Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion

By Robert Cialdini, a social psychologist, this book is a more recent addition to the classics. Seems every marketeer under the sun has a copy of this book. Which is funny, because Robert Cialdini initially wrote the book to teach people how to resist the persuasive tricks of people like marketers and copywriters.

He covers the same techniques that one hears of repeatedly in copywriting. He concentrates heavily the following six:

  • Reciprocity (I scratch your back, you buy my stuff)
  • Scarcity (One hour sale, and then it comes off the market!)
  • Liking (I like you, so I’ll buy your stuff)
  • Authority (I trust you, so I’ll buy your stuff)
  • Social proof (Everybody else is buying your stuff, so it must be good)
  • Commitment/consistency (You’ve been consistent in everything so far, so I feel I can buy your stuff and trust you to deliver)

What sets Influence apart from other books that cover these topics is the scientific approach and the depth. He goes well into the subtexts and history of human behavior so you come out on the other side with a much deeper and intuitive understanding of each of these sales/copywriting techniques.

He describes case examples in very entertaining ways, which makes this a very readable book – so much that you forget you are reading a scholarly approach. Moreover the lessons learned here will still embedded in your actions.

How I Raised Myself From Failure to Success in Selling

By Frank Bettger

I first heard about How I Raised Myself From Failure to Success in Selling from uber-copywriter John Carlton in one of his interviews about the craft. My ears always perk up when these guys discuss the books that taught them how to be brilliant copywriters. I mean, since I don’t have the 2 grand or more to spend on John’s rare courses, I can at least spend a few bucks on the things that taught him. He mentioned this book as being very valuable to his development as a writer.

Which is funny, because it’s not a book about writing. It’s a book about selling (i.e. persuasion).

Well, you hear often enough that copywriting is:

“Salesmanship in print”

Remember that, and you’ll be way ahead of the game. If you can sell, you can copywrite. In fact, it’s probably more important that being able to write. After all, you just need to write well enough to express yourself the way you would when you sell. You don’t need to be Thomas Pynchon.

Frank Bettger was a contemporary of Dale Carnegie, and he also liked to keep his books short and to the point. This is a very easy read. And that’s a good thing, as you will want to reread it regularly, until it’s second nature.

Each chapter is summed up at the end with a few words, as in the following:

“First sell the appointment. Second, sell your product.”

He was talking about the need to concentrat on getting your foot in the door before even thinking about selling your product. Converted to copywriting talk, that means you need to expend 100% of the first part of your copy in getting the attention of your prospect. Don’t try to sell in the headline. Just capture interest in the headline, enough that they will keep reading to the part where you sell your product. Get their attention.

All of this stuff is readily adaptable to writing. For a few bucks, you can’t go wrong. Don’t take my word for it. Don’t even take John Carlton’s word for it. Take Dale Carnegie’s word:

“I have read every page of this book. I can recommend it with enthusiasm. Talk about walking a mile to get a cigarette—when I started out to sell, I would gladly have walked from Chicago to New York to get a copy of this book, if it had been available.”


The Copywriter’s Handbook

By Bob Bly

See that picture there on the left? That Joe Vitale, of “The Secret” fame, hanging on tightly to his real secret – a guy named Bob Bly. As much as I hate to post Ogilvy again, the late great adman said, “I don’t know a single copywriter whose work would not be improved by reading this book. And that includes me.”

Bob Bly is still cranking out winning books about copywriting, but this should be the first on your shelf.
He is a down to earth guy, no fluff and no over the top promises or hype. He has years of solid experience going way back, and has simply transferred his brilliance to the internet in recent years.

The book is very nuts and bolts, and an ideal book to get any copywriter started.

The Robert Collier Letter Book

Robert Collier was born April 19, 1885, son of Mary Ferguson and John Collier. He was educated in a church seminary, and was expected to become a priest. Deciding against it, Robert left home for Virginia to find his fortune.

He soon made his way to New York & found his stride in advertising, where he specialized in mail order, selling everything from trench machinery to fertilizers, books & raincoats, stocks & bonds, and services.

Within a short period of time Collier placed hundreds of millions of dollars into the pockets of those he worked for. He then branched out on his own in 1925 to author & sell a series of self-help publications called “Secrets of The Ages”. A million dollars worth were sold by mail order within just the first six months of release.

To put Robert Collier’s phenomenal success into perspective, consider the fact that one hundred million dollars in sales in the 1920s, would amount to a billion dollars in sales today, with inflation taken into account.

Robert Collier is the acknowledged “Father of direct marketing .”

He single handedly marketed billions of present day dollars worth of goods & services with nothing but the words in his marketing materials.

Collier wrote down all of his
marketing systems in this one amazing book.

It is the most sought after book on sales and marketing in the history of direct marketing.

Whenever you use Collier’s formula, you instantly capture the attention of your readers and sustain their avid interest paragraph after paragraph. Even using it haphazardly can automatically amplify your readers’ hidden desire … until the only logical choice for them is to buy!

He got a lot of mileage out of his copywriting formula … selling books, stocks and bonds, jewelry or commodities such as raincoats, fertilizers, trench machinery, handkerchiefs or even coal by the carload … and more.

It’s true that he had a magic gift with words, but fortunately for the rest of us, his copywriting formula doesn’t rely on writing talent to make it work.

The formula works just as well for copywriters who are starting out, as it does for the seasoned veterans who earn seven figures annually.

Currently, Robert Collier’s letters are the jealously guarded secrets of the marketing elite, both online & off. The best of the best freely admit to his massive influence on them, while charging a princely sum to teach you their secrets – which are his secrets.

This Book Will Instruct You…

· About tested selling phrases and how they can be used to turbo-charge response. Starts on page 328.

· How a change in appeal quadrupled returns. Page 38.

· How to take the guess work out of your advertising and put cash into your pockets. Page 456.

· How to raise money for just about any organization. Chapter 26.

· The one best method of approaching your prospect. Why people buy what they buy. Page 15.

· How and why a simple picture added 10 per cent to the number of orders. Page 279.

· How to avoid attracting the wrong kind of attention.

· A technique that can add 15 to 30 per cent to the number of sales. Page 248.

· The only way you can sell more than one product and actually increase overall sales. Page 270.

· How to inject life into a boring subject. Page 357.

· The right way to approach a prospect.

· Some typical openings that get the reader’s attention and lead logically on to a description of your offer. Page 17-26.

· An effective technique to get testimonials. Page 54.

· How one technique that pulled a tremendous amount of orders nearly bankrupted the company. Find out how and why it happened and what was done to recover successfully. Page 252.

· How the mind thinks. Page 30.

· The eternal question which stands up and looks you and every sincere person squarely in the eye each morning. Page 18.

· What you should do when you find an approach that is unusually successful. Page 345.

· How do you crash through the barrier and get your prospects to buy your product. Even while competitors are insisting that their products are the best. Page 54.

· How to put your ideas across better. Page 30.

· A truism that will lead to you getting a higher pay-up whenever you extend credit terms. Page 220.

· The details about a letter that sold $3,500,000.00* worth of shirts by mail, starting on page 240.

· How to get the attention of business people. Page 16.

· About a letter that sold 20,000 pairs of silk socks. Page 243.

· The type of letter you should be wary of because everyone admires it. It may bring praise but few orders. Page333.

· The most important essential in your marketing. Page 14.

· The one thing you should always keep in mind. Page 349.

· The one reason why anyone ever reads your marketing.

· What it is about some marketing that makes them so much more effective than others. Page 1.

· How campaigns were planned and carried out.

· How a man used direct mail to successfully start a store front business and make it profitable in only 7 months. Page 368.

· About the only limit to your sales. Page 259.

· The strongest motive you can use to make people buy. Page 45.

· The most important factor in making your sales. Page 440

· The six essentials contained in all good marketing. And why they are so vital. Page 68.

· How you can tell if there is something wrong with your methods or your product. Page 305.

· How long your marketing copy should be. Sometimes short? Sometimes long?

· Questions every successful letter writer must ask himself. Page 44.

· What to do when your competitors are selling inferior products for less and are hurting your sales. Discover the little known technique that works, in the book, including samples on following pages. Page 260.

· How to take the guess out of advertising. Page 328-366.

· How to lower the cost of your sale from 50 per cent to 5 or 10 per cent. Page 94.

· Which is your most difficult task when trying to interest a prospect

· A small touch that can add 10, 15, or 20 per cent to the pulling power of a marketing. Page 28.

· What to do at the point in your marketing when the prospect is almost ready to act. If you fail to do this one thing, he will likely lapse from his “almost ready” attitude back into indifference. Page 67.

· A simple technique that jumped sales results from 3 to 9 per cent and why it was never tried again. Page 252.

· Why a prospect would buy from someone he’s never seen before rather than from a local store. There are two reasons. Page 59.

· What is the easiest way to make your prospects want your product. Page 360.

· A unique way to offer a premium. Not only does it raise order response but it doesn’t cost anything! Page 417.

· An odd-ball technique that pulled 12 per cent in order response. Page 319.

· About the experience of getting 3000 orders in a single day. Page 129.

· About one letter that pulled in 300,000 orders. See the actual letter.

· How to find the motive that will impel your reader to overcome his economic inertia and buy. Page 44.

· An amazing technique that bankrolled $2000 into $20,000,000.00* worth of sales for a young man from a small town. Find out his secret. (Note: anyone can use it). Page 15.

· The 6 prime motives of human action and how to use them to make people buy your product. Page 44.

· How to find the magic words that make people buy. Page 354.

· How Robert Collier took a product that sold only 5000 in two years and got it selling 70,000 in the same length of time. (Note: it was NOT the copy).

· What the first thing is that you must do regardless of what product or service you are writing about. Page 437.

· How a book whose sales had lately fallen off after six years was rescued. For the appeal that got it back on track and selling 50,000 sets a year for two more years, see chapter 12.

· How to get your prospect to want the thing you are offering. Page 31.

· From samples of 324 letters on all kinds of products. Letters that have actually been used and proven successful in making sales.

Here’s the Formula in a nutshell: “No matter what product or service you write about, you must first find out the ‘mental conversations’ your prospective customers are having about your offer.”

This simple formula made Robert Collier the “father of direct marketing.”

That’s exactly why successful marketers turn to The Robert Collier Letter Book and why you should too.

Fact is, The Letter Book is ready-at-hand on the bookshelves of many of the world’s top copywriters such as Gary Halbert, John Carlton, Joe Sugarman, Ted Nicholas, Dan Kennedy and Bob Bly (just to name a few).

When you implement its proven wisdom, you’ll be using the most powerful psychological advertising strategies known. The very same secrets the legendary Robert Collier used to pen some of the most lucrative sales letter campaigns of all time!

Why do modern day marketing giants like Jay Abraham, Dan Kennedy, Ted Nicholas, Drew Whitman, Yanik Silver & Joe Sugarman (I could go on & on) pour countless hours into the study of Robert Collier’s letters? Simple. Because they conceal magic!

They contain hidden secrets. And this manual points them out for you in living color. Use them to quickly drive costs out, & sales in.

The book is an ageless classic that’s packed with the timeless principles that Collier used to build many business empires. Best of all, these ideas are as original, fresh and compelling today as they were when he invented them!

Breakthrough Advertising

By Eugene Schwartz

Eugene Schwartz was a master of market manipulation, and routinely wrote sales letters and ads that pulled in millions of sales.  He has a very pragmatic and hard working approach, and his advice is not just valuable to copywriters. Any CEO or small business owner could hugely benefit from reading this book through. It will put money in your pocket.

Schwartz believed advertising could not create real demand, but could channel existing demand to any product. He give the example of weight loss. There is a “mass desire” in the marketplace to lose weight, and so there is a demand for weight loss products. Good copy captures the driving desire behind that demand, and channels it to a particular product.

He goes into detail in this book about the structure of an ad, and its building blocks – including headlines.

This is another book that is found on every top copywriter’s bookshelf – and every smart CEO’s as well.

The only problem is that this book is too popular. There is an almost cultish demand for the book, especially since it’s not that easy to find. If copies are available on Amazon, they sell for as much as $300. You can check the Amazon link below.

One recent option is a site that sells the PDF version for $25 at http://eugeneschwartz.co.cc/

Otherwise pop on over to Amazon and see if you can find an affordable copy!

Ogilvy on Advertising

David Ogilvy was a legend in advertising. I should know. My own father was a copy chief at a major agency, and spoke of Olilvy as “the only man who really understood advertising – the rest are posers.”
He started his own agency with $6000 and quickly rose to become the most respected advertiser of the age.

His entry into advertising was marked by a client who had only $500 to promote the opening of a hotel. Ogilvy took advantage of cheap postcard rates and sent an “exclusive” invitation to as many local addresses as he could. The hotel opened to a packed house.

This book will teach you everything you need to know about making smart, memorable and targeted ads. His writing style is fun to read, and filled with insights. And that’s a good thing, because you will benefit each time you reread this fabulous book.

Buy Ogilvy on Advertising from Amazon Now!

Tested Advertising Methods

By John Caples

Tested Advertising Methods brings you the marketing genius of John Caples, who made fortunes for companies over his 40+ years in advertising. David Ogilvey called this the most useful advertising book he ever read, and based much of his stellar career on Caple’s marketing principles.

Caples writes in a down to earth, and very easy to read style. Yet, these simple sentences are filled with gold nuggets for a career copywriter, or even for someone who is just writing sales letters or promos for their own product.

A full 4 chapters are devoted in detail to crafting headlines. And detailed approaches are described for building your sales pitch. John Caples lived until 1990, and saw his concepts blossom in the direct marketing field.

Most newer editions have been updated by Frad Hahn, with some useful comments.

Buy Tested Advertising Methods at Amazon Now!

Scientific Advertising

By Claude Hopkins

“Nobody, at any level, should be allowed to have anything to do with advertising until he has read this book seven times. It changed the course of my life.

David Ogilvy
Advertising Legend

This is on the shelf of every living star copywriter. And each of them reads this book religiously. You should read it often as well – until it becomes second nature. This book is 80 years old, and not one bit of it is dated. As you read, you will see where all the marketing gurus picked up their info. They are all simply rephrasing this book. A few excerpts:

1-There is one simple way to answer many advertising questions. Ask yourself, “Would it help a salesman sell the goods? Would it help me sell if I said them to the buyer in person?”

2-The best ads ask no one to buy…The ads are based entirely on service. They offer wanted information.

3-Use pictures only to attract those who may profit you. Use them only when they form a better selling argument than the same amount of space devoted to print.

There are a few places where this very special book can be picked up. It can be had as a bonus to people who buy the 4 book set of Long Lost Marketing Secrets offered by Yanik Silver. Take a look at his offer here.

The First Hundred Million

I’m taking this description straight from the Gary Halbert letter. Why? Because Gary was one of the greatest copywriters of the 20th century, and probably of the 21st as well (though we have another 9 decades to go, and Gary sadly didn’t make it through the first). Read his description of the book here, buy it (through my link preferably!), and do yourself a big, big favor and visit thegaryhalbertletter.com. Just reading those letters and taking them to heart is enough to make a copywriter of you. On with Gary’s review of this book:

More than 60 years ago, a man named E. Haldeman-Julius conducted the most fascinating and large-scale market research program I’ve ever heard about. Are you familiar with Haldeman-Julius? He’s the guy who published the world famous Little Blue Books.

What’s that? You’ve never heard of the Little Blue Books? What are you anyway, just a young kid? You say you’re wondering what a publishing venture you’ve never even heard about can teach you about marketing?

Plenty. The story of the Little Blue Books offers up a treasure trove of marketing insights that is pure gold. Here are the details: Once upon a time, way back in the 1920′s, the Little Blue Books were born. They were, all in all, a collection of some 2,000 titles. All the books had a blue cover and measured 3-1/2 by 5 inches. Most often they contained 64 pages, although sometimes they went up to 128 pages. The content of the Little Blue Books was wide and varied. They covered everything from Shakespeare to the Debate on Birth Control. Many of them were self-help books of the “How To” genre. They were sold in large ads that appeared in many of the major newspapers and other publications such as Colliers and the Saturday Evening Post. They sold for a nickel (5 cents) and you had to buy at least 20 of them with every order.

Now listen: Do you remember when Playboy magazine first hit the newsstands? Remember the technique of how to buy it? Remember how you’d go to a newsstand and grab copies of Life and Look and maybe the National Geographic and a couple of others and then you’d pick up a Playboy and hide it in the middle of all those others when you went up to the cash register?

You do remember all that? Geez, time sure passes, doesn’t it? Well, since a person had to buy 20 Little Blue Books at a time, that meant he could anonymously sandwich in an order for what he really wanted to read or learn about with all that stuff society was telling him he was supposed to be interested in.

To say that the Little Blue Books sold well would be somewhat of an understatement. How many of them were sold? I’m glad you asked because the answer is…..

More Than 100 Million!

And listen to this: After Haldeman-Julius had sold over 100 million of these little books, then he wrote a book titled The First Hundred Million to tell what he had learned from this publishing venture. His statistics are amazing. They reveal exactly what interested the American public in the 1920s and in exactly what relative proportions. And you know what? Those statistics are dead on target today!

What subject was the American public most willing to pay and read about in the 1920′s? The same one they’re most willing to pay to read about today.

Sex.

Indeed, The First Hundred Million is a book that contains a precise and valid statistical measurement of America’s inner most needs and greeds. So why didn’t I mention it in last month’s newsletter when I listed the greatest marketing books of all time? Simply because I didn’t have a copy of it and I wasn’t sure it was obtainable. Those others that are out-of-print are hard to find but, with a little effort, they are at least gettable. So anyway, what happens is a good friend and long-time client of mine, Brian Smith and his trusty helper Amy, found a copy of Haldeman-Julius’ book and Xeroxed it for me!

Thank You! Thank You! Thank You!

And now, without further adieu, I am simply going to extract for you some data from this wonderful book. Haldeman-Julius sold 20,700,000 Little Blue Books in 1927. Many of then were about sex. Let’s see what we can learn from his annual sales figures for that year. Hmn? A book titled The Art of Kissing sold 60,500 copies, yet one titled The Art Of Courtship sold only 17,500 copies. What Married Women Should Know (a euphemistic titled that Haldeman-Julius really wanted to call Sex Facts For Married Women) sold 112,000 copies while What Married Men Should Know sold 97,500 copies. Women’s Sexual Life sold 97,500 copies, Man’s Sexual Life sold 54,000 copies. Confidential Chats With Wives sold 52,000 copies, while Confidential Chats With Husbands sold only 29,500 copies.

Hmn? I guess a woman’s sexual revelations have much more commercial appeal than a man’s, don’t they?

Hah! Here’s something. It seems that Modern Aspect of Birth Control appealed to 73,000 readers, while Debate on Birth Control appealed only to 27,000.

I guess they didn’t want to hear all the arguments, they just wanted to know how to do it.

Ah, but let’s go for what they really wanted to read. Check out this figure: Prostitution in the Modern World – 129,500 copies!

As opposed to The Evolution of Marriage which sold only 20,000 copies.

Here’s a strange one. Love Letters of a Portuguese Nun sold 46,000 copies, while How to Write Love Letters sold only 23,000 copies.

And Facts About Venereal Disease sold 41,500 copies as opposed to the more specific Facts About Syphilis which sold only 36,000.

O.K. that’s enough sex for this month. Let’s move on to the area of self-education. Just look at this difference: How to Improve Your Conversation sold 77,000 copies yet The Romance of Words only 10,500. Hmn? Hints in Public Speaking sold 46,500 copies, How to Write Advertising 20,000 copies, How to Write Book Reviews only 8,000 copies. How to Psycho-Analyze Yourself sold 43,000 while another titled How I Psycho-Analyzed Myself only 13,500. More numbers: How to Fight Nervous Troubles 39,000, Facts About Will Power 38,500, Your Memory and How to Improve It 37,000 copies, Your Talent and How to Develop It 35,500, Psychology of Leadership 32,000, How to Think Logically 30,500, Psychology of Character Building 29,000, The Conquest of Fear 27,500 and Psychology of Laughter 14,000.

Here’s an illuminating statistic: How to Break Bad Habits sold 29,000 copies as opposed to How to Form Good Habits which sold only 20,000.

And another: Care of Skin and Hair sold 52,000, yet How to Take Care of Your Mouth and Teeth only 8,000.

What foreign languages do Americans want to learn most? Here they are in rank order:
Spanish Self-Taught

French Self-Taught

German Self-Taught

Italian Self-Taught

Esperanto Self-Taught

Latin Self-Taught
47,000

46,500

27,500

21,500

17,000

10,500

What do we like to eat? Or, more precisely, what do we like to cook? How to Make All Kinds of Candy sold 45,000 copies, How to Make Pies and Pastries 29,000, How to Cook Fish and Meats 21,500 and, dead last, was French Cooking for Amateurs at 9,500.

The demand for info on proper manners always astonishes me. Back in 1927, the Little Blue Book titled Hints on Etiquette sold 72,000 copies! Less surprising, at least to me, is that Party Games for Grown-Ups sold 46,500.

What of the professions? These figures tell a story:
Best Jokes About Doctors

About Preachers

About Lawyers

25,000

23,000

21,000

Listen: I’m not going to give you the figures on poetry and the classics because my space is limited here and I doubt those marketing stats will have much practical value to many of you. The same is true of books of proverbs, fiction, plays, the classics, etc.

What is super instructive, however, is the chapter called THE HOSPITAL which is subtitled How Little Blue Books Are Given New Zest by New Titles!

Consider: When Gautier’s Fleece of Gold was changed to The Quest for a Blonde Mistress, sales jumped from 6,000 to 50,000! When the title of Oscar Wilde’s Pen, Pencil and Poison was changed to The Story of a Notorious Criminal, sales more than tripled! The book Patent Medicine did poorly. Yet, when changed to The Truth About Patent Medicine, sales more than tripled! Arthur Schopenhauer’s Art of Controversy didn’t do squat until retitled as How to Argue Logically when, thereupon, it enjoyed sales of 30,000 per year.

You already know what happened when Thomas De Quincey’s Essay on Conversation was changed to How to Improve Your Conversation – but do you know why?

There, now you have plenty of reading. This book and Gary Halbert. Knock yourself out. And read them again. And again.