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I’ve got something special for you today.

This is a particularly brilliant piece by the late great marketer and copywriter Gary Halbert. And somehow I missed it, until I got it in an email a couple of days ago.

Now, when I say brilliant, don’t assume it’s the humour-filled pieces Gary usually wrote.

Granted, there’s some humour in there, albeit dark humour. But it’s a very serious piece. With a very serious message.

Now, with the kind permission of Kevin and Bond Halbert I’m reprinting that same article here.

I urge you to read it from beginning to end.

Here’s an intro by Bond:

 

This edition of The Gary Halbert Letter is one of the top ten favorites among the readers and it’s easy to see why.

The story and the lessons contained in this classic issue will be valuable forever.

In fact, these teachings saved my career and my life!

But, something to think about is how my father gets right out of Boron and instead of hiding the fact, he embraces and exploits the situation.

He really got in front of the story and turned what most would consider a career ending event into a huge advantage.

When this all went down, there was never any talk about covering up what was going on.

I never even thought to hide the situation and neither did my pop.

Maybe we both knew it was going to make for great stories.

Anyway, the moral is…

If you are afraid of what failing will do to your reputation or your future potential, look at what Gary Halbert was able to do with a situation far worse.

Don’t let yourself worry about your past or the fear of failing in the future, stop you from anything.

With that said, enjoy this classic issue and all of the valuable insights.

Sir Bond
The House of Halbert
PS Whether or not you have already read The Dark Side of Success, give yourself a treat and stop what you are doing right now and read this particular issue. You get more out of this letter, every time you read it.

 

From: W-A-Y West of Jewfish Creek

Dear Friend & Subscriber,

I’m in danger.

This is really true. It’s not an opening statement I’m using for shock value. No. It’s not a joke either. Or a clever prelude to a marketing lesson. The alarm bells in my head are clanging and shrieking, stridently demanding attention.

Why? Listen: I’ve been on an especially hot roll lately and it’s starting to go to my head. For one thing, I’ve just produced my first TV show (it’s about the Beverly Hills Medical Diet) and I think it’s a very good first effort. For another, I’ve just beaten one of my old direct mail control packages and now my client can profitably double his mailing schedule.

And He Was Already Mailing
700,000 Pieces Per Month!

And so on. But, best of all, as far as my ego is concerned, I just received a letter from a man named Drayton Bird who is the Vice Chairman of Ogilvy and Mather Direct in London. And, the reason that letter was so good for my ego is he was writing to tell me he is in frequent telephone communication with David Ogilvy and that Mr. Ogilvy has just sent him all back issues of my newsletter including what Mr. Bird refers to as the “brilliant” dollar bill acknowledgement letter. Mr. Bird wanted to know, among other things, if he could include some of my work in the upcoming new edition of his book called “Common Sense Marketing.”

Well, I don’t know about you but, for my money, David Ogilvy is easily the most astute advertising man alive and, to have captured his attention through these letters is the prize feather in my self-serving war bonnet of ego accolades.

Except for the actual numbers that are produced by a good piece of marketing: Those, of course, remain the supreme accolade of your work.

Or else the supreme indictment.

Have you ever heard of the Caples Awards? John Caples is one of my marketing heroes, but the new wrinkle in the awards given in his name makes me sick. You know what some slobs have decided about the Caples Awards? It’s this: The direct marketing piece in contention doesn’t have to be a winner for the writer to win the award, it only has to be “creative.”

Isn’t that nice? It must truly cheer many a clients’ heart, after being rendered damn-near destitute by some fool’s bird-brained, stupid ad campaign, to know the writer won the “Caples.”

Shame on everybody connected.

Forgive me, I digress. Anyway, to get back to what I was saying, if you were to visit my offices and look around and talk to the staff, you’d see pictures of me with some celebrities and clients, you’d see I have a loving and gorgeous woman, you’d see framed letters on the walls from subscribers and clients I’ve helped make a lot of money, you’d see me working with my children, you’d see all of us laughing and joking and having a good time while everybody works like crazy and, if you could also read my thoughts, you’d see a man (me) dangerously close to making one of the deadliest mistakes a man can make which is…

Starting To Believe
Your Own PR!

This can be fatal. I’m not talking injurious to your business (although it can most certainly be that), I’m talking fatal, fatal.

Like once upon a time when it almost was for me. Listen: Do you remember how, in my direct mail pitch, to get you to subscribe, I promised to write about “the dark side of success”? Well, it’s time for me to do that. Therefore, this letter is not about how to improve your marketing or make more money. No, this letter is about how to keep your success from ruining your life as it almost did mine. If you have children and/or anyone else you love and, if you think there is value in these letters, this is the one, by far, that would be the most important to let your loved ones read. What you are about to learn is just how dumb, foolish and ignorant a supposedly intelligent man (Ol’ “Guru Gary”) can be. But let me suggest something: Before you smirk and get condescending about the stupidity I am about to reveal and say, “that Halbert is really dumb, that stupid stuff will never happen to me,” I suggest you listen to that little whisper in the back of your mind that says…

Don’t Be Too Sure.

Don’t Be Too Sure.

Don’t Be Too Sure.

Let us go back in time to the first half of 1973. Back then I was truly living high on the hog. I had sold my half-interest in Halberts Inc. (the coat-of-arms company with over seven million customers) for a sum that translates into today’s money to something like 2 to 2-1/2 million dollars. I also had my publishing company (Good News Incorporated) cranked up to where it was generating millions of dollars per year. I had highly profitable investments (sometimes my silver futures contracts would appreciate as much as $20,000 per day), I had a showplace home atop a hill, a condo in Ft. Lauderdale, a boat in the Florida Keys, lots of hangers-on and, in general, I was…

A Big Fish In A
Little Pond

And believe me, I milked it for all it was worth. For example, whenever I found myself in a conversation with strangers and the conversation turned to money and everybody was trying to impress everybody else, I would always emerge victorious by using one of my conversational “toppers.” Like so: If one of the group would ask me how much my income was, I’d say, “Oh about 20 thousand, I guess.” And then they’d smile and say, “Well, that’s not too bad. I guess $20,000 a year is decent money for a young guy like you.” And then, of course, I’d use my “topper” by saying…

“Oh No, You Misunderstood. My
Income Is $20,000 Per Day!”

You like that one? Did it make you smile a little? Pretty clever, huh? Actually, what it really demonstrated was my…

Insufferable Stupidity!

I’ll tell you something: Watch out for self-made guys in their 30′s because many of them are just as insufferable (and dangerous) to themselves and others as I was.

Another example. Once upon a time, the First National Bank in Massilon, Ohio wouldn’t even let me have a checking account because their credit research deemed me so unworthy.

Can you imagine that? A bank that says you’re such a bummer they won’t even let you deposit money?

So guess where I did my banking after I made my big bucks? You’re right. Right there at the good ol’ First National. And guess who, when the bank deposit was especially huge, made the deposit himself?

Bingo. You’re right again. Picture this: It’s about two o’clock on a Monday afternoon. The door to the bank opens and in walks what appears to be a young guy in his 30′s who has been working on a road gang. He’s wearing faded and torn blue jeans, a sloppy sweatshirt and he’s carrying a canvas bag over his shoulder. He waits patiently in line and, when he gets to the teller, he tells her he wants to make a deposit. And then in full view of all the customers in the bank and its employees, this rather shabby-looking young man starts pulling out wads of checks and cash and stack them side-by-side a foot or so high in front of the open-mouthed teller.

Sort of asking for it, wasn’t I?

Well, I got it and it went down like this: One day in the first week of July, 1973, just after dark, I went to get the groceries out of the trunk of the car. The car was outside the garage and, as I was coming from inside the house, I had to push the button that would open the garage door automatically. As soon as the door went up, I saw two figures standing outside the garage wearing ski masks. At first I thought they were kids and I started to bitch. But the complaint died in my throat as I discovered they were indeed adults and were both armed with .45 caliber handguns. Have you ever seen a .45? I carried one for three years when I was an MP and they are scary. Especially when you are looking into the business end of one of those monsters.

One of the guys marched me over to the air conditioner unit on the west side of the house just outside the garage and had me take off my glasses and give them to him. Then, he did something strange; he said to me very politely, “I’m putting your glasses here on top of the air conditioner so they’ll be easy to find when this is over.”

Then he marched me back into my house where his buddy had already subdued my wife, Nancy. Then they tied me up, blindfolded me, gagged me and put me inside a canvas sack.

They also did all this to Nancy except they didn’t put her into a sack.

Then, they ransacked the house. They took our “emergency” silver coins, they took a cherished heirloom ring that Nancy had been given by one of her favorite relatives and they took sacks of mail all containing checks from our recent full-page ad in “Parade” magazine.

At this point, Nancy said, “Gary, do something! They’re even taking the mail!”

But what was I to do while all tied up inside a canvas bag?

Anyway, they wanted more and they began to threaten us. However, after a while, they were convinced there was nothing else to get and they left, taking my car (a Cadillac naturally) and all the loot they had gathered up including thousands of checks written to “Good News Inc.” which were worthless to them. By the way, before they left one of them said, “This is what happens to people who make a lot of money and who live in a big house like this.”

Have you ever had anything like this happen to you? I hope not. It’s unnerving and much more so than you would think. You know, we’re all so used to watching TV we sort of get the impression that, after a violent act, a person just gets up, brushes himself off and goes about his business.

Trust me, it’s not like that at all.

I’m no stranger to violence and danger. I grew up in a town that was, during my youth, the most heavily industrialized per capita city on earth. I’m talking about Barberton, Ohio and, back then, it was sometimes, almost like a war zone. In high school, my buddy, “Pompadour Bill,” and I would drive around in his father’s car and we kept a German Luger and two knurled steel blackjacks in the glove compartment. Then later, when I was an MP, I was sent to Germany and my tour of duty consisted of breaking up massive bar fights and dealing with enraged servicemen and going up against everything from pocket knives to a lunatic with a double-barreled shotgun.

But this was different. This was in my home, my sanctuary, my cave that was supposed to be my “safe place” and secure from the tigers and bears and demons of the night.

And my family was home!

Not only my wife, but my kids too, who were all (thank God!) asleep upstairs.

Anyway, for nearly a year after this, I could hardly sleep. I was already a heavy beer drinker back then and, after the robbery, I began to drink even more heavily. My work suffered, my business went downhill and I knew something had to change.

So, after a year, more or less, of living like this, I sold my business to a tall Texan named Jerry Antill for $15.00 and never bothered to cash the check. By the way, at that time, the business had over 1,000,000 customers and more than $60,000 cash-on-hand plus all its other assets.

What I did next is I moved my family to Los Angeles, California so my wife and I could become patients of the Center for Feeling Therapy which was formed by a group of nine psychotherapists who were formerly associated with the famed Institute of Primal Therapy formed by Arthur Janov.

The founders of the Center for Feeling Therapy were acclaimed worldwide. They were supposed to be the best. They had been on 150 talk shows like Merv Griffin, Johnny Carson (I was in the studio audience), Good Morning America and all the others. They published endless learned articles and, I believe, four hardcover books. When Nancy and I signed up for this “therapy” it was our understanding that in about nine months we would be relieved of all our mental trauma and we’d be able to get on with our lives.

What We Got Instead Was
A Three And A Half Year
Nightmare.

These so-called psychotherapists, all licensed by the State of California, turned out to be the most sophisticated and manipulative mind-benders the free world has ever known. They nearly ruined the lives of hundreds of their patients. They were, (unknown to me at the time), sexually molesting some of the female patients while they were sucking money out of all of us with an efficiency that would’ve made even Jim Bakker envious.

They controlled your life. Everything from where you worked to where you lived and even to with whom you could sleep.

Let me take a moment here to say that, at this point, you may be saying, “How could any intelligent adult let such a thing happen? That could never happen to me.” Well, what I say is you only ask for therapeutic help when you are very vulnerable so…

Don’t Be Too Sure.

Don’t Be Too Sure.

Don’t Be Too Sure.

By the way, all of those “therapists” were subsequently indicted by the California Board of Medical Quality Assurance and they went through the longest malpractice trial in California history and they all lost their licenses and were publicly shamed. If you are interested, you can read about it in the September 30, 1987 edition of the “L.A. Times.”

But anyway, I didn’t get out of that “therapy” until January, 1978 and while I was in it, my mind was in virtually constant turmoil. And, while in the midst of this mental turmoil in 1976, I was approached by a couple of guys who wanted to go into the mail order business. The idea was to sell a book on “Proud Bi-Centennial Americans” and also a decorative bi-centennial plate. The idea was I’d write th copy and put up the money and these two guys would run the business. well, for a little while, things went fine. We mailed our sales letters, took in orders and started to produce the products both of which, incidentally, had to be personalized.

Then, all of a sudden, everything went bad.

One of our big direct mail rollouts only produced a fraction of the earlier test results to that list. Also, all my income from other sources, for reasons not relevant to this story, almost dried up completely.

In a nutshell, what happened is we ended up with thousands of orders and not enough money to fill them all.

This was certainly a bad situation but it was, I felt at least correctable. You know, at that time, a lot of people had come to know and respect me and I was pretty sure I’d be able to borrow enough money to fill all the orders and make things right.

Alas, this was not to be. What happened next is one of our customers who had not received his order decided to complain and he did so to a local TV station. Well, as you know, the news media is ever hungry for bad news and they sent a camera crew to our offices. The resulting footage was not very dramatic but, when it was aired, we came to the attention of the postal authorities and soon thereafter two postal inspectors came to our offices. Soon they learned that, even though I wasn’t the official owner of the business, I was, in fact, the “force” behind the company.

Which was true.

So they wanted to talk to me.

So, not knowing any better, I invited them to my house.

Big mistake. Real BIG! You see, at that time I was living at 637 Pacific Coast Highway, right on the beach in Santa Monica, California. My home was one of only 17 on that stretch of real estate (law forbids the building of any more) and it was truly fantastic. The house next door to me was formerly owned by Peter Lawford and it was the western White House when Kennedy was president. I’m not going to go on and on about my house but I will say it was perhaps the finest home I’ve ever seen. It had a 50 foot swimming pool and it later became the most expensive home in history ever to be sold at private auction.

So, in come these two postal inspectors, one of whom I can hardly remember and the other whom I’ll never forget. The one I’ll never forget was a tall, skinny guy with a scraggly mustache who had a look of deprivation about him. In fact, to me, he looked like a guy who’d never had a good meal or a good woman in his entire life.

And guess how he reacted to my home on the beach with its 50 foot heated swimming pool?

You know already, don’t you? Let’s just say he wasn’t exactly overjoyed to see me enjoying the evil fruits of my capitalistic endeavors. During that first meeting, and during subsequent ones, he would slip in comments like, “Well, I guess I’ll never know what it’s like to live in a house like this.” Or, “I’m sorry to have to ask you and your wife to ride in this plain old car but we can’t all have Cadillacs.”

And so on.

So it begins to look like this is really serious and it’s not going to go away so my partners and I hire a lawyer. I can’t remember his name. Actually, I only chose him because he was so handy as he was in the same building as our offices. After we explained everything to this lawyer he said it was obvious that none of us ever had any criminal intent (true) and we should open our books and give the postal inspectors any info they wanted.

That was a big mistake. A real BIG mistake!

Look, being investigated is like being interviewed by a TV news team. In other words, if they find out 50 good things about you and one bad thing, it is only the negative that is recorded on their minds and has a chance of going on the air or in their reports.

We were indicted. All three of us. For mail fraud.

What happens next is the postal inspectors have a little chat with my two “co-conspirators” and it is explained to them that if they help the inspectors get me (Mr. Big), they will be allowed to plead guilty to only one count of mail fraud and probably get a suspended sentence.

And, to their eternal shame, those two guys laid down and rolled over. And, in fact…

They Were So Scared
They Pled Guilty To A
Crime Of Which They
Were Innocent!

Perhaps I’d better modify that “innocent” part a bit. According to the law, you are not guilty of any type of fraud, including mail fraud, unless you had “criminal intent.” Well, let me tell you, neither of those two guys (or me, for that matter) ever had one smidgen of criminal intent.

On the other hand, the mail fraud statutes are written so broadly it is difficult for anyone who has ever mailed a letter not to be found guilty. It’s so bad, in fact, that sometimes, it seems to me anyone who has walked by, driven past, or flown over a U.S. post office is guilty. What this means is that, often, a jury does not have any real choice as to whether or not to find a defendant guilty. You see, what happens is the judge will issue jury instructions that dictate the jury must find you guilty if such and such or so and so occurred.

And since those such and such’s and so and so’s are so broad in scope…

98% Of All Defendants
Are Found Guilty!

Here’s a side story. Once upon a time, in the San Fernando Valley, some paid arsonist torched a restaurant and a couple of people were killed. He was guilty of trespassing, breaking and entering, arson and murder.

And They Got Him
For Mail Fraud!

‘Cause somebody, to get the insurance payoff, sent the claim in by mail. And the prosectors know, if they can’t get someone for something else they can almost always get anybody for mail fraud.

On with my story: So, here I am indicted for mail fraud and, in August of 1978, I went to trial. It lasted about a week and guess what was the most persuasive piece of evidence the feds had against me?

It Was My House!

Yep. One of those zealous little public servants stuck a camera over the hedges on the beach side of the property, took a picture, had it blown up to poster size and then forced the jury all week to look at this photo of “Halbert’s Beach Villa.”

Know this: If you are a successful businessman, there is no such thing as a “jury of your peers.” Basically, your fate will be decided by 12 men and women who are “have nots” and who believe all the “haves” got that way be being crooked.

I was convicted.

I was sentenced to 18 months but I was released on my own recognizance, pending appeal. The appeal took three years and, guess what?

I Won!

The trial was, in my opinion, a farce and, unbelievably, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals seemed to agree. Now what happens when you win an appeal is you are back to square one. What that means is the government has the option of putting you on trial again, dropping the whole thing or else letting you plead not guilty to a much lesser charge.

That third choice, the “plea bargain” is, by far, the most popular choice. And that is what the government decided to do with me, to let me plead guilty to a misdemeanor and pay a fine or something. You see, by this time, the “news value” of “The Big Bi-Centennial Rip-Off” was non-existent and, after everything that came out in the 1978 trial, I think even the prosecutors no longer thought I was such an evil guy.

But this was not to be. And, according to my lawyer, it was because that “from hunger” postal inspector wouldn’t let it go.

I don’t know if that’s true or not. But I do know this: The mental and emotional turmoil of being “in therapy” and fighting these mail fraud charges cause me to go broke around the time of the first trial. However, between 1978 when I filed my appeal and 1981 when I won it, I did something unthinkable:

I Made A Lot Of
Money All Over Again!

And in 1981, when the postal inspector came out to serve me, I was then living at 201 Ocean Avenue in Santa Monica and I owned two apartments there (they’re co-ops) which were both worth a ton of money.

Can’t have that, can we? No Sir. So, in August of 1981 I got back on trial again. But this time I’ve got a new lawyer (wait’ll you hear about all my wonderful lawyers) and I’m a lot more prepared and I think I’m going to win. The prosecution trots out the picture of the house again but, anticipating this, my lawyer and I have prepared what we think are effective counter arguments.

So, the trial ends on a Wednesday or Thursday afternoon and when the jury walks past me, they actually look friendly and that’s a good sign says my lawyer. But the next morning as they walk past me and my lawyer, their heads are down and they won’t even look at me and that’s a bad sign says my lawyer.

And later, that afternoon, they find me guilty.

And, in an interview, what do they say as to why they found me guilty? “It’s the house,” they say. “Anybody who was really trying to do right and fill those orders wouldn’t have lived in such an expensive house.”

“But I thought we explained that,” says my lawyer.

“Yeah, but just look at this article that is in this morning’s ‘Herald Examiner,’” says a lady juror. And she waved it in front of our faces and there was a three page article all about my house complete with pictures, the main one of which was the same one the jury had been forced to look at poster size all week.

What a strange coincidence. Here it is something like six years since I’ve lived in this house and the “Herald Examiner” which is a morning paper comes out with this long article about the opulence of the house and its furnishings and all the Rolls Royces and other exotic cars parked outside and so forth and it comes out just in time for the jury to see it…

And Take It In The
Jury Room With Them!

Incredible timing, right?

So we immediately ask for a new trial and I’ll never forget the judge’s face as he denies the motion muttering how he may be wrong but we’ve got to make sure the appellate court has enough work to keep them busy.

So once again I file an appeal and try to retain my sanity (I never did regain it) as I wait for the outcome.

This time it only takes 2-1/2 years and I lose; I don’t see how but I did.

And on May 21, 1984 I reported to Boron Federal Prison Camp (“Club Fed”) in the Mojave Desert to start serving my time. I’ll tell you a little about that experience in a minute but first two more of my semi-famous “side trips.”

First, I want to tell you a little about the seven lawyers I used fighting this nightmare. One of them was a respected law professor who wrote both of my appeals. Another was a Mormon who fought his heart out for me but could not overcome the impact of the newspaper story about my house. Another one did almost no preparation for my case and he was eventually disbarred. Another one is the naive, young guy who told me to freely give the postal inspectors any info they wanted. Another one was too busy laundering drug money to be of any real help to me and, besides, he was found shot dead in the Century Plaza shopping center while clutching a paper bag full of paper money. Another, reputed to be a “fix it” lawyer, was indicted along with a local judge for obstructing justice.

I Sure Can Pick ‘Em
Can’t I?

The seventh attorney was Howard Weitzman. Remember him? He’s the guy who won for DeLorean and the only attorney in this story who I have decided to mention by name. You know, I really have a lot of respect for this guy. Here’s why: When I asked him to do some post-conviction work for me he said…

“Gary, you ought to get someone
else because other lawyers
will do it cheaper than me and
you don’t have much of a
chance anyway.”

I could hardly believe it; honesty from a lawyer? So I hired him, he gave it his best shot, I lost and paid him willingly and never regretted it simply because…

He Was Straight
With Me!

By the way, I talked to him on the phone from Boron the day after DeLorean was acquitted and I told him that, when the verdict was announced, the whole camp burst into applause!

Isn’t this a bitch of a story? Hold on. You ain’t heard nothing yet. Let’s take side trip #2.

Away we go. After my conviction in 1978, while I was on appeal, I did some work for a publisher back East. What I did is I wrote a diet ad for him that featured a San Diego M.D. (a psychiatrist) that became one of the highest pulling ads in history.

Considering my situation, I was very careful about what I wrote. I checked and double-checked with the doctor to make sure the ad was accurate.

The money started coming in like crazy and the guy back East couldn’t keep up with the orders. I literally begged him to slow down, to stop advertising till he got caught up. To no avail. He got thousands of orders behind, many of which were four months overdue. And guess what? Yep. He got indicted, I got indicted and the doctor got indicted…

On An Ad I Thought Was “Hound’s Tooth Clean”!

Those indictments were later dropped but they massively interfered with my mental peace and also prevented me from bringing in character witnesses during my second trial.

Lord, love a duck; I was starting to feel like a one-legged man in an ass-kicking contest.

But so what? What can be learned from all this that is of practical value to you?

A lot. Assuming you don’t want to be robbed, incarcerated or swamped with the emotional and financial trauma of litigation, I herewith offer 10 rules for your consideration:

#1. Stop living in a dream world!

Stuff like this really can happen to you. People who never take any risks are boring cowards but people who take stupid risks are, in fact, stupid. Consider this: The news is full of stories about the dangers of AIDS yet, by far, the #1 and #2 most common preventable cause of death in the U.S. are cigarette smoking and not wearing a seat belt. Yet millions of dummies still smoke and ride around sans safety belts while mouthing banal quips about how everybody has to die of something.

Trust me, Buckwheat, if you get lung cancer or permanently mangled and/or paralyzed in a car crash, the memory of all those cute little banalities you used to say will make you vomit.

And so it is with taking unnecessary chances in your advertising campaigns. No one is in complete control of his or her destiny but, for God’s sake, don’t beg for problems like I did. You’ll get enough problems no matter how careful you are without insisting on having more.

#2. Stop lying!

To your customers, to your partners or business associates and to yourself. If you lie in your direct mail letters and/or space ads or commercials, the one time you get caught may easily cause you more grief than it was worth for the hundreds of times you slipped by.

And hear this: In the last 1-1/2 years I’ve met three different people who routinely cheat everybody they do business with. Well, let me tell you, one thing I learned while serving time is that not everybody who gets cheated elects to right that wrong via litigation. Instead, many choose mayhem or murder. But you don’t really believe any of those wimps you’ve ever shortchanged would do anything like put out a “contract” on you, do you?

Don’t Be Too Sure.

Don’t Be Too Sure.

Don’t Be Too Sure.

#3. Immediately acknowledge every order you receive via first class mail!

Pound-for-pound, penny-for-penny, this is the most profitable point in all your communications with your customers. But profit is not the issue here. No. The issue here is staying out of trouble. And, believe me, nobody represents more “trouble potential” than a customer who has sent in his hard-earned money and feels it has disappeared down a rathole because no one ever bothered to confirm or acknowledge his order.

#4. Fill all orders as fast as you can!

Both times I got in trouble with the post office, it was because of unfilled orders. Had the orders been filled and filled promptly the ads and letters would most probably never been questioned. Whether a certain statement in an ad or letter is deceptive is often subjective. However, there is nothing subjective about an unfilled order.

You either did or you didn’t and, if you didn’t, you are begging for trouble.

#5. immediately give a refund to anyone who wants one!

Stop screwing around with this. If you say you’ll give refunds, do it and do it promptly. If you don’t one day you may end up with a problem that can no longer be solved even if you do finally decide to make refunds. The problem I’m talking about, of course, is the one where you become a convicted felon.

#6. immediately answer all your white mail!

“White mail” is any written correspondence from a customer that does not contain an order; like requests for more info, requests for refunds, inquiries from BBBs and government agencies, etc.

Failure to communicate can lead to a loss of ability to communicate like, for example, when you’re locked up.

#7. don’t rub your wealth in other people’s faces!

Showing off is one of the “perks” of being a success. However, I’d like to suggest you avoid trying to impress people who are losers. Losers are bitter, frustrated people who are constantly looking for new people to blame for their failures. And, if their bitterness becomes too intense and their focus settles on you, only trouble can result.

Go ahead and drive your Rolls to a meeting of the Young Millionaires Club but beware parking in the K-Mart lot.

#8. don’t trust your life to a lawyer!

I don’t care if he’s your brother, your father or you spouse. It seems to me that almost all lawyers are forced to have an “ethical bypass” operation as soon as they pass the bar. Question: What show has the most ridiculous premise of all shows on network TV? Answer: L.A. Law. L.A. Law always has a bunch of lawyers sitting around discussing lofty ethical considerations.

Are you kidding? That’s not what lawyers sit around and gab about. No way. What they truly concern themselves with is…

Milking Money
From Misery!

But what’s the alternative? Well, what I suggest is, in addition to your lawyer, you get some “reality oriented” advice from someone who has already suffered through whatever legal problems you currently have. Believe me, you can get more sound advice from a few intelligent ex-cons than all the lawyers in the world.

Hey, you want to know how you can tell when your lawyer is lying? That’s easy. It’s when his lips are moving.

#9. keep yourself healthy!

If you pump a little iron and run three or four miles a day, you’ll unconsciously give off a different class of vibes that signal you’re not a vulnerable wounded fish and easy prey for all the two-legged sharks of the world.

#10. keep your sense of humor!

You think I’ve had it hard? Don’t be silly. What I’ve endured is nothing compared to a kid born with AIDS, a man who has lost his family in an air disaster or any of a jillion other things that millions of people endure bravely every day of their lives.

Look, if history is any guide, none of us are gonna get out of this mess alive so we may as well have a few laughs along the way.

Want to know when you finally realize it really has happened and you really are incarcerated? It’s when that big, ugly, muscle-bound guy across the hall informs you he thinks you’re “cute.”

Want to know when you know you’ve done too much time? It’s when you’re glad he thinks you’re cute!

Thank God I wasn’t in long enough to get to the second stage but, I’ll tell you, I learned what it means to really miss your woman and I remembered why my nickname used to be “Goat Glands Gary.”

Enough. Someone once said every man’s life has value if for nothing else than to be used as a bad example. Maybe that’s me. You’re a dumb bunny if you follow my footsteps. Instead, let me serve you another way…

Let Me Be Your
Bad Example!
Sincerely,

Gary C. Halbert
Ex-Con

P.S. Are you one of those people who take chances because going to “Club Fed” sounds like a vacation to you? Trust me, there are a few things about it you won’t like. For example, do you have a tendency to befoul the atmosphere and make funny little noises when you use the bathroom?

How wonderful! Just think, when you go to Club Fed you can “share” those quaint little personal eccentricities with dozens of other people everyday who will be going to the bathroom with you! And gosh, you can also enjoy all their quaint little personal bathroom habits.

Are you someone who values your privacy? Hmn? I wonder how you’re going to like it when some hack tells you to “bend over and spread ‘em” so he can explore your most private bodily cavity with this flashlight.

And don’t think that, just because Club Fed is a camp, it only has white collar felons. That’s not the case. There are also bank robbers, drug dealers, blackmailers, contract killers and many, plain old garden variety murderers.

Oh yeah, and there’s one more bad thing about Club Fed.

You Can’t Leave!

P.P.S. On the other hand, I think going to Club Fed was easily the most valuable experience of my life. One of the reasons is that, in a perverse way, it set me free. One day I was jogging and I suddenly realized I felt much lighter. Why? Because of lack of guilt. You see, I figured that serving time for something of which I was not morally guilty made me even. It made up for all those library books I never returned, the teenage girls after whom I lusted and I was even able to forgive myself for all those times I drove while drinking for which, in my opinion, I really deserved to go to prison.

Sometimes life evens things up, doesn’t it?

For more of Gary’s articles visit http://www.thegaryhalbertletter.com/newsletter-archives.htm

and you can visit Bond’s site here: http://bondhalbert.com/

Filed under copywriting, Gary Halbert, marketing by on #

Last week I interviewed Arfa Saira Iqbal about her High-Paid Expert program. I mean with a name like that you got to know what it really is, right?

On the surface, the title seems to imply exactly what it means. But titles can be misleading.

This is what J.F. (Jim) Straw said about it:

“The information appears to be right on target… “

And if you know J.F., you’ll know he doesn’t say things he doesn’t mean.

Check out what Arfa said:

What is a High-Paid Expert?

A high-paid expert is someone who is an expert in their field and provides solutions to their client’s most pressing problems. They’re able to command premium fees with little resistance. High-paid experts don’t charge for their services based on price, but always on the value they give to their clients. So as a consultant, rather than charging by the hour for your services, you’ll command a value fee for your services based on the problems you solve for your clients and the solutions you provide them.

Show me an example of what High-Paid Expert is?

When you compare yourself to similar consultants in your field who might for example charge $100 an hour, you’ll instead charge a premium for enrolling clients into your programs and offerings. Programs can be 90 day, 6 month, 9 month or 12 month programs where clients have access to your expertise in exchange for an investment. You might for example charge $20,000 for your 12 month program with monthly training calls and strategy sessions rather than charging per session. The more access a client has to you in your programs, the greater the level of investment your client will make.

In other words, you’ll change the way you work because not only will you work less hours and earn more money with fewer clients, but you’ll eliminate your competition as you become the trusted authority in your industry and the natural choice to work with for your clients. You’re no longer offering a ‘cookie cutter’ approach to solving problems, instead you’re providing meaningful solutions your clients want and need to help them get out of being stuck and overwhelmed.

Who is this not for and why?

This is not for those consultants or coaches who are stuck in the ‘dollars for hours’ model and under-earning – but see that as perfectly acceptable to be stuck in that place. For some reason, being stuck is somehow serving them and the general problem I’ve found is that if you have to drag them into your program, you’ll have to drag them around. You’ll also have to listen to a lot of excuses.

I don’t buy excuses because really, when a potential client is clearly stuck and unwilling to move forward and do something about their situation, it’s usually fear or second guessing me and my ability to help them which is holding them back and preventing them from getting the results they want to achieve. Maybe they fear doing things differently, maybe the fear is around money and not having enough of it. The problem with that is you can afford anything if you really want it – and as my mentor tells me all the time, you can’t run out of money, you can only run out of ideas.

Potential clients who make excuses for being stuck are generally the hardest clients to deal with – they’re the ones that will pick a 100 different holes in what you say or advise and never really fully commit to your program. These types of clients also love to blame others when things don’t work out and will blame the strategist rather than looking at where they failed to take action.

I only work with clients who understand that to achieve success, they have to be willing to take a leap of faith and be open and willing to learn. More importantly, they MUST be willing to step up and take action to get the results they want and need.

How can I get started?

To make it easy for you, I encourage you to attend my FREE teleseminar series: ‘9 Ways To Attract High-Paying Clients, Command Premium Fees and Rapidly Accelerate Your Income.’ in which I’ll share with you the exact elements you need to put into your business right now to become a high-paid expert. You’ll leave the session energized and with a clear picture of where your business is lacking and what you need to do to right now to step up and become the high-paid expert you’re meant to be.

The teleseminar will be held over two days – Monday 28th May 2012 and Tuesday 29th May 2012 at 9am EST/2pm GMT and you can sign up for it here: www.arfasaira.com (Special offer for readers of The Marketing Sleuth – quote Rezbi500 for a $500 discount).

I promise you’re going to get incredible results from this training series because it’s going to create a major shift in how you see yourself and how you do your business. If you don’t take away anything else from this teleseminar series, you’ll at least stop trying to compete with other consultants based on price and stop having to worry about serving hundreds of clients to hit your money goals.

Now believe you me, that’s going to be a big shift in your business model and will definitely make your life so much easier. And if you can’t be on the calls, don’t worry – I’ve got you covered. You’ll get full access to the recording, so there’s no way you’ll miss out on the juicy advice I’m going to share with you.

Well, there you have it. A High-Paid Expert in a nutshell.

Best,

Rezbi

www.arfasaira.com

As a special saving for readers of The Marketing Sleuth, if you feel inspired to work with Arfa and become a high-paid expert in your industry, simply quote Rezbi500 for a $500 saving on her High Paid Expert Program – but you’ll have to attend the teleseminar to find out how you can qualify for her program.

 

Filed under marketing, Motivational by on #

Ten Tips For Getting Traffic Through Social Media
By Jimmy D. Brown of Traffic F.U.E.L.

Here then are 10 tips for using social media to drive traffic to your sites…

1. Complete your profile.

When you first open your Twitter, Facebook, Squidoo or other social media site account, fill out your profile (including a picture). Doing so makes it easier for people to get to know you and build relationships with you, which will make it more likely they’ll click through to your site.

2. Interact.

Social sites are, by definition, social. They’re two way streets (not monologues). That’s why you shouldn’t just post content and move on. Instead, spend a few minutes each day interacting and getting to know people in your network.

3. Include a link to your site on your profile page.

This tip is simple but effective: Give people a reason to click through from the social media site to your blog or squeeze page. A promise of a free solution usually makes for a good enticement.

4. Ask your followers to “retweet” and repost.

If you create a “buzzworthy” post (such as a post on a hot or even controversial niche topic), as your Twitter followers to “retweet” it and ask your other social media networks to repost it.

5. Spend time each day growing your network.

Commit to spending at least 10 minutes each day growing your network. You’ll see big results by the end of the month. And you’ll be amazed at the size of your network in six months or a year from now.

6. Link your social site pages together.

Link your Twitter account to your Facebook, MySpace, Squidoo, HubPages and other social media pages. And vice versa.

7. Use your real name so that you’re easy to find.

People who want to do business with you won’t respond well to working with “BaseballBoy72.” Instead, build trust by using your real name. Doing so also makes it easier for others to find you on Facebook and similar sites.

8. Post good content.

Social media is not just about networking, it’s also about sharing information. If you share some of your best information with your network, you’ll get respect, trust… and more sales. Plus you’ll establish yourself as a niche expert.

9. Optimize some of your content.

Some social sites (such as Yahoo! Answers and Squidoo) get crawled and indexed regularly by the search engines. As such, you may consider optimizing some of your content for the search engines by including relevant (longtail) keywords two or three times for every 100 words of content.

10. Get the most benefit for your time.

Instead of trying to interact and build relationships with thousands of prospects, consider building a relationship with a handful of partners. That’s because just one good partner can send you hundreds or thousands of prospects and customers.

In summary: Social media is only expected to grow in the future – and now is the best time to get involved if you’d like to grow your business right along with it. You can start today by applying the ten traffic-generating, relationship-building tips you just discovered!

—————–
Jimmy D. Brown is the publisher of Traffic Jam newsletter and the owner of Traffic F.U.E.L. membership site. Drop by today to learn how to get completely free traffic to any website. Get your free traffic newsletter at http://directanddigitalmarketing.com/trafficfuel/

Filed under Advertise, Blogs, marketing, Traffic by on #

How To Get Others To Promote You NOW
By Jimmy D. Brown of Traffic F.U.E.L.

See if you can spot the similarity.

What do the following three statements have in common?

1. I can’t do it right now, but maybe later.
2. I’ve already got my mailings scheduled.
3. Let me get back to you.

Got the similarity spotted?

These are all typical responses that most people get when asking partners and affiliates to promote their offers.

Chances are you’ve gotten answers much like these, right?

Don’t despair … there are ways around the barriers of reluctance and passiveness.

Let me share some simple ideas for getting affiliates to take action on your promotions quickly. I use the acronym “N.O.W.” to describe three ways to get others to promote you now…

N – News

In journalism, no one wants to be “scooped” when it comes to newsworthy items. Sharing some big story that another network or publication broke days ago is a big “no-no”. You always want to be first when it comes to getting the word out.

That same philosophy applies to what I’ve labeled “The Principle of First”. The idea is simple: being “first to market” aids in responses. Those who let their contacts know about your news promptly will generate the greatest results. If they wait, someone else will break the news.

So, to apply this principle, you simply need to create some newsworthy buzz that your affiliates and partners can’t pass up on sharing with their network of influence.

**CASE STUDY**

Several months ago I decided that I was going to remove the archives from one of my membership sites. This announcement served as a strong motivator to get my affiliates to promote my site promptly before someone else did. The result was almost 500 new members paying monthly fees!

If you make dramatic changes to your offer, or create some other kind of “story” or “news” that warrants discussion promptly, you’ll find you can get many fence-setters active in promoting you.

O – Occasions

Another great way to motivate affiliates to get active is to use “occasions” that have a real deadline involved.

Some examples include –

* Product launches
* Firesales
* Live events (teleseminars, workshops, etc.)
* Contests
* Special offers
* Limited quantities

This is what might be referred to as “The Principle Of Force”. That is, you MUST promote the offer now or miss out simply because the offer will no longer be valid. You “force” participation.

For example: If you have a 3-day “firesale” set for a specific date, then anyone interested in earning commissions for referring customers to the “firesale” would be “forced” to promote it during your pre-determined timeframe or they’d miss out because the event will end.

My recommendation is that you schedule some kind of “occasion” every quarter. That should give you four significant spikes in your revenue each year, which can be a tremendous boost to your bottom line.

W – Wants

What do your partners and affiliates want? Seriously, stop and think about that for a moment. In fact, go one step further than that and ASK them a simple question…“What would it take for you to promote this offer this week?”

Make it happen.

I want you to remember the intangibles here: the sales of your initial offer aren’t really all that important. (Don’t freak out, hear what I have to say :-) It’s building a lead list, an affiliate list and a customer list along with ADDITIONAL offers over time that makes the real money.

Consider this –

Option A:

Miss Ima Guru ignores your request to promote your offer as it currently stands.

Option B:

Miss Ima Guru accepts your modified offer which includes giving her 100% of the revenue she generates. You make nothing off her promotion…but in the process of her promotion she adds 500 new subscribers to your list, 75 new affiliates and 60 new customers.

Which would you rather have?

Whatever it takes to get people to promote your offer now, make it happen.

*** NOTE ***

Now, let me make a simple suggestion here: The deal you make should be directly proportional to the potential results the partner represents.

Some affiliates and partners bring more to the table and sshould be offered more in order to get them to participate.

That being said, you can get virtually any affiliate to promote you now if you make it worth their while. So, ask them, “what will it take?”

This is what I call “The Principle Of Fear”. That is, a feeling of “This is such a compelling offer, I can’t afford to miss out on this deal.”

All of this adds up to more involvement and participation among your affiliates and partners…

N – News +
O – Occasions +
W – Wants =
——————-
Other people promoting you NOW!

—————–
Jimmy D. Brown is the publisher of Traffic Jam newsletter and the owner of Traffic F.U.E.L. membership site.  Drop by today to learn how to get completely free traffic to any website.  Get your free traffic newsletter at http://directanddigitalmarketing.com/trafficfuel/

Filed under advertising, Blog, Traffic by on #

How To Get An Instant Traffic Surge To Your Site
By Jimmy D. Brown of Traffic F.U.E.L.

There’s no question that building an affiliate program is THE best way to get a lot of free traffic to your web site.

And, if you spend any amount of time at all reading through the materials here, you’ll find a lot of useful ideas for finding affiliates to grow your program.

But, here is an affiliate idea that will absolutely take your traffic and sales to the next level.

Let me give it to you in it’s abbreviated form first, and then I’ll explain everything you need to know to quickly get it implemented.

You ready for this?

Here goes…

“Find a motivated ‘affiliate manager’ and pay them 50% of all your profits”

Now, I know what you’re thinking – why in the world would I pay someone HALF of all of my profit?

I’m about to explain it to you. And believe me, this is worth the read, so pay careful attention to what I’m about to explain to you.

This is good.

It works like this…

Setup a separate website to process orders.

To begin with, you’ll need to setup a separate website to process all of the orders that your “affiliate manager” brings in (along with all sales generated by the affiliates he recruits for you)

In other words, you register a new domain that is similar to the title of your existing domain, and you host that site.nt for processing all of the orders and managing your new affiliate program that your “manager” will be overseeing.

This is a completely separate account from your existing one. All orders generated through this account will be completely brought in by your affiliate manager and affiliates / partners he recruits.

Now, obviously, your affiliate manager will want to monitor sales stats to see how much profit is being generated to this Clickbank account. You’ve got two options for how you allow your affiliate manager access…

Get full access to the control panel. Your first option is to allow your affiliate manager complete access to the control panel at Clickbank in order to monitor stats. I highly recommend that you ONLY do this if your affiliate manager is someone you know well and find completely trustworthy. Once someone has access to your Clickbank account, they can, in effect, take control of the account. Use this option with extreme caution.

Give email access and screenshots. The other option is to setup a forwarding email address that sends the sales notifications from Clickbank to both of your email accounts. This will allow your affiliate manager to get notified when any sale is generated so they can verify sales and profits. Additionally, at the end of each pay period, you could take screenshots of the Clickbank control panel or scan the check you receive from Clickbank when sending your affiliate manager’s half of the profits received.em on to your affiliate manager to use with the affiliates he has recruited for the separate program.

Hint: Encourage him to create his own unique materials, incentives, and contests for his own affiliates as well!

What an incredible traffic-generation idea!

You get…

* 50% of all profits from this separate site!

* A growing database of affiliates!

* A growing opt-in list!

All in all, this is one of THE best ways to grow your business … without lifting a finger!

—————–
Jimmy D. Brown is the publisher of Traffic Jam newsletter and the owner of Traffic F.U.E.L. membership site. Drop by today to learn how to get completely free traffic to any website. Get your free traffic newsletter at http://directanddigitalmarketing.com/trafficfuel/

Filed under Blog, blogging, Traffic, website by on #

On a small table next to my desk I have four books: Social media marketing for dummies; Digital marketing for dummies; Web marketing for dummies and Starting an online business for dummies.

On the desk in front of me I have Branding your business, by James Hammond (who’ll be contributing to this site, by the way).

I have other books on my desk and the table. And loads more on my shelves.

But there’s a specific reason I mention these five. Is it because I’m a dummy and the fit is perfect? Maybe.

But here’s another reason: They’re all from the library.

Am I a cheap sod?

Hardly.

I’ve spent over £30,000 over the past few years learning about marketing and copywriting.

The point is, if you lack cash, there’s no need to buy books.

But that’s not the real point, either.

The real point is, in the library there are tons of books we can read to educate ourselves… and learn to do what we want to do… before we do them.

And that’s the key.

Study.

These books may be for dummies, but they turn dummies like me into… well… dummies with a little more knowledge.

But I bet you could use that knowledge right now to achieve a heck of a lot more.

And, if you put your mind to it, you could read each book over a weekend.

Five weekends five books.

And tons more knowledge you can put to use in your business.

Enough for now: I need more knowledge.

Best,
Rezbi
www.hotbuttoncopywriting.com

 

Filed under copywriting, Education, marketing by on #

0

Have you heard of Denny Hatch? He wrote ‘Million Dollar Mailing$’.

And now Denny’s come out with a new book. I won’t bore you with what I think of it.

Here, check out a little of what’s inside the book:

1. Advertising

“Advertising is, actually, a simple phenomenon in terms of economics. It is merely a substitute for a personal sales force — an extension, if you will, of the merchant who cries aloud his wares.” —Rosser Reeves
………………
“Advertising is salesmanship in print.” —John E. Kennedy
………………
Here’s the secret of successful advertising: interrupting what’s going on in the front of a prospect’s brain with headline, graphics, copy and action that seize upon a lurking fear or desire and exploiting it.
………………
“It is easier to write passably effective sonnets than one effective advertisement.” —Aldous Huxley

“Every man is constantly holding a mental conversation with himself, and the burden of that conversation is himself — his interests, his loved ones his business, his advancement.” —Robert Collier
………………
These self- conversations are frequently interrupted: a baby crying, a kitchen timer going off, a dog barking, someone at the front door, a fire engine going by, a piece of direct mail or catalog, a TV infomercial or a
telemarketing call.

If the marketing effort is dull … if it does not interrupt and keep on interrupting… the interruption is interrupted … and we resume the conversation with ourselves. The marketer has lost money. If you can capture the prospect’s attention, it is imperative to hold it. Once the proposition is laid aside, chances are very high no action will be taken.
………………
“Advertising is the greatest art form of the 20th century.” —Marshall McLuhan

If your mailing piece or ad sends responders to your website, create a special URL that takes them to a page directly relating to the message that they have just seen. Many marketers simply list the generic home page, whereupon responders are consigned to roaming around Landing Page Limbo, and you have lost the order, donation or inquiry.

When was the last time you took a critical look at your home page/ landing page? Does that dog hunt? Or have so many people screwed around with it that it has become Landing Page Limbo?

Do your email promotions have a viral marketing option (e.g., “Please forward to a friend or colleague who may be interested in this opportunity.”)?

Do you have an action device where it’s obvious how to reply? Is it easy to reach a real person at your shop — either by email or phone? If not, why not?

38. Employee, Being One

“Become indispensable — take on jobs other people don’t want to do.” —Ivanka Trump
………………
“According to a 2009 Proofpoint study of 220 leaders at American companies with over 1,000 employees, 38 percent employ staff to read or otherwise analyze the content of outgoing email, compared to 29 percent  last year.

Why the big increase in surveillance? 34 percent said their businesses had been affected by the exposure of sensitive or embarrassing information, up from 23 percent in 2008.” —The Daily Stat, Harvard Business Publishing
………………
Emails are forever. Even though you have deleted or trashed an email, it lives — somewhere in your own  computer and/or in the company server and/or out in the Internet.

“‘Companies that do use email to notify employees that they’ve been laid off or fired “do it because it’s easy,’ said Frank Kenna, president and CEO of Marlin. ‘It’s not the right way to handle it,’ he said, especially for situations where a worker is being fired.” —Marianne Kolbasuk McGee
………………
Getting fired is never easy, even if you see it coming. But when a dismissal borders on insulting, it becomes the stuff of legends. —Sarah E. Needleman

46. Humor in Advertising

“Is your copy funny or cute? (Avoid humor at all costs.)” —Milt Pierce
………………
“For the Tufts School of Veterinary Medicine’s newsletter, Your Dog, I wrote a letter from the dean of the veterinary school emphasizing the credentials and expertise of their canine authorities. Then I added a second lift note — from a dog! — explaining why dogs hate the newsletter. (It makes their owners too knowledgeable, and teaches owners how to break dogs’ bad habits!)

Humor is usually risky, but in this case, proved highly effective. It added significantly to the strength of this control.” —Barbara Harrison

Note: Barbara Harrison used humor in a peripheral element — the lift note. It wasn’t the main piece of the effort.
………………
But cleverness and humor, traditionally, have no place in direct marketing. If the reader says, “My, isn’t this clever” or “Oh, how funny!” the thread of the argument is lost and so is the sale.

“Don’t use humor.” —Craig Huey

“Don’t be cute. Your advertisement can entertain a million readers — and not sell one of them.” —Andrew J. Byrne

“Your job is to sell, not entertain.” —Jack Maxson

• Be careful about cutting people, which are the most important assets. They can help you through tough times; they know your history. If you lose people now, when things pick up, you’ll have to hire new people and train them, which will impact productivity.

• Survival comes first.
………………
“People use the word ‘guru,’ because the word ‘charlatan’ is so hard to spell.” —Peter Drucker
………………
“Be a people person. Answer your own phone. Wander around the ballpark. Be at the gate to say good night to people.” —Bill Veeck
………………
“You’ll never have to apologize for giving people some fun.” —Bill Veeck, who sent 3-foot-7 stunt man Eddie Gaedel to pinch hit for the Cleveland Browns in 1951

62. Marketing

“Always underpromise and overdeliver.” —Marilyn Black
………………
“Marketing is only as good as the supporting infrastructure.”
—Dick Benson
………………
Creating a product or service is easy. It’s the marketing that’s difficult, time-consuming and expensive.

Put another way: It’s easy to make a football. Getting it into the end zone is tough.

With any new business — or existing business — start with the customer and work backwards from there.
————————————————————————————–
For more about Denny Hatch visit his site
here www.hotbuttoncopywriting.com
————————————————————————————–

73. Murphy’s Law

According to numerous websites, Edwards Air Force Base was the site of the birth of Murphy’s Law. (“If anything can go wrong, it will.”)

In 1949, Capt. Edward A. Murphy was a project engineer who discovered a transducer wrongly wired. He said of the technician who was responsible for the goof, “If there is any way to do it wrong, he’ll find it.”

Murphy’s comment was noted, and he became world famous. Other laws:

  • Nothing is as easy as it looks.
  • Everything takes longer than you think.
  • Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
  • If there is a possibility of several things going wrong, the one that will cause the most damage will be the one to go wrong.
  • Corollary: If there is a worse time for something to go wrong, it will happen then.
  • If anything simply cannot go wrong, it will anyway.
  • If you perceive that there are four possible ways in which a procedure can go wrong, and circumvent these, then a fifth way, unprepared for, will promptly develop.
  • Left to themselves, things tend to go from bad to worse.
  • If everything seems to be going well, you have obviously overlooked something.
  • Nature always sides with the hidden flaw.
  • Mother Nature is a bitch.
  • It is impossible to make anything foolproof because fools are so ingenious.
  • Whenever you set out to do something, something else must be done first.
  • Every solution breeds new problems.

………………
“Corollary to Murphy’s Law: Everything takes twice as long as you think it will take — and then double that. Everything costs twice as much as you think it will cost — and then double that.” —Irvin Borowsky

Before taking such action, think through every possible scenario and potential collateral damage.
………………
“Very often the art of public relations is the art of private relations.” —Albert Lasker

85. Public Speaking

“PowerPoint makes us stupid.” —Gen. James N. Mattis

“Power corrupts. PowerPoint corrupts absolutely.” —Edward Tufte

Many (inept) speakers use PowerPoint badly. They fill the screen with small type that can be read only by people sitting in the front row, and they proceed to read their speech off the screen.

A read speech is a dead speech.

If you do use PowerPoint, limit the amount of text on the screen, and make it large enough for those in the last row to read.

Obey the 10-20-30 Rule of PowerPoint: no more than 10 slides, no more than 20 minutes and no type smaller than 30 point.
………………
People come to a presentation to listen and take notes, not to read along with the speaker.
………………
President Obama uses the invisible glass Teleprompter system on the right and left side of the podium, so eye contact with the audience can be maintained while the speech is being read. I am not sure if he has a printed speech on the podium as a back-up, but most likely he does.

President George W. Bush and members of his administration were “Of my two ‘handicaps’ being female put more obstacles in my path than being black.” —Shirley Chisholm

“Remember no one can make you feel inferior without your consent.” —Eleanor Roosevelt

“I have learned over the years that when one’s mind is made up, this diminishes fear; knowing what must be done does away with fear.” —Rosa Parks
………………
“I do the very best I can to look upon life with optimism and hope and looking forward to a better day, but I don’t think there is anything such as complete happiness. It pains me that there is still a lot of Klan activity and racism. I think when you say you’re happy, you have everything that you need and everything that you want, and nothing more to wish for. I haven’t reached that stage yet.” —Rosa Parks

99. Writing

Below are Ted Nicholas’ four rules I follow when I start to prepare copy.

1. Clear your mind. For some persons, this might mean lying down for a few minutes before going to work. For others, it could mean jumping in the pool or jogging around a track. Frolic, spend time with someone you love or go dancing. Do whatever comes naturally to you in order to have a clear mind for creative purposes.

2. Never write when you’re tired. You’re not going to try to drive or operate machinery when you’re tired.

3. Never write when you’re busy. If there are other demands pressing on you, tend to them first. I don’t think anyone can write well when they are watching the clock. Don’t try to write if you have appointments later in the day or errands to run.

4. Don’t write in bits and pieces. Once you’ve turned on your creative energy, you need to keep it flowing. I don’t stop until I complete a draft. I try not to stop even for meals.

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Best,
Rezbi
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