Hereâs a fantastical story about writing ridiculously profitable ads for you: Many years ago Michael Senoff interviewed a guy (Michael Samonek) about his insanely popular (promoted all over the Food Network at the time) book about special effects recipes that move, and smoke, and do crazy stuff, that he sold primarily via direct response and media publicity. And, at the start he talked about his main copywriting inspiration: Comicbooks. He said he just got fascinated by how the ads in those comics (pre 1990âs, when they were all direct response, before they started accepting boring corporate advertising) got into his soul and knew exactly what he wanted, even if he didnât even know it at the time. I suspect a lot of old school comicbook fans can relate. Those ads were sometimes BETTER than the content around them â more fascinating, more exciting, and more interesting. Mail-order millionaires were sometimes made from a single ad at the time. But, you may wonder, exactly how did they crawl right into your soul? Well, it went way beyond just âcopywriting.â In fact, the writing isnât even all that great in a lot of them. Look at the ridiculously popular Sea-Monkeys ads. We ain't exactly talking Caples, Halbert, or Bencivenga-level copy. To understand what they were doing, you have to put yourself in the shoes of the average comic book reader at the time: introverted & awkward teenager who is an outcast and total âgirl repellantâ â scrawny, bullied, lived in his own head, thinks of himself as the damned amongst his peers going on dates and getting girlfriends⦠and using comicbooks as escapism to experience what it was like to be tall, powerful, and superhuman, and not so timid, awkeward, and afraid of his own shadow. So he's reading these comicbooks about people with superpowers. And amongst these stories about people with super powers are ads. But these ads did not just promise âbEnEFiTs!â like lesser copy solely focuses on. No, these ads promised something quite different. Something far better. Something literally irresistible no matter how bull shyt the ads sounded. And what these ads promised the tortured, scrawny, âgirl-repellantâ yutes was: Super powers! * X-ray vision (like Superman!) glasses. * Skinny-to-muscular (like the Hulk!) overnight programs. * Long-lost ancient secrets from the Orient (like Iron Fist!) to kick ass. * How to grow taller (like Hank Pym!) * Pets (Sea-Monkeys!) that live in a little underwater magical kingdom. * How to impress people with magic (Dr. Strange!) tricks. * And even how to control other peoplesâ minds (like Professor X!), become a ârockstar-levelâ guitarist (like KISS!) in 7-days, perform strong man stunts (like The Thing!), become rich (like Bruce Wayne!) selling newspapers⦠to becoming a secret agent with a spy camera (like James Bond!) - and all for just a postage stamp plus $1.00 for shipping! Totally irresistible. Anyway, they make great case studies for marketers. Dan Kennedy ainât just whistlinâ dixie when he says: âWhat works to sell the incredible, sells even better to sell the credible.â Which brings me to the November Email Players issue. It teaches a cool approach (not a checklist of "tips") to ethically & legitimately exploit this sort of phenomenon Iâve been using for many years but that I have never really seen anyone teach to potentially get your business all kinds of new new sales, engagement, prestige, deals, clients, attention, respect, and the list goes on. It all depends on you, how you use it, and your kind of business. And the more stuffy and boring the business, probably the better itâll work. I canât really say for sure though. As, again, I have yet to really see anyone teach this force of persuasion & influence in any kind of depth, even if I have seen various marketers use it over the years. Really, it did not even occur to me to teach it until last year when preparing the launch emails for my Markauteur book. And I believe once you see this, you wonât be able to âun-seeâ it. I also donât think youâll be satisfied with NOT doing it in your own marketing. Just my guess. I wonât know until my Email Players of the Horde start using it. On that note: The deadline to subscribe in time for this issue is tomorrow. To get in while the gettinâs good, use this link immediately: [httpsâ¶//www.EmailPlayers.com]( Ben Settle This email was sent by Ben Settle as owner of Settle, LLC. Copyright © 2023 Settle, LLC. All Rights Reserved. No part of this email may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without written permission from Settle, LLC. Click here to
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