Are Product Launches Peddling For Profits?


Used car salesmanAfter participating in a recent product launch (something I very rarely do), our Platinum Group was discussing the issue and I wanted to share those insights with you.

Considering the recent hysteria behind the massive Apple iPad launch, it got me thinking about how most Internet marketers conduct their product launches.

Most of them work because they’re based on basic human psychology. But I believe people who do use it do it poorly.

In fact, I think they do so because the strategy, particularly as it applies to Internet marketing and digital products specifically, is inherently flawed. What I mean is, in order for it to work — and work well — it must rely on three major factors:

  1. Anticipation
  2. Social proof
  3. Scarcity/urgency

Granted, you can manufacture these. And when you sell Internet, digital, or information products, you have to. Why? Because these products are, or are seen as, limitless.

And therein lies the rub…

The best and most profitable launches in history didn’t rely on any of these. At least, not in a direct way. Sure, these factors do play a huge role in most successful launches. But they occur almost as natural byproducts. They are not manufactured.

And that’s exactly what iPad did for their launch day. They used #1 (anticipation) and #2 (social proof). But they didn’t use #3. In other words, they launched without the need to create or promote any kind of manufactured scarcity.

Why? Because they didn’t need to.

Obviously, iPad is a physical product, which is naturally limited. That scarcity was made even greater on launch day because of #1 and #2. In other words, they didn’t have to “close their doors” and reopen them at some later date to create scarcity.

Granted, Apple may have limited their in-store stocks on launch day to create more demand. I don’t know. And they did a lot more. Seth Godin shares a few others. But I’m referring to the product launch strategy’s three major factors specifically.

My point here is, natural scarcity or creating a genuine sense of urgency — better said, possessing or projecting one — will trump a manufactured one. Every time.

Manufactured scarcity appears self-centered, questionable, and suspicious. When you look at how the FTC, Visa/MasterCard, Google, and now Facebook — with its recent slap — frown upon generated scarcity, you know people are lashing out against the practice.

When Jobs introduced the upcoming iPad, it created a ton of anticipation. With the iPhone being as popular as it was, news generated inherent social proof since people already had experiences with the iPhone.

But there’s more to it than that.

Apple created genuine scarcity because they have strong brand recognition, are well positioned, and have a history of delivering solid products with great value. They didn’t have to poach other people’s lists, create sales contests, or use high-pressure tactics.

Now, I’m not saying joint ventures, sales contests, and manufactured scarcity are wrong. But if you keep using them, product launch after product launch, then chances are you will be be seen as nothing more than a salesman. A slick, smarmy, snake-oil peddler.

(That’s not just my opinion, either.)

Apple didn’t create demand, which is why they didn’t need to manufacture scarcity. Whether the product was a physical one didn’t matter. To paraphrase Gene Schwartz in Breakthrough Advertising, “They didn’t create demand, they merely channeled it.”

Speaking of channeling demand, let’s look at some of the differences.

When I used to teach marketing management in college, there are two schools of thought in marketing. One is called the pull strategy, and the other the push strategy.

What do they mean? With the push marketing strategy, you are pushing the product through distribution channels. A “channel” can be, for instance:

Manufacturerarrow rightDistributorarrow rightStorearrow rightConsumer

In Internet Marketing and with downloadable products, the channel looks more like this:

Seller/Vendorarrow rightWebsite (eStore/Delivery)arrow rightConsumer

The push strategy is the one most often used by salespeople, infomercials, direct response advertisers, and direct marketers. And, obviously, Internet marketers, too.

The pull strategy, on the other hand, is where reputation and recognition generate awareness and demand. And that demand pulls the product through the distribution channel — thus requiring a lot less legwork, and a lot less need to sell. For example:

Consumerarrow rightStorearrow rightDistributorarrow rightManufacturer

Now, let me put this in a better perspective for you.

Ostensibly, a push strategy can make a lot of money. There’s no denying that. That’s how many marketers make their “millions,” particularly via these massive product launch parades. Problem is, you have to constantly push products to stay afloat.

Sadly, this constant need to push products creates that unflattering “salesman” stigma, where most Internet marketers are largely seen as peddlers and not businesses.

In order to stay alive — or to maintain their standard of living — most Internet marketers need to constantly create new products, make new offers, and seek new “addicts” to push their products onto. (Sounds dangerously close to drug dealers, doesn’t it?)

That’s why most of them churn and burn their lists.

If they stop pushing more products, there is no business.

That’s why Sylvie and I call them “serial drive-by marketers.”

If you use a pull strategy, or complement your existing push strategy with a strong pull strategy, you will work a lot less. The rest will almost take care of itself. The business will keep going, no matter what. And above all, there will be less of that peddler stigma.

What constitutes a strong pull strategy?

Aside from offering in-demand products and solid value, there’s positioning, brand recognition, business identity, good customer service, a loyal fan base, authority in your field, and strong relationships with your customers and prospects. Just to name a few.

(Sure, there are more than that. But how many Internet marketers use any of them? Very little. For example, how many online salesletters have you seen with a logo? ‘Nuff said.)

Think of it this way: there’s a difference between the pawn-shop mentality and the retail store mentality. The former constantly needs products on its shelves to sell to stay alive. But the latter doesn’t need new products to sell. (And by “new” I mean “more.”)

Rather, retail stores need traffic. Consumers. Markets. People with needs. You simply create products to fill needs, not create needs (such as using fake scarcity) so you can shove your products down people’s throats during some big, limited product launch.

In other words, we need to think more like a retail store than like a pawn shop.

Now, I’m not saying we need to become like Wal-Mart or some other big box store. And we don’t need to focus on branding alone, or to advertise via some upscale, big budget, Madison Avenue advertising firm like many big brand stores do. No, not at all.

But we need to think like Wal-Mart.

We need to think like an Internet marketing business instead of like a peddler.

How would you feel if, upon entering your local Wal-Mart, they only had one product available at any given time? Or they had limited quantities of a product you know well and good wasn’t limited? Or they used high-pressure, time-sensitive tactics to sell you?

Sadly, most Internet marketers conduct their business like pawn shops. I’m not saying we should stop using direct response. Direct marketing, particularly for small businesses, is essential. But it should complement a good business strategy. Not replace it.

How great would it be if you sold products like crazy simply because people asked? How great would it be if you never had to sell or use any kind of manufactured scarcity to sell? And how much more money would you make, especially over the long term?

Bottom line, start focusing on creating long-term, solid businesses rather making serialized promotions for subpar products with time-limited, over-the-top product launches that at best merely provide short-term cash injections.

Something to think about.

By the way, if you’re interested in how to become a recognized authority, and position yourself and your business in a way that generates authentic demand and scarcity, then I encourage you to come to next week’s Authority Event in Charlotte, North Carolina.

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Are Product Launches Peddling For Profits? originally appeared on The Michel Fortin Blog. Please visit to subscribe to it, or Tweet This.


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How to Become a Recognized Authority


Michel Fortin speaking at Brave The WaveNext month (in mid-April), I’ll be speaking at Armand Morin’s Authority Event in Charlotte, North Carolina, which is part of the Brave The Wave series of specialized events.

(And yes, that website was designed and the copy written by yours truly. And yes, those are my affiliate links.) ;)

Of course, Armand will be speaking mostly, covering topics like branding, positioning, public speaking, and a lot more. Watch this video to see what he’ll be revealing at the event.

I’m accompanying three other guest speakers, including Brendon Burchard who will speak on how to become a highly paid expert, Jim Howard on how to become a successful author, and Rick Frishman on how to attract massive publicity.

So what will my topic be?

Not copywriting. Not web design. And not positioning. In fact, this will be the first time I will be speaking on this topic. I’ll share things I’ve never revealed before. And that’s…

… Blogging and social media.

Now, hold your horses. Before you go off telling the world I’m claiming to be a social media expert, I’m doing no such thing. I’m far from being a social media expert.

(So many claim to be “experts” when they know less than my teenager daughter!)

However, having a blog with close to 80,000 subscribers without any paid advertising, and social media sites with maxed out friend limits without any kind of autofollowing or friend-scraping software, I guess you can say that I know a thing or two.

I don’t know what the other speakers have planned (although I have a pretty good idea), but here’s what I’ll be revealing at the event. It’s one of my most requested topics, too.

First, I’ll share how I attract close to 80,000 subscribers to my blog, and how my blog makes a decent four-figure monthly passive income without any heavy lifting, and without regular, frequent, or (what most would consider) “pro” blogging.

In fact, I’ll dive deeper into my content repurposing process that drives close to 70,000 visitors to my blog each month without any external marketing. Plus, I’ll be going through my plugins and personal, hand-coded tweaks I use to accomplish this and more.

In other words, I will be pulling back the curtains and reveal the backend administration on my blog. But more important, I will explain how I use my blog for expanding my reach — such as reprinting and distributing articles, and writing and posting blog posts.

Also, I’ll share my social media strategy on how I interconnect several platforms so they all work seamlessly, in tandem, which only takes me a few minutes a day.

Social media can be a huge distraction. It’s the web’s water cooler, so it’s easy to deviate from doing more productive activities. I’ll share with you how to avoid getting distracted or pulled into the social media madness, and how to use it less but more effectively.

I’ll reveal which platforms have provided the best results, and how I build, connect with, and engage my friends, followers, and fans on these networks.

(It’s more than just sharing affiliate links or tweeting what I had for lunch.)

Now, I’m going to do something a little unorthodox.

I do plan on delivering over an hour of solid content you can walk away with and start using after the seminar. At the end of my talk, I will be inviting you to join one of my programs if you’re interested, which you can purchase at the back of the room.

Regardless if you buy anything I offer or not, I promise to deliver great, usable content.

But here’s what I mean by doing something unconventional. I say “unconventional” because I’ve never done this before, and I haven’t seen other speakers do this. In the interest of being a bit more transparent, let me share with you what I will be offering.

(I may change my mind, although if I do it will be to make this program even better.)

It’s going to be a series of in-depth webinars on blogging and social media. I envision about 4–6 webinars (or as many as it takes to deliver the content I have planned). Each webinar will last a couple of hours, delivered weekly, and will consist of three major parts.

The first part will be training. I will go into greater depth on the topic of blogging and social media, reveal a few tips and tricks, and even dissect some of my other blogs.

The second part is the best. For each and every person who joins my program at the back of the room at the event, I will spend time on the webinar series to critique their blog, blogging strategy, or social media strategy. Whichever they feel is most pressing.

Want me to go over your plugins? Your design? Your list-building process? Your copy? No problem! Everyone who joins my program will get a critique. Plus, this will be done on the webinar so that other students get to watch, learn, and even pick my brains.

Speaking of which, this leads me to the third part…

I will be offering a question-and-answer session during the webinar series. I will answer any questions, or cover anything about blogging or social media you want.

Incidentally, I will be including a few cool bonuses. I don’t want to reveal those here, not because it’s some “secret” but because I’m still figuring out what I will be throwing in.

Finally, a couple of things to keep in mind. I don’t personally offer these critique consultations to the public anymore. I only offer them to established clients. And when I do, I still charge a hefty minimum fee per critique consultation.

I will only offer this program at Brave The Wave: Authority. This is the first time I will be offering this program. Unless I speak at future events, it will likely be the only time, too.

So if you want to learn how to become famous as a recognized authority and do in less time; if you want to learn my blogging and social media strategies; and if you’re at all interested in the program I am offering at the event; then I invite you to come join us.

This seminar is a full, three-day intensive training event unlike anything Armand Morin has ever given before. I’m really excited about it, and I hope to see you there.

Admission is only $497, and you can bring a guest (i.e., it comes out to less than $250 per person). This is pretty reasonable when you consider other high-priced seminars.

(To be clear, this does not include my program, which I will offer at the end of my talk. And my presentation is not some disguised, hour-long “pitch,” either. You will walk away with a lot of great, usable information, whether you decide to join my program or not.)

Click here to get more information about the event.

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How to Become a Recognized Authority originally appeared on The Michel Fortin Blog. Please visit to subscribe to it, or Tweet This.


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Carve Your Niche By Dominating One


Female auto mechanicI was recently interviewed by a print magazine about how I started my business. In it, I offered several tips and ideas on how to carve a niche in the marketplace that I personally applied.

I realized some of these tips were particularly powerful. So I wanted to reprint some of my answers here for you.

If you know my personal story, you know how niche marketing played an important role in my career.

Long story short, as the child of an alcoholic I feared rejection immensely, which led to a reclusive childhood. We all fear rejection to some degree. But for me, it was debilitating.

I wanted to overcome my fears and decided to dive into the world of sales in order to fight them head-on. Years passed and many failures ensued until I finally became the top producing salesperson in Canada for a major Fortune 500 company.

How did I accomplish that?

Since I hated prospecting, I found more effective marketing strategies that caused high quality prospects to come to me instead of the other way around. I no longer had to prospect. I no longer had to be rejected. I no longer had doors slammed in my face.

In short, I went from prospecting to positioning.

In other words, I decided to specialize in a specific niche and deal with only a small percentage of the market — even though my employer did not require it of me. I positioned myself as an expert for a specific target market within that company’s larger market.

Even though I could sell everything to everyone from this employer, I decided to specialize in only one product line for one particular category of prospect.

The result? I appeared as a specialist. (I’ll come back to this later.)

Realize that doing so helped me to attract pre-qualified prospects to my door. I didn’t have to do cold prospecting anymore. I didn’t have to “bother people” to listen to my pitch. I attracted higher quality prospects who wanted me to help them.

People today are bombarded with so much information, commercials, and competition. Especially online. Prospecting, especially cold prospecting, is not only difficult but also next to impossible. (Unless you have a million-dollar advertising budget to risk.)

Thus, you have to market in such a way that causes those kinds of people to come to your business or website, and not the other way around. Like a magnet, if you will.

Therefore, rather than prospect for clients you must position your business as unique in a particular category or industry, or for a specific audience or market. By being unique and focused on a core market, you will naturally become the leader in that market.

With all the competition out there vying for your market’s attention, it is no longer possible to be better than the competition. The goal is to be different, not better.

In other words, don’t duplicate. Instead, differentiate! It’s better to be the leader in a small niche than an alsoran in a general one. You will naturally dominate that market as a byproduct rather than spinning your wheels trying to corner a market by brute force.

Being a general copywriter when I first started out would have pitted me against all the copywriters in the world, particularly all the top copywriters who were far better than me.

However, being a copywriter specializing in cosmetic surgery, which was my niche at the time, I naturally dominated that niche. I called myself “Success Doctor” because I helped doctors become successful. Through better copywriting and marketing, that is.

Today’s world has become overcommunicated, overadvertised, and hypercompetitive, it all appears as just one huge blur of sameness. If you attempt to be too general or too wide in your marketing approach, you will only dissipate among the blur.

People won’t see any greater value in buying from you than in buying from others.

One of the greatest errors committed by most new businesses is that they fall into a trap: they try to be “all things to all people.” And they do so because they are mislead by the notion that, by offering more (or by serving more people), they will generate more sales.

That’s understandable for the survival of any new business depends on the number of sales it makes. However, the more general you are or appear to be, the more indifferent you will appear to your audience. Indifferent to their specific needs, goals, and problems.

Based on the law of averages, you will have to advertise and market yourself quite heavily to be in front of as many eyeballs as possible, with the hope of attracting an adequate amount of prospects that will in turn translate into a certain number of sales.

Undeniably, this requires a gigantic advertising budget. Or a heck of a lot of time. For most new and especially smaller businesses, this is obviously quite a challenge.

It’s true that, the greater your reach is, the greater the potential quantity of responses will be. But what about quality? Would it matter if your business or website generates a large quantity of uninterested, tire-kicking visitors that will simply never buy from you?

Let’s look at the web. If your online business targets everyone, then your marketing message must be painted with broad brushstrokes as to appeal to everyone. The challenge with such an approach is the fact that you will lose a large percentage of visitors.

Some may fall into your target market, but most visitors will leave your website because they likely feel left out or have no interest. Others simply choose competitors that might provide them with greater perceived value. Even if they offer the same thing.

In other words, the broader you are in your appeal, the less relevant you will be to any and every individual visiting your site. Guess what becomes the deciding factor?

If you’re like (or perceived to be like) everybody else, then the least common denominator they have to work with is price. Price becomes the only metric of comparison. If there are no other points of differentiation, naturally the cheapest alternative wins.

Why? Because generalists have too many things in common. Therefore, pricing seems like the only difference. It will be the only metric used in comparing your value to others.

Sales will increase dramatically if your site is centered on a specific theme, product, industry, people, or outcome. A niche, in other words. (A niche can still be, or be a part of, the mass market. A large yet underserved mass market is still a niche, by the way.)

It’s about focus. For the more focused you are, the less you will need to produce a sufficient quantity of visitors to produce similar results by appealing to everyone.

A good niche is one that has three major qualities:

  • It exists already;
  • It’s easily identifiable;
  • And it’s easily targetable.

Let me explain why this is important.

The most common question I receive from aspiring entrepreneurs is: “What product should I sell?” (Or “what sells well on the Internet?”) Quite frankly, everything sells and can sell well — from pet food to travel packages — in some way, especially online.

In fact, everything is being or can be sold, somehow, in some form or another, on the Internet. But that’s not the problem. It’s not what you sell that matters. It’s to whom.

In other words, don’t look first for a product to sell. Look for an easily targetable market with an easily identifiable need or problem, and fill their need or solve their problem.

In order to achieve this, you need to be observant and listen to the needs of the marketplace. Conduct some market research. If people seem to be asking for a specific solution to a problem, obviously it is because a niche exists that has yet to be filled.

Look at some of the questions people ask or the complaints they have. These are very good indicators that a need exists. Otherwise, the marketplace would be silent.

Once you find a viable niche, learn as much as you can from it. Everything will flow from that point. Follow this tactic and you will constantly find products to sell.

Simply put, don’t carve a niche. Rather, find one and fill it. Consequently, your marketing will naturally help to solidify your position and thus dominate that niche, rather than trying to “get more clients” by trying to appeal to and go after everyone.

Sure, there are ultra-targeted niches that are very small and limited. In such cases, the only way to remain profitable is to dominate several of them. Some people will go after a multitude of small niches. Others will go after smaller ones within a larger market.

This is called “market segmentation,” where you segment your marketing to cater to a wide variety of small niches. But for the scope of this article, let’s just say that narrowing your focus will attract not only more prospects but far more qualified prospects, too.

How do you dominate a niche?

It doesn’t need a lot of work, really. When you position yourself as the expert in a niche, you naturally dominate it through the power of leadership. Leadership is not the result of an action or an event. It’s a position, one based on the power of perception.

If you offer a customary product or service, or if your competition offers the same thing you do, catering to a niche helps to project an aura of uniqueness and superiority instantaneously by virtue of the fact that it doesn’t appear as customary.

Rather than copying your competition, you isolate yourself from them.

For instance, if you required brain surgery, would you choose a dentist? Of course not. More importantly, would you choose a general, medical practitioner, even a general surgeon? No. You would probably choose a neurosurgeon. A brain surgeon, in other words.

It’s the same thing for direct marketing. If you owned an imported car that needed new brakes, would you choose any general mechanic? Or, if one existed, would you choose one that not only specializes in brakes but also specializes in imported cars?

Expertise is in the eyes of the niche.

You become the leader not because you are superior but because you are different. You’re going from being indifferent to your market to being different to them.

Specialization is in itself a powerful marketing process that, as a byproduct, generates the perception of expertise. It’s amazingly effective in creating top-of-mind awareness.

Contrary to popular opinion, focusing on a seemingly smaller niche doesn’t lessen your chances of making sales. Quite the opposite. For example, an accountant specializing in car dealerships will acquire more clients than a general accountant will.

An advertising salesperson specializing in home furnishing stores will sell more ads than a typical salesperson will. A photographer specializing in weddings will get more photography bookings than a regular photographer will. And the list goes on and on.

As more businesses get started, and the more inundated with marketing messages our society becomes, then the less time, energy, and money people will have to spend in choosing the companies or websites with which they will do business.

Thus, specialization helps to solve that problem by projecting an aura of expertise.

Take a mechanic. Rarely would you call a general mechanic an “expert,” unless she has invested a considerable amount of resources in branding herself that way, or in educating herself deeply in the world of mechanics backed by many years of experience.

On the other hand, it would be easy to dub a mechanic — even a new one, with no experience — that specializes in imported car brakes as an “expert mechanic.”

Similarly, by finding, filling, and dominating a niche, you can become an expert by default — not by design. You become an expert as a natural byproduct. In other words, a generalist is just a marketer. But a specialist is an expert. That’s the difference.

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Carve Your Niche By Dominating One originally appeared on The Michel Fortin Blog. Please visit to subscribe to it, or Tweet This.


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Blame The Copywriter, Not The Copy


Let's deal!Lately, I’m seeing a lot of posts in public forums and blogs these days about people getting sick and tired of seeing “crappy,” “hypey,” used-car, Ginsu-like, looooong copy.

Some of them come from guru-bashing naysayers who hate marketing, which I always take with a grain of salt.

But some are intelligent, mature, and commonsensical. They are interesting because I believe that, while negative feedback does have its place, it’s often misplaced.

Here’s why. They blame long copy when all too often it’s not the copy’s fault. More importantly, it’s not because of the length. Let’s get something clear off the bat: long, Ginsu-like copy does work. It has always worked. It will always work. And it’s here to stay.

But (and it’s a big “but”)…

People object to them not because of what they say but how they say it. Take a look at the web. Noticed how it’s being used right now by many wannabe copywriters or naive marketers? Tons. They are the culprits — not the process.

(Actually, their lack of sales and writing skills is the culprit.)

There’s an interesting point to make in all this.

Some people are muddying the facts with secondary objections that are misleading — although some of these objections are appropriate, as some salesletters are indeed too long, boring and hypey. But they are confused with the real issue, here.

There’s a difference between short copy and brief copy. Between long copy and long-winded copy. Between pithy copy that may still be long and short copy that’s curt, leaves the reader hanging, and doesn’t tell enough to make the sale.

Back to The Point…

In its defense, some have used the excuse that the sale is the ultimate result. Nothing else matters. And that those objecting to “crappy” copy are not prospects, and make the error that the copy is not meant for them and therefore they have no right to object.

Yes and no.

We can all say that “conversion is queen,” and that “someone who objects is usually not targeted for the offer.” In some cases, that may very well be true. But in many cases, I beg to differ. And I’ll tell you why in a moment…

But I also believe that, most of the time, the obvious, “hypey,” used-car approach used in copy has really nothing to do with the hype itself but everything to do with the fact that the owner (or the copywriter) doesn’t know how to sell. Period.

Why do brazen, used-car salesmen have such a stigma, when some have shattered sales records selling and even reselling cars over and over to the same people? Like Joe Girard, for example, the Guinness Record holder for selling the most cars?

You see, it’s not the approach. It’s the people.

Specifically, it’s the lack of sales and persuasion skills.

Hype may have a negative connotation. But when used properly and blended with interesting, riveting copy, as well as powerful stories (I call this “storyselling”) and targeted to the right people, is often disregarded or ignored.

In fact, when hyperbole is used properly, most readers will look at hype as “passion,” “caring,” “empathy,” “personality,” “conversational,” etc. Not “hype.”

When people object to crappy copy, they’re not objecting to the fact they are using long, hypey, direct marketing. Even though it may seem that way. They are objecting to the poor salesmanship on the part of the writer or marketer.

Specifically, on their poor use of long, hypey copy — and not the pitch itself.

You see, use this approach properly, and people will downplay the hype. But use it improperly, and you will lead people, including prospects, to see right through it and conclude that it is indeed just a bunch of hype. And therefore, a load of crap.

(And by extension, they’ll also believe that the product and the business behind it are just as crappy. Naturally. I call this a “UPA,” or an unconscious paralleled assumption.)

It’s Psychology, Pure And Simple.

For example, some people point out copy that say things like, “to be honest, Ms. Prospect…” “frankly, I’m puzzled,” or, “I’m going to be flat-out truthful with you, Mrs. Prospect, and tell you something [that’s going to blow your socks off],” blah, blah, blah.

And they equate this tactic to be the sign of poor copy.

As you know, I used to be a sales trainer in a former career. Sales training says you should never to say, “to be honest,” “to be frank,” or “to be truthful with you.” Because, unconsciously, prospects will think you must be dishonest if you need to say it.

They think, “Gee, was he dishonest until now?”

Like in sales training, they tell you that instead it’s best to say, “to be candid with you,” “to be open with you,” “to be forthright with you,” or “to be more to the point with you.”

They’ve been teaching this in Sales 101 for ages! :)

But that’s semantics. In my opinion, I believe you certainly can say “honest” and so on, as long as you are not perceived as trying to “pull a fast one.”

If you are and, more importantly, if you appear genuine, empathetic, and passionate, then it becomes part of a normal, natural conversation — not a blatant, hypey sales pitch, where anything you say makes you look incredulous or suspect.

Anyway, it’s just one very small example of poor sales skills. Which translates into poor copy. Which inevitably leads to these kinds of objections.

Now, to The Other Points.

Personally, I do think much of the copy on the web these days downright suck. I’m not talking about the typical bland, professional, corporatespeak that makes you yawn. I’m referring to some people’s dismal attempt at long, hard-hitting, “grab-their-money” copy.

Often, it’s understandable. It’s an attempt by the marketer or copywriter to “copy” the Ginsu-like style of hard-hitting copy for their own offers.

Whether they’re swiping or mimicking them, if they don’t understand the principles of good salesmanship, they often do it all wrong. In the end, it’s those kinds of salesletters that make all long, hard-hitting sales copy look bad.

For example, they pack their copy with adjectives, superlatives, adverbs, and carnival-barking, snakeoil verbiage that makes you cringe in horror with every passing sentence.

You know the kind, right?

“Get my super-fast, heart-pumping, stunningly lightning-fast, jack-hammer-powered, amazingly sweet, orgasmic, googley-eye-inducing, whiz-bang widget right NOOOOOOWWWW!!!”

Some people say it insults their intelligence.

It’s not the fact that it insults prospects’ intelligences. It’s the fact that, if we feel it does, it means the writer didn’t do his job, didn’t know the product well enough, and laced their copy with superlatives because they don’t know how to write or how to sell.

I once interviewed my friend Gary Halbert, one of the best copywriters in the world before he passed away. And he said it best. To paraphrase, he said something like this:

“Copy that tries to make a freakin’ explosion is going to turn people off and makes the pitch so unbelievable simply because the writer doesn’t know what the heck he/she is doing. Period.”

Then I interviewed John Carlton, who said something similar. It all comes down to passion, persuasion, influence, psychology, and the power of storytelling — otherwise, it ends up with superlative-laden, used-car vernacular that makes you want to puke.

Bottom Line, It Comes Down to This…

  • Know your product.
  • Know your audience.
  • Know how to sell (i.e., how to connect the first two).

The web has made it possible for the proliferation of wannabes, or marketers who don’t know their product enough (from their prospects’ perspective, that is) who attempt to write copy that mimics cheesy late-night informercials.

Let me repeat it: the Ginsu approach does work when it is used properly.

(And in many, many, many cases, it is not.)

In that interview mentioned earlier, John Carlton talked about passion and salesmanship in copywriting. People who use this kind of adjective-laden copy are simply not skilled in selling, and haven’t truly woken their “inner salesperson” to sell really well.

Usually, there’s no hook, no empathy, no eye-grabbing copy, no real benefits, no reasons why, and above all, no story. So, since the writer didn’t do their job, they often resort to adjectives and adverbs simply because they have nothing else to work with.

I could go on and on, but I am getting sick and tired of poor copy — particularly poor copy giving good copy (and good copywriters) a bad name. I see this all the time, with my copy critiques as well as some of the offers I come across on the web.

It’s not poor copy.

It’s Poor Selling.

Now, someone also said that, while we can bitch and complain about crappy copy, it really boils down to understanding two different marketing approaches — i.e., a marketer’s choice of approach to fit short-term or long-term goals.

That is, they can choose between the get-your-money, go-for-the-jugular, aggressive direct marketing kind, and the relationship-driven, good-customer-service, warm-fuzzy, branding kind. (And thus, there’s copy that appeals to both, respectively to the hard-hitting hype, versus the soft-selling editorial style.)

My take? It doesn’t have to be a choice, really.

I agree with the spirit of what they said. Since direct marketing is so quick, direct, and measurable, it is an opportunity for people to jump in, hit ‘em hard, and make a quick buck — and for some, run out of town. (The latter is a true snakeoil salesman.)

But, I just want to point out something, perhaps not to differ but to clarify. An my point is that, while it’s true in some cases, it’s not true in all the cases.

Many direct marketing companies who use hard-hitting copy and aggressive sales approaches have also created strong relationships, solid brand equity, great customer service, and powerful name recognition for themselves, too.

But they achieved it as a byproduct, not as a distinct goal.

They simply decided not to spend millions of dollars on ad agencies to build their brands, take huge risks, or work really hard (and wait a long time) using soft-sell techniques to create the much-needed word of mouth.

(Why? Because branding, publicity and relationship-building is risky business, because it’s not accountable, justifiable, or as measurable as direct marketing.)

And “short-term” direct marketers, as they were referred to, who use hard-hitting, seemingly “hypey” copy are not just in it for the quick buck.

Granted, some are. And granted, some companies have indeed taken the low-key approach and succeeded amazingly fast without using any hard-hitting copy.

But they succeeded for many other reasons: they’ve created a highly in-demand product or a new product with a great twist. They’ve used niche marketing, buzz creation, viral marketing, or guerrilla marketing. Or they’ve developed a cult following, etc.

Take Google, For Instance.

They “did” it with almost no advertising or hard-selling.

But just after their record-breaking IPO hit Wall Street, the Chief Exec of Marketing Communications — also said to be the brainchild behind Google’s marketing success — is resigning over differences with the company, who’s now looking into going “Madison-Avenue” style of million-dollar ad-agency advertising.

Now, something important needs to be said…

Building relationships should be the aim of every marketer. But I think there’s a distinction between creating relationships as a byproduct of good customer service versus relationship-only marketing that strives to create a brand name and image.

The latter is often expensive, time-consuming, and risky. Of course, it may indeed work. If the long-term, brand-focused business is lucky enough to make it work, the success shifts into cruise-control, and no longer requires a lot of work, time or money.

(However, that success is not permanent. There are maintenance costs involved. Because they eventually will have to fight off competition, spend more money to keep the brand alive, penetrate new markets to keep revenues leveled, etc.)

As for direct marketers being strictly “short term,” I don’t think so.

Maybe it’s a short-term approach in terms of results or campaign efforts. And maybe it’s true in some cases. But not all direct marketers have the goal of staying short-term… of making a quick sale and bailing out like some snakeoil salesman.

How many direct marketers out there have used hard-selling copy, and created great brands and name recognition, and even used their controls — their old yet ubiquitous, hard-hitting ads — for years and years? Lots. Mucho lots.

Look at DAK, Ronco, Ginsu, TimeLife, as well as salesletters and ads that are old and still running to this day: oldies like the Charles Atlas ad, to fairly newbies like Jeff Paul’s advertorial-style salesletter, “Making $4,000 a day at your kitchen table in your underwear.” (Which is still running, what, for over a decade, now?)

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Blame The Copywriter, Not The Copy originally appeared on The Michel Fortin Blog. Please visit to subscribe to it, or Tweet This.


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New To Copywriting? Start Here…


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iStock 000008584445XSmall 150x150 New To Copywriting? Start Here...As part of my coaching program, students can ask me unlimited questions via email. One common question I seem to get is, “I’m new to copywriting, where do I start?”

Since my coaching students also get access to any of my digital programs, they also get access to my Copy Doctor website, where I share over 50 hours of salesletter and copy critiques, recorded on video. It’s a great start.

But one student said something that struck me:

“I learn better by doing than by watching. Is there anything you can recommend?”

Great question. Some people are more visual (they learn better by watching), some are more aural or auditory (by hearing), others are more kinesthetic (by doing or feeling). And I also thought it would be a great question to cover on my blog. So, here goes…

#1: Courses

If you want some basic guidance to get you started, there’s a course I recommend, which is really popular and pretty well-rounded. It’s the Six-Figure Copywriting course by the American Writers And Artists Institute (AWAI). I own a copy myself, and it’s pretty good.

It’s a great primer if you’re just starting out and want to learn the fundamentals of writing good copy. There are some advanced topics, but I like it more for its basic training.

The reason I also recommend it is, for those kinesthetic students who prefer to do the work, which I applaud, the AWAI course offers assignments with the curriculum. And you get graded on those, too, and they give you feedback along the way.

(I’ve never handed in any work myself, so I’m not exactly sure how the process is done. But even with just buying the course, I’ve pulled a few gems and used them.)

One course I’ve co-authored and recommend is The Copywriting Success System with Ken Calhoun. This course offers training from basic to advanced, including understanding the writing process, formulas, and using tools to boost your chops.

In it, I also offer my formulas I recommend and personally use, such as my OATH formula (for determining the stage of awareness of your market), QUEST formula (the proper structure of a salesletter), FAB formula, the storytelling process, and more.

Finally, here’s a product I intimately know and highly recommend.

(Why? Ahem, well, guess who wrote the copy?) :)

It’s by Dan Lok. Dan is not only an amazing, hard-hitting copywriter himself, but he also created a product that packages brilliant interviews with some of the best copywriters on the planet. Best of all, English is his second language, which he learned later in life.

So if he can do it, do the math.

Also, in Turn Words Into Cash, Dan grills top names in the business — some of whom have never given interviews before. Those interviews are worth the price of admission.

#2: Websites

Next, check out this blog and look on the right for “most popular posts.” It contains links to some of the most viewed articles, which I recommend for someone learning the ropes — including some of the formulas I talk about in my copywriting course above.

Another fantastic resource is Brian Clark, a lawyer-turned-copywriter who has some of the best copywriting articles online. His blog, CopyBlogger, offers an entire section called Copywriting 101, which contains articles I recommend to anyone just starting out.

I’m sure you also know about Gary Halbert’s repository of articles. There are tons of great stuff in there. Don’t forget my interviews with the late Gary Halbert on this blog.

There are many other sources, too. There are tons of copywriting blogs out there. Or ask other copywriters in popular forums. There’s also a copywriting forum, too.

But the very best learning process I’ve found, particularly for kinesthetics (and visuals alike), is to take a successful salesletter and write it out, word for word, by hand. This is by far the best way to learn because it enables you to internalize the information.

There are tons of copywriting newsletters out there, too. One I particularly love is John Forde’s Copywriters Rountable, of which I’ve been a subscriber for years. Some of these blogs and newsletters offer swipe files or examples you can easily copy by hand.

Another great way to get your hands on some of the best salesletters out there is to visit Clickbank’s Marketplace. Just click on the “Marketplace” link at the top of the page.

Look at some of the most popular items being sold. But don’t stop there. Check out the listings in your preferred category (I tend to check the “Marketing and Ads” section).

With each product they list, which are listed in order of rank (by sales and popularity), you get the actually sales copy link, with a number of useful stats to gauge how good the salesletter is — such as payouts, percentages, gravity score, and more.

Reason is, you want to do this exercise with only salesletters that are proven to sell.

#3: Books

Finally, let’s not forgot some of the most popular books on copywriting. Many of these are timeless classics, which all copywriters should have in their library. I certainly do.

There are quite a few of them. So rather than list them all here, let me share with you my top favorite ones. (I own a copy of all of these. And my copies are note-filled, dog-eared and heavily used. For good reason. So I highly recommend them.)

  • Scientific Advertising (Claude Hopkins)
  • The Robert Collier Letter Book (Robert Collier)
  • Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion (Dr. Robert Cialdini)
  • Breakthrough Advertising (Eugene Schwartz)
  • Tested Advertising Methods (John Caples)
  • On Writing (Stephen King)

Hopefully, these resources will get you started and point you in the right direction.

The Michel Fortin Blog.

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