lead 
sentence of an ad as the most important part of the ad, and in 
reality, you should do the same. After all, when you ad is 
surrounded by hundreds of other ads, and information or 
entertainment , what makes you think anyone is going to see your 
particular ad? 

The truth is, they're not going to see your ad unless you can 
"grab" their attention and entice them to read all of what you have 
to say. Your headline, or lead sentence when no headline is used, 
has to make it more difficult for your prospect to ignore or pass 
over, than to stop and read your ad. If you don't capture the 
attention of your reader with your headline, anything beyond is 
useless effort and wasted money. 

Successful advertising headlines - in classified ads, your first 
three to five words serve as your headline - are written as 
promises, either implied or direct. The former promises to show you 
how to save money, make money, or attain a desired goal. The latter 
is a warning against something undesirable. 

EXAMPLE OF A PROMISE: Are You Ready To Become A Millionaire - In 
Just 18 Months? 

EXAMPLE OF A WARNING: Do You Make These Mistakes In English? 

In both of these examples, I've posed a question as the headline. 
Headlines that ask a question seem to attract the reader's attention 
almost as surely as a moth is drawn to a flame. Once he's seen the 
question, he just can't seem to keep himself from reading the rest 
of the ad to find out the answer. The best headline questions are 
those that challenge the reader; that involve his self esteem, and 
do not allow him to dismiss your question with a simple yes or no. 

You'll be the envy of your friends is another kind of "reader 
appeal" to incorporate into your headline whenever appropriate. The 
appeal has to do with basic psychology: everyone wants to be well 
thought of, and consequently, will read into the body of your ad to 
find out how he can gain the respect and accolades of his friends. 

Wherever and whenever possible, use colloquialisms or words that 
are not usually found in advertisements. The idea is to shock or 
shake the reader out of his reverie and cause him to take notice of 
your ad. Most of the headlines you see day in and day out, have a 
certain sameness with just the words rearranged. The reader may see 
these headlines with his eyes, but his brain fails to focus on any 
of them because there's nothing different or out of the ordinary to 
arrest his attention. 

EXAMPLE OF COLLOQUIALISM: Are You Developing a POT BELLY? 

Another attention-grabber kind of headline is the comparative 
pricegazines, headline: Three For Only $3, Regularly $3 Each! Still 
another of the "tried and proven "kind of headlines is the specific 
question: Do You Suffer From These Symptoms. And of course, if you 
offer a strong guarantee, you should say so in your headline: Your 
Money Refunded, If You Don't Make $10,000 Your First Year. 

How To headlines have a very strong basic appeal, but in some 
instances, they're better used as book titles than advertising 
headlines. Who Else wants in on the finer things - which your 
product or service presumably offers - is another approach with a 
very strong reader appeal. The psychology here being the need of 
everyone to belong to a group - complete with status and prestige 
motivations. 

Whenever, and as often as you can possible work it in, you should 
use the word "you" in your headline, and throughout your copy. After 
all, your ad should be directed to "one" person, and the person 
reading your ad wants to feel that you're talking to him 
personally, not everyone who lives on his street. 

Personalize, and be specific! You can throw the teachings of your 
English teachers out the window, and the rules of "third person, 
singular" or whatever else tends to inhibit your writing. Whenever 
you sit down to write advertising copy intended to pull the orders - 
sell the product - you should picture yourself in a one-on-one 
situation and "talk" to your reader just as if you were sitting 
across from him at your dining room table. Say what you mean, and 
sell HIM on the product your offering. Be specific and ask him if 
these are the things that bother him - are these the things he wants 
- and he's the one you want to buy the product... 

The layout you devise for your ad, or the frame you build around 
it, should also command attention. Either make it so spectacular 
that it stands out like lobster at a chili dinner, or so uncommonly 
simple that it catches the reader's eye because of its very 
simplicity. It's also important that you don't get cute with a lot 
of unrelated graphics and artwork. Your ad should convey the feeling 
of excitement and movement, but should not tire the eyes or disrupt 
the flow of the message you are trying to present. 

Any graphics or artwork you use should be relevant to your product, 
it's use and/or the copy you have written about it. Graphics should 
not be used as artistic touches, or to create an atmosphere. Any 
illustrations with your ad should compliment the selling of your 
product, and prove or substantiate specific points in your copy. 

Once you have your reader's attention, the only way you are going 
to keep it, is by quickly and emphatically telling him what your 
product will do for him. 

Your potential buyer doesn't care in the least how long it's taken 
you to produce the product, how lone you have been in business, nor 
how many years you've spend learning your craft. He wants to know 
specifically how he is going to benefit from the purchase of your 
product. 

Generally, his wants will fall into one of the following 
categories: Better health, more comfort, more money, more leisure 
time, more popularity, greater beauty, success and/or security. 

Even though you have your reader's attention, you must follow 
through with an enumeration of the benefits you can gain. In 
essence, you must reiterate the advantages, comfort and happiness 
he'll enjoy - as you have implied in your headline. 

Mentally picture your prospect - determine his wants and emotional 
needs - put yourself in his shoes, and ask yourself: If I were 
reading this ad, what are the things that would appeal to me? Write 
your copy to appeal to your reader's wants and emotional needs/ego 
cravings. 

Remember, it's not the "safety features" that have sold cars for 
the past 50 years - nor has it been the need of transportation - it 
has been, and almost certainly always will be the advertising 
writer's recognition of people's wants and emotional needs/ego 
cravings. Visualize your prospect, recognize his wants and satisfy 
them. Writing good advertising copy is nothing more or less than 
knowing "who" your buyers are; recognizing what he wants; and then 
telling him how your product will fulfill each of those wants. 
Remember this because it's one of the "vitally important" keys to 
writing advertising copy that does the job you intend for it to do. 

The "desire" portion of your ad is where you present the facts of 
your product; create and justify your prospect's conviction, and 
cause him to demand "a piece of the action" for himself. 

It's vitally necessary that you present "proven facts" about your 
product because survey results show that at least 80% of the people 
reading your ad - especially those reading it for the first time - 
will tend to question its authenticity. 

So, the more facts you can present in the ad, the more credible 
your offer. As you write this part of your ad, always remember that 
the more facts about the product you present, the more product 
you'll sell. People want facts as reasons, and/or excuses for buying 
a product - to justify to themselves and others, that they have not 
been "taken" by a slick copywriter. 

It's like the girl who wants to marry the guy her father calls a 
"no good bum." Her heart - her emotions - tell her yes, but she 
needs to nullify the seed of doubt lingering in her mind - to 
rationalize her decision to go on with the wedding. 

In other words, the "desire" portion of your ad has to build belief 
and credibility in the mind of your prospect. It has to assure him 
of his good judgement in the final decision to buy - furnish 
evidence of the benefits you have promised - and afford him a 
"safety net" in case anyone should question his decision to buy. 

People tend to believe the things that appeal to their individual 
desires, fears and other emotions. Once you have established a 
belief in this manner, logic and reasoning are used to support it. 
People believe what they "want" to believe. Your reader "wants" to 
believe your ad if he has read it through this far - it is up to you 
to support his initial desire. 

Study your product and everything about it - visualize the wants of 
your prospective buyers - dig up the facts, and you'll almost always 
find plenty of facts to support the buyer's reasons for buying. 

Here is where you use results of tests conducted, growing sales 
figures to prove increasing popularity, and "user" testimonials or 
endorsements. It's also important that you present these facts - 
test results, sales view, and not that of the manufacturer. 

Before you end this portion of your ad and get into your demand for 
action, summarize everything you've presented thus far. Draw a 
mental picture for your potential buyer. Let him imagine owning the 
product. Induce him to visualize all of the benefits you have 
promised. Give him the keys to seeing himself richer, enjoying 
luxury, having time to do whatever he would like to do, and with all 
of his dreams fulfilled. 

This can be handled in one or two sentences, or spelled out in a 
paragraph or more, but it is the absolute ingredient you must 
include prior to closing the sale. Study all the sales presentations 
you have ever heard - look at every winning ad - this is the element 
included in all of them that actually makes the sale for you. 
Remember it, use it, and don't try to sell anything without it. 

As Victor Schwab puts is so succinctly in his best selling book, 
How To Write A Good Advertisement: Every one of the fundamentals in 
the "master formula" is necessary. Those sitting across from him at 
your dining people who are "easy" to sell may perhaps be sold even 
if some of these factors are left out, but it's wiser to plan your 
advertisement so that it will have a powerful impact upon those who 
are "hardest" to sell. For, unlike face-to-face selling, we cannot 
in printed advertising come to a "trial close" in our sales talk - 
in order to see if those who are easier to sell will welcome the 
dotted line without further persuasion. We must assume that we are 
talking to the hardest ones - and that the more thoroughly our copy 
sells both the hard and the easy, the better chance we have against 
the competition for the consumer's dollar - and also the less 
dependent we will be upon the usual completely ineffective follow 
through on our advertising effort which later takes place at the 
sales counter itself. 

ASK FOR ACTION! DEMAND THE MONEY! 

Lots of ads are beautiful, almost perfectly written, and quite 
convincing - yet they fail to ask for or demand action from the 
reader. If you want the reader to have your product, then tell him 
so and demand that he send his money now. Unless you enjoy 
entertaining your prospects with your beautiful writing skills, 
always demand that he complete the sale now, by taking action now - 
by calling a telephone number and ordering, or by writing his check 
and rushing it to the post office. 

Once you have got him on the hook, land him! Don't let him get 
away! 

Probably, one of the most common and best methods of moving the 
reader to act now, is written in some form of the following: 

All of this can be yours! You can start enjoying this new way of 
life immediately, simply by sending a check for $XX! Don't put it 
off, then later wish you had gotten in on the ground floor! Make out 
that check now, and "be IN on the ground floor!" Act now, and as an 
"early-bird" buyer, we'll include a big bonus package - absolutely 
free, simply for acting immediately! You win all the way! We take 
all the risk! If you are not satisfied, simply return the product 
and we will quickly refund your money! Do it now! Get that check on 
its way to us today, and receive the big bonus package! After next 
week, we won't be able to include the bonus as a part of this 
fantastic deal, so act now! The sooner you act, you more you win! 

Offering a reward of some kind will almost always stimulate the 
prospect to take action. However, in mentioning the reward or bonus, 
be very careful that you don't end up receiving primarily, requests 
for the bonus with mountains of requests for refunds on the product 
to follow. The bonus should be mentioned only casually if you are 
asking for product orders; and with lots of fanfare only when you 
are seeking inquiries. 

Too often the copywriter, in his enthusiasm to pull in a record 
number of responses, confuses the reader by "forgetting about the 
product," and devoting his entire space allotted for the "demand for 
action" to sending for the bonus. Any reward offered should be 
closely related to the product, and a bonus offered only for 
immediate action on the part of the potential buyer. 

Specify a time limit. Tell your prospect that he must act within a 
certain time limit or lose out on the bonus, face probably higher 
prices, or even the withdrawal of your offer. This is always a good 
hook to get action. 

Any kind of guarantee you offer always helps you produce action 
from the prospect. And the more liberal you can make your guarantee, 
the more product orders you will receive. Be sure you state the 
guarantee clearly and simply. Make it so easy to understand that 
even a child would not misinterpret what you are saying. 

The action you want your prospect to take should be easy - clearly 
stated - and devoid of any complicated procedural steps on his part, 
or numerous directions for him to follow. 

Picture your prospect, very comfortable in his favorite easy chair, 
idly flipping through a magazine while "half-watching" TV.  He 
notices your ad, reads through it, and he is sold on your product. 
Now what does he do? 

Remember, he's very comfortable - you have "grabbed" his attention, 
sparked his interest, painted a picture of him enjoying a new kind 
of satisfaction, and he is ready to buy... 

Anything and everything you ask or cause him to do is going to 
disrupt this aura of comfort and contentment. Whatever he must do 
had better be simple, quick and easy! 

Tell him without any ifs, ands or buts, what to do - fill out the 
coupon, include your check for the full amount, and send it in to us 
today! Make it as easy for him as you possibly can - simply and 
direst. And by all means, make sure your address is on the order 
form he is supposed to complete and mail in to you - your name and 
address on the order form, as well as just above it. People 
sometimes fill out a coupon, tear it off, seal it in an envelope and 
don't know where to send it. The easier you make it for him to 
respond, the more responses you'll get! 

There you have it, a complete short course on how to write ads that 
will pull more orders for you - sell more of your product for you. 
It's important to learn "why" ads are written as they are - to 
understand and use, the "master formula" in your own ad writing 
endeavors. 

By conscientiously studying good advertising copy, and practice in 
writing ads of your own, now that you have the knowledge and 
understand what makes advertising copy work, you should be able to 
quickly develop your copy writing abilities to produce order-pulling 
ads for your own products. Even so, and once you do become 
proficient in writing ads for your own products, you must never stop 
"noticing" how ads are written, designed and put together by other 
people. To stop learning would be comparable to shutting off from 
the rest of the world. 

The best ad writers are people in touch with the world in which 
they live. Every time they see a good ad, they clip it out and save 
it. Regularly, they pull what makes them good, and why they work. 
There's no school in the country that can give you the same kind of 
education and expertise so necessary in the field of ad writing. You 
must keep yourself up-to-date, aware of, and in-the-know about the 
other guy - his innovations, style, changes, and the methods he is 
using to sell his products. On-the-job training - study and 
practice - that's what it takes - and if you have got that burning 
ambition to succeed, you can do it too! 

QUESTIONS & ANSWERS 

1. WHAT'S THE MOST PROFITABLE WAY TO USE CLASSIFIEDS... 

Classifieds are best used to build your mailing list of qualified 
prospects. Use classified to offer a free catalog, booklet or report 
relative to your product line. 

2. WHAT CAN YOU SELL "DIRECTLY" FROM CLASSIFIEDS... 

Generally, anything and everything, so long as it doesn't cost more 
than five dollars which is about the most people will pay in 
response to an offer in the classifieds. These types of ads are 
great for pulling inquiries such as: Write for further information; 
Send $3, get two for the price of one; Dealers wanted, send for 
product info and a real money-maker's kit! 

3. WHAT ARE THE BEST MONTHS OF THE YEAR TO ADVERTISE... 

All twelve months of the year! Responses to your ads during some 
months will be slower in accumulating, but by keying your ads 
according to the month they appear, and a careful tabulation of your 
returns from each keyed ad, you will see that steady year round 
advertising will continue to pull orders for you, regardless of the 
month it's published. I've personally received inquiries and orders 
from ads placed as long as 2 years previous to the date of the 
response! 

4. ARE MAIL ORDER PUBLICATIONS GOOD ADVERTISING BUYS... 

The least effective are the ad sheets. Most of the ads in these 
publications are "exchange ads," meaning that the publisher of ad 
sheet "A" runs the ads of publisher "B" without charge, because 
publisher "B" is running the ads of publisher "A" without charge. 
The "claimed" circulation figures of these publications are almost 
always based on "wishes, hopes and wants" while the "true" 
circulation goes out to similar small, part-time mail order dealers. 
Very poor medium for investing advertising dollars because everybody 
receiving a copy is a "seller" and nobody is buying. When an ad 
sheet is received by someone not involved in mail order, it is 
usually given a cursory glance and then discarded as "junk mail." 

Tabloid newspapers are slightly better than the ad sheets, but not 
by much! The important difference with the tabloids is in the 
"helpful information" articles they try to carry for the mail order 
beginner. A "fair media" for recruiting dealers or independent 
sales reps for mail order products, and for renting mailing lists, 
but still circulated amongst "sellers" with very few buyers. Besides 
that, the life of a mail order tab sheet is about the same as that 
of your daily newspaper. 

With mail order magazines, it depends on the quality of the 
publication and its business concepts. Some mail order magazines are 
nothing more than expanded ad sheets, while others - such as BOOK 
BUSINESS MART - strive to help the opportunity seekers with 
on-going advice and tips he can use in the development and growth of 
his own wealth-building projects. Book Business Mart is not just the 
fastest growing publication in the mail order scene today; it's also 
the first publication in more than 20 years to offer real help 
anyone can use in achieving his own version of "The American Dream" 
of building one's own business form a "shoestring beginning" into a 
multi-million dollar empire! 

5. HOW CAN I DECIDE WHERE TO ADVERTISE MY PRODUCT... 

First of all, you have to determine who your prospective buyers 
are. Then you do a little bit of market research. Talk to your 
friends, neighbors and people at random who might fit this profile. 
Ask them if they would be interested in a product such as yours, 
and then ask them which publications they read. Next, go to your 
public library for a listing of the publications of this type from 
the Standard Rate & Data Service catalogs. 

Make a list of the addresses, circulation figures, reader 
demographics and advertising rates. To determine the true costs of 
your advertising and decide which is the better buy, divide the 
total audited circulation figure into the cost for a one inch ad : 
$10 per inch with a publication showing 10,000 circulation would be 
10,000 into $10 or 1 dollar per thousand. Looking at the advertising 
rates for Book Business Mart, you would take 42,500 into $15 for an 
advertising rate of less that .35 cents PER thousand.  Obviously, 
your best buy in this case would be Book Business Mart because 
of the lower cost per thousand. 

 Write and ask for sample copies of the magazines you have 
tentatively chosen to place your advertising in. Look over their 
advertising - be sure that they don't or won't put your ad in the 
"gutter" which is the inside column next to the binding. How many 
other mail order type ads are they carrying - you want to go with a 
publication that's busy, not one that has only a few ads. The more 
ads in the publication, the better the response the advertisers are 
getting, or else they wouldn't be investing their money in that 
publication. 

To "properly" test your ad, you should let it run through at least 
three consecutive issues of any publication. If your responses are 
small, try a different publication. Then, if your responses are 
still small, look at your ad and think about rewriting it for 
greater appeal, and pulling power. In a great many instances, it's 
the ad and not the publication's pulling power that's at fault! 

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