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August 15, 2006

"Momentum: Why Statues Never Win Foot-Races, And How Motion Leads to E-Motion... Which Leads to Action" by David Garfinkel

Consider the humble hoola-hoop.

Sitting in a garage by itself, it's little more than than a large ring of plastic.

Put around the waist of a person who's willing to set it in motion, the hoola-hoop is a wonder to behold.

Just as long as...

... the hoola-hoop wearer keeps moving in the direction that makes the hoola-hoop spin.

So it is with copy. Have you ever thought about it?

Most people don't. That is why their copy is so perfectly clear... and explanatory... and dull.

Dull doesn't do it... not when you're trying to get prospects to take action, that is.

Here's a tip you may have never fully realized before:

Good copy is not: ... static... lethargic... motionless.

No. Good copy is: ... dynamic... energetic... kinetic.

In simple words, that means copy is in motion.

It starts in motion... and because it keeps going, right to the last word, it has momentum.

When people perceive or imagine motion, they get emotional. Think movies. Think a rousing, stemwinder speaker. Think of a large bear coming out of nowhere, running straight towards you.

Emotion: Fear

Motion: Running to safety

You don't need to scare people like a bear to get them emotional and prompt them to action. But you are well advised to get them to picture motion in order to emotionally motivate them to take action.

Here are some ways:

* write descriptive language to get your prospect to imagine using your product or service.

* talk about the actions taken by you, your company, or your client (if you're writing copy for someone else) that were necessary to bring the product or service to market

* ask the prospect to take the specific action you want them to take

Notice I do this, at the end of every post on this blog, because the action I want you to take is to subscribe to my World Copywriting Newsletter.

I write, "To subscribe, click here."

Does it work?

Of course!

But not just because I ask for action. The other reason it works is because I follow the same principles myself that I just outlined for you.

Remember: If you can keep their brains in motion, their hearts and fingers will follow.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

July 14, 2006

"Rhythm: Why A Cadence And A Meter Make Your Message That Much Sweeter" by David Garfinkel

This weekend, lazily surfing the tube, I fell into the charms of an infomercial.

(They work especially well when you're drowsy, you know... )

This one was for the Magic Bullet, an ingenious little blender/chopper/mixer system that makes dips, shakes, sauces and more in 10 seconds or less!

This morning having coffee, I distinctly remembered what I saw and heard. The reason was...

... the particular way they demonstrated the product.

One of the hosts of this show would pour the ingredients for (for example, salsa) into the clear glass container, turn it upside down, screw it onto the base, and as they used it, say,

"... and in one... two... three... seconds... you have your chunkly salsa!"

... pressing the "bullet" down in the same rhythm as the words were spoken: "one... two... three."

Why did I remember that?

Because we remember rhythms!

I was talking to a friend this morning, and he said this reminded him of an infomercial about a rotisserie where the slogan was "Set it... and forget it!"

My friend pointed out that the host on this show got the studio audience chanting these words: "Set it... and forget it!"

Brand advertisers have known for years about the power of rhythmic phrases... and you can find examples of this in many other areas of persuasive speech.

But the same thing works in copy... albeit at a more subtle level.

Put a rhythm in your words, and you get a great effect.

One of my clients says the the right hemisphere is the "rhythm section" of the brain, and I believe this is true.

I also think that the right brain is the gateway to the unconscious... where feelings are stored and generated, and buying decisions are made.

So pay attention to the "beat," and you'll be pleased with the results.

Don't make your copy scream "remember me!" Let your rhythm do it for you.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

July 03, 2006

"Every Copywriter Needs To Know This!" by David Garfinkel

"It is not sufficiently recognized - especially by the critics of advertising - that romance in its broad sense is the most wanted product in the world."
-- James Webb Young, quoted in How to Write a Good Advertisement by Victor Schwab

This is so important, and many copywriters think there is no romance -- in selling tractors, or office machinery, or scientific measuring devices, or software.

But those copywriters are wrong. Listen to what Vic Schwab has to say:

"Some products are literally bursting with romantic and emotional connotations. Then it is wiser to stress the glamorous ideas assocated with them - to feature the fancies and subordinate the facts, using the latter only to buttress the copy when and if necessary."

Remember, "romance" doesn't just mean "love." Or "sex." It means fantasy of all type... excitement, danger, bliss, victory, dreams come true.

Believably (and legitimately) draw the connection between what you're writing copy about and this broad definition of romance, and watch your banker and your accountant get very lovey-dovey with you.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

June 28, 2006

"The Disappointment Dimension" by David Garfinkel

How Customer Complaints Can Make You A Fortune:

Yesterday I went shopping for luggage. This has become an annoyingly familiar experience. I go through suitcases, roller-bars, what-have-you, in record time.

Am I harder on my luggage than other people?

I don't think so.

Here's why:

First, a little background. I thought of all the stores I had been to before, and the problem was either

a) low-quality luggage, or

b) too expensive for the value

A friend had recommended I join Costco (box store, huge selection, giant quantities) so I thought this might be a good time to check them out.

I did, and I found an "Executive 26-inch Expandable Trolley" for about half of what I would pay for a discounted TravelPro (which I like, and I own a carry-on, but I think they're overpriced).

OK... to the point about complaints and disappointment:

I need two: one for me and one for products. (I'll be bringing about 35 pounds worth of information products as sales table display units to a conference I'm speaking at later this week).

Right on the front of the little brochure attached to the suitcase were the words "U.S.A. Cordura® by DuPont® Ballistic Nylon" (made in the U.S.A. to military specifications)"

Inside the brochure:
"Full honeycomb memory frame construction made of lightweight, industrial strength ABS composite material for maximum durability and strength."

On the back of the brochure:

"U.S.A. Cordura® by DuPont® Ballistic Nylon, invented by DuPont, was originally developed for bullet-resistant, military applications..."

Hmm... seems to me a LOT of people have trouble with luggage that doesn't go the extra mile.

My disappointment: On my last trip, the pull-out handle that you use to drag the luggage around, wouldn't pull out. And then one of the zippers snapped off.

It wasn't cheap, by the way, but it was something I bought at the last minute from an adventure-travel-goods store that really wasn't in the business of providing rugged or long-lasting luggage. (Unfortunately, this one wasn't a TravelPro... but anyhow, that's the way the story goes... )

So... here's the major point of all of this:

If you KNOW what your customers are upset about... ESPECIALLY with what they're getting from your competitors... and you can HIGHLIGHT a solution to that problem in your copy...

... it will get a lot of frustrated people to gratefully buy what you have to offer.

It did me.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

June 25, 2006

"Common Sense Consensual Marketing" by Michel Fortin

Listen to the Interviews of the Leading Entrepreneurs in the World Who Are Heroes That Are Pursuing Their Dreams With Every Ounce of Strength and Faith.
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Michel Fortin is a direct response copywriter, author, speaker and consultant. His specialty are long copy sales letters and websites. Watch him rewrite copy on video each month, and get tips and tested conversion strategies proven to boost response in his membership site at http://TheCopyDoctor.com/ today.
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One of the things most if not all Internet marketers come across at least once in their lives is "spam." Whether they've used it, contemplated it, rallied against it, or received it, the deceptively appealing nature of unsolicited commercial email as well as the gut-wrenching, mind-numbing, nerve-racking person-hours it takes to manage spam makes it the most detested form of online marketing. But the question remains: Why is it still being used?

It's Like a Drug
Today, while driving to a client in my consulting practice, I listened to the audio version of one of my favorite books, "The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing" by Al Ries and Jack Trout -- the fathers of positioning. One of their laws struck me in a way it has never struck me before, for I realized, now that I am online, how much these laws apply to Internet marketing as well. It also struck me because the book was written in a time when email was relatively unknown and "WWW" was thought of as an acronym for some new sports organization.

Law number 11, the law of perspective, states: In marketing, "The long-term effects are usually the exact opposite of the short-term effects." Al Ries illustrates this law with sales promotions and the way they work -- and work against you. While sales do help to increase business in the short-term, in the long-term the effect wears off and, like a drug, one has to inject more price based incentives to keep the volume at a certain level. Ultimately, a discount driven company will see its business inevitably decrease. As Ries points out, "Sales tend to educate consumers over time never to buy at regular prices."

Sex, drugs, money, and crime are all typical examples in which short-term gains can lead to long-term losses. But these hedonistic-like marketing approaches are not limited to sales promotions. With the Internet comes along another -- this seemingly unstoppable barrage of unwanted commercial email called "spam." Obviously, spam is effective and very profitable since, if it wasn't, it would have stopped haunting our inboxes long ago. However, in addition to the potential infringement of new business-related laws, the negative consequences of spam with regards to long-term profitability far outweigh the short-term advantages.

Credibility is Crucial
A business' most important asset is its credibility -- and more so online, for the Internet lacks the human element. (By the way, it is this very lack that often makes spam so attractive if not addictive, as some people tend to forget that people receive the mail, not computers.) Nevertheless, credibility in the faceless world wide web is like oxygen in its offline version: It's critically important and inescapably essential. Therefore, a more profitable, long-term solution is the creation of one's own opt-in mailing lists or the use of others that are opt-in, responsible, and targeted.

Consequently, ezines are growing with astonishing fervor. Beyond the fact that they help build trust and credibility, ezines help you to stay in constant touch with your prospects. People want to get to know you. And the level of value they attribute to their purchase from you is -- as unrelated as it may seem -- inextricably tied to the level of trust they place in you.

Sure, short-term band-aid solutions can produce good results. Sales and profits can be made with spam (or without the need for prospects to know you, for that matter). But like drugs, these solutions are only short-lived, which is why they must be continuously repeated in order to remain viable let alone profitable -- hence, the reason why spammers keep spamming.

Knowing you is the basis of any long-term business success. If you're in it for the long haul and if you want to remain profitable for a long period of time, then consider the converse -- short-term losses versus long-term gains. In other words, don't spam. Find ways to stay in contact with eager, interested, and consensual prospects. Publish your own ezine. Buy or rent targeted opt-in lists from reputable mailing list brokers. Get linked on as many other sites as possible. Most important, advertise in ezines... It's your surest and safest bet.

Needless to say, it is commonsensical that, if you sell a product online that helps to make life easier for your prospects, don't market your product in a way that negates or contradicts that very point. Use responsible email marketing strategies. The pitfalls of spam marketing will, in the end, cost you much more than some of its more respectable alternatives.

Listen to the Interviews of the Leading Entrepreneurs in the World Who Are Heroes That Are Pursuing Their Dreams With Every Ounce of Strength and Faith.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Michel Fortin is a direct response copywriter, author, speaker and consultant. His specialty are long copy sales letters and websites. Watch him rewrite copy on video each month, and get tips and tested conversion strategies proven to boost response in his membership site at http://TheCopyDoctor.com/ today.
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April 21, 2006

"Humor in Copywriting" by David Garfinkel

Does Copy Have to Follow The "Airport Rule" -- That Is, No Jokes?

Last night I spoke to the Laugh Lovers Toastmasters Club in Oakland, California. It was poignant for me because the club was founded, in another format, by a friend of mine who is no longer with us on this Earth, the legendary John Cantu.

Robin William, Dana Carvey, Paula Poundstone, Margaret Cho and many other comedy superstars of today got their start at Cantu's Holy City Zoo, a comedy room on Clement St. between 5th and 6th Avenues in San Francisco. Today the space is occupied by a fierce Irish bar called The Dogs Bollix.

I was invited to speak last night to commemorate Cantu (he went by his last name), and in dredging up memories, I thought of a story he told me once from his days as a carvinal barker.

Besides being a great humor resource, Cantu was also a very skilled salesman. Rare combo, don't you agree?

He used to sell the Veg-o-Matic, and he also sold a super-absorbent cloth called the Shammy. On tables at County Fairs. A real pitchman of the first water.

When selling the Shammy, Cantu would give examples of how you could use the product.
One piece of advice he would give his prospects:

"And if you have a Golden Reliever at home... oops, I mean a Golden Retriever... "

That would get a laugh, and that would increase sales.

While this great friend of mine was alive -- and I miss our wide-ranging conversations so much! -- he and I would talk about how most advertisers totally blow it with humor in sales copy (Cantu also wrote killer radio commercials, and had a lot of expertise selling over the telephone).

Now, throughout advertising history, there are legendary disaster stories about how humor has made copy reduce sales. Alka-Seltzer. Isuzu. I'm sure you can think of a few.

And in all the "below the radar" sales Web sites and direct mail letters that pull in the big bucks, humor is so rare as to be seen as an endangered species of communication.

The conclusion Cantu and I came to is, humor for humor's sake -- that is, to get attention for the copy itself -- was a sure-fire losing strategy.

But what worked so well with the Shammy could work in any piece of copy (spoken, as a pitch or delivered as an ad, Web site, sales letter, or email).

What Cantu did, perhaps not deliberately, but instead intuitively, was make fun of the problem that the product was promising to solve.

When you can render an annoying problem in your customer's life as a little less overbearing, by poking fun at it, you stand a chance of making a few more sales. Doing so is a way of creating empathy.

Now this can backfire. If you ridicule and dismiss a real and serious problem too cavalierly, you can end up looking crass and uncaring. And that doesn't usually help sales.

So, it's a fine line; it's still risky to use humor in copy. Like a comedian trying out a new line in front of a tough crowd, you can still bomb.

But at least you have the possibility of using humor, productively, in your copy, with this strategy.

Just don't read these last three paragraphs out loud at an airport. You might end up speaking one of those no-no words (hint: it begins with a "b")... and these days, there's nothing funny about pranks at airports, no matter how clever you are.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

April 17, 2006

"Creativity: Why Your Next Million-Dollar Idea Is Right Under Your Nose -- Or Else, Behind It" by David Garfinkel

In a few hours, my new friend Mike Lamb will interview me for his Moneyroom Internet radio show. Mike comes from the world of "real radio" -- he was a major-market DJ in several cities -- and I'm excited about the whole thing!

As I prepared for the interview, I dug deep into my memory and thought about what led me to where I am today. The most amazing thing I discovered was the powerful effect of the creative process has had across the broad span of my life.

Everything builds on everything else. What I'm doing today, and why I'm particularly suited for it, for example, traces back to age five when I created "The C&D Company" with my best friend Chris Soulen. I don't know what we were selling, but, it does let me say I've been a business owner for 46 years! :)

In writing copy, not only does everything build on everything else, but, you can ethically and profitably use simple creativity to shortcut the time and effort needed to come up with the words that sell.

Am I saying you build your life the same way you write your copy? Well... a life has far more to it than even the best piece of killer copy... but... in a sense, I am.

Because...

... one thing builds on another in copy, and when you get the right combination, 1 + 1 = 3.

At least.

For instance, if you are as "seasoned" as I am, you may remember the old ad campaign (I think it was in the 1960s) for Avis Car rentals:

We're Number Two... We Try Harder

From what I remember, those six words wrung a lot of money out of the market for Avis. Even to the point (and this is just a rumor I've heard, but it's very probable), Avis continued to use the "We're Number Two... " slogan after it overtook Hertz and was in fact Number One in its marketplace...

... just because those words worked so well.

I'm indebted to Gene Schwartz, author of Breakthrough Advertising, for explaining how this particular bit of creativity worked. He called it "emotional math."

The idea is that when you have two phrases that together leave a lot unsaid between them, you get people thinking... and if you can get them thinking in the right direction, that can turn into a lot of business.

You see, there's brilliance in that phrase, because it would make sense that the number-two player in a business would try harder, since they need to in order to reach the top spot.

And wouldn't you rather rent your car from someone who's trying harder? Don't you expect you'd be treated better? Given extra accommodations when you needed it?

In fact, wouldn't you expect the rates to be more competitive, the cars to be cleaner, the selection to be wider?

All of those are things a customer might think, just from those six words.

Now, here are two important points for you to consider as you begin to expand your own creativity:

Creativity doesn't need to be exotic or unique. In fact, the best creativity comes from the unusual combination of fairly mundane or familiar elements. "We're number two" is hardly a stroke of genius; "we try harder" doesn't sound like that much, either. But put together in the way that they were, those words were an oil gusher for Avis.

It's all under your nose or behind it (in your brain). Creativity doesn't need to take place anywhere else, although it can. But it doesn't have to. You can find things right on your desk, or in your car, or from your car radio, or in your newspaper, or in a conversation with a loved on, or in your memory bank... and put them together in different combinations.
A lot of your potential for using your creativity to write better copy is shifting from the view that the world is a fixed place, set in its ways, with limited opportunities...

... to the more proactive view that the world is a treasure chest of ingredients, and you have the right and the power to recombine those ingredients so as to make money!

It sounds so simple.

It is.

Go ahead. Try it. You'll see.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

April 16, 2006

"The Vital Importance of Y-O-U: How The Third Line of Stupid "Knock-Knock" Jokes Can Put More Money In Your "Pocket" by David Garfinkel

It cuts across all forms of personal communication: writing copy; speaking; face-to-face selling; chit-chat at the grocery store; even lookin' for love at the local saloon.

It's the need to put yourself in the story. To shed anonymity. To let people know who YOU are.

It's powerful.

When you don't do it, you're weak; and most people writing copy leave this part out. O shame! O missed opportunity! O self-sacrifice!

Because putting personal information in your copy, the right way, will add tremendous power to your copy and...

... increase your response rate and profitability by a wide, wide margin.

On Friday I was recording an exciting new product here in the San Francisco studio, with Working Solo guru Terri Lonier, who was in town from New York. I'll tell you more about it later this fall.

One section of our new product, naturally, was about copywriting. We were discussing how important it is in a sales letter to introduce yourself and at least summarize your relevant credentials early on in your copy.

Terri and I both shook our heads as we remembered all the Web sites we have seen that don't appear to be run by, or connected to, people. There's no mention of any human on them anywhere.

Of course I'm reluctant to do business with any company like that, unless someone I know and trust can vouch for this faceless, nameless entity.

Yes, we live in a very impersonal world. But no, we don't sell or buy that way.

People buy from people. It's always been that way; and there's a very good chance it will continue to be that way stretching out into the future, as far as the eye can see.

Now, to put this in perspective, your copy is not, and never should be, all about you.

Because it's all about your customer. And what you have to offer can do for your customer.

But remember... as your prospective customer is reading your copy, he or she will come to say (silently or out loud): "Who's saying all this stuff to me? Who are they, anyway? Why should I believe them? What gives them the right to say these things?"

That's real. You may not like it; you may not even believe it, yet.

But suppose for a moment that it were true, and introducing the person or people behind the business really would help your copy increase its results.

What would you say? How would you say it? How would you make it seem conversational, authentic, relevant?

The correct answers to those questions will put you in a higher tax bracket. And make your customers much more comfortable doing business with you.

You. Yes, you. Y-O-U!

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

March 18, 2006

"Spelling, Grammar and Cash on the Barrelhead Whether 'tis nobler to be word-perfect... or happy!" by David Garfinkel

My friend Craig Perrine and I were talking yesterday, and Craig told me about someone who had visited his Web site and sent him back a report card.

It's hard to send red marks through an email, but this well-meaning visitor told Craig about the misspelled words and grammatical mistakes on his site.

And, the dude had the audacity to remind Craig to never begin a sentence with the word "and."

Probably without realizing it, the well-meaning visitor entered a dialogue that has been going on for decades - between direct marketers and guardians of proper usage, punctuation and the language as a whole.

You might wonder which side of the fence I'm on, on this issue.

How's this for your answer:

Both.

No, it's not that I don't know how to take a stand. I have very strong and definite opinions.

But I do pick my battles these days. And this is not one of them.

However, it's an important point -- if for no other reason, because it comes up so much -- and that is why I'm writing about it today.

First, my fence-straddling:

My background encourages perfectionism. I once worked for the world's largest publisher of business information, McGraw-Hill, as a magazine editor; later as a field correspondent; and ultimately as a news bureau chief.

As a New York editor, I was very clearly told that any copy leaving my desk had bloody well be free of errors. Condition of employment.

Before that, I had been a French major in college. I even spent a year studying in France. If there's one language, and culture, that doesn't look kindly on spelling or grammar mistakes, that would be the language and culture of France.

And we could talk about the house I grew up in... but this is a blog, not public psychotherapy.

Now, truth be told, I like good grammar and correct spelling. But I don't think they're the end-all and be-all, especially in sales copy.

As for the other side of the coin, fault-free writing does not necessarily lead to breaking the bank with your results.

To give you a couple of examples, I've recently been doing some work in the business-opportunity field, where companies use pre-programmed email autoresponders to turn cold leads into warm prospects.

When you look at these autoresponders, you could easily get the impression that the people who wrote them went out of their way to make spelling mistakes, grammatical errors, leaps of logic and other stupid faux pas.

Like:

"It's not hard. just show people the savings they can enjoy and get paid.. Can you handle that??
If yes, then take that next step and let’s get going... You deserve a vacation dont you?"

or

"Make a Fortune while Traveling to Exotice Hot Spots..."

Hey -- not major errors, but so far from word-perfect, we won't even go there.

And yet, these are sales messages that just happen to be making the people who use them, thousands upon thousands of dollars.

Now, these are not isolated examples. I have one friend, a copywriter and entrepreneur, who is wildly creative and yet points out every typo in everything of mine he sees.

He's as successful in business as anyone I know. Let's just say, "mega-successful."

And I'm always glad to get his feedback. I know he's trying to help, and he does.

I have another friend who writes million dollar sales letters, who keeps getting pulled off his own projects with irresistible offers from other big-name marketers.

He can't get the difference between "your" and "you're" right.

One friend, a best-selling author and frequent media guest. I've never seen her make a typographical error, even in an email.

Another friend, also a best-selling author, who teaches prospective authors how to get published. Can't spell her way out of a paper bag. Well, she can... but not all that well. :)

So, what's the answer? Does spelling matter? Does grammar count? Will your copy sink if your syntax stinks?

I think it's all about what's behind what you write.

Atrocious spelling and illiterate sentence structure won't necessarily pry dollar bills out of your prospects... but...

You can make mistakes -- plenty of them -- and still make a fortune.

If...

You understand what people want, how they talk about it, and how to offer it to them in an appealing way.

There's an ancient understanding among those of us who sell with the written word:

A good offer with imperfect copy will far outdo an inadequate offer with copy that would get an A-plus from the English teacher.

I have one client who has made millions before and is building new empires today.

He hired me to mentor him in writing copy. It cost him a lot of money and he has put in a tremendous effort.

His copy's gotten pretty darned good. His spelling is for the birds.

So I told him, maybe he should hire a proofreader.

Or maybe not.

See, he knows what people want... knows how to offer it to them, in an appealing way, and with integrity. So it's good for them and profitable for him.

He'll make money either way. Plenty o' money.

I hope this gives you some things to think about... and a renewed sense of hope if you can't spell your way out of a paper bag.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

March 16, 2006

"High Bidder" by David Garfinkel

Fortune Magazine Names Meg Whitman, ebay CEO, as the "Most Powerful Woman in Business."
What This Means to You as a Marketer and Copywriter...


Congratulations to my San Francisco Bay Area neighbor Meg Whitman for receiving this honor.

Not only is it a major achievement for her, but, since ebay is a totally Internet-based company, it's a landmark event for the Internet business community as well.

I was editor of a very expensive printed and mailed newsletter during the dot-bomb era called "What's Working Online," and it was all I could do, as a direct marketer, not to end nearly every story with the assessment: "This company is a joke."

With $3.2 billion in projected revenues for 2004, ebay is no joke.

But when you look at how ebay makes its money...

... you realize that its success is proof positive of something I have been saying for a long time:

The Internet is a direct-marketing, direct-response medium.

And companies' fortunes will live and die online by the quality and sales effectiveness of their copywriting.

Lord knows we have enough negative examples to fill several books... and indeed those books have been written.

But now we have the first of many positive ones: ebay.

Postive in that the whole business model, at the foundation, is based on copywriting.

Here's why I say that:

You can put the same item up for sale on ebay, with the same pictures, and with

a) a neutral, wimpy or skimpy description, you'll get a modest amount of money,

b) but with a winning, desire-inducing, action-stimulating, feeding-frenzy-causing description, you'll get a much larger sum of money.

The difference? The description.

And what is the description? It's copy. Plain and simple.

Headline.

Benefit statements.

Bullet points.

Proof of claims.

Call to action.

So here's my call to action to you: whether you want to be the next most powerful woman (or man) in business... or you just want to make a few more bucks on the Internet (or elsewhere)...

... sharpen up those copy skills.

Starting now.

There's a new literacy today. No federal programs supporting it (except the one that prints small green bills with pictures of dead presidents on them). No commissions studying it (except the dispersed aggregate "commission" known as "the marketplace"). No statistics officially available (but you would find those statistics in the closely-guarded sales conversion numbers of Web sites with good copy).

What is this new literacy?

It's copywriting literacy.

For your own economic future, make sure you get some.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

March 12, 2006

"Value: What separates the men from the boys and the ladies from the girls in copywriting? It's this!" by David Garfinkel

I know a copywriter who's so good he got me to write a check for $5,000 today before I even knew what he was really selling.

I have absolute faith and confidence that it is money well spent. Well, not just spent. Invested.

This is not some cute little story I made up for my blog. It's true. I have taken some liberties, because...

... the copywriter in question -- I'll be telling you about him in a future rant -- wouldn't actually let me send him a check. He said he might be doing something and it would cost $5,000 to participate. I told him my credit card was ready the minute he was ready to accept it... and I meant it.

What was he selling? You think it matters, but it doesn't. What matters is that he knew how to create value in my mind.

It didn't hurt that two street-smart sharp cards, guys coincidentally both from Brooklyn (yeah, I have roots there... that's where my Mom's from), had both asked me in the last 24 hours, "Did you hear about so-and-so's seminar? Are you going?"

Both of these dudes are friggin' geniuses. They have made millions for their clients with the copy they have written (they're both copywriters, too). The more successful of the two told me he was going. One specific result he was pretty sure he could get, he told me, would more than pay for the event in toto.

Now in case you think this whole rant is about copywriters who make a lot of money for other people spending a lot money on other copywriters...

... may I invite you to think again?

Because what this is really about is value. How it's created and how it's perceived. And what it causes, sometimes forces, people to do.

Value, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder. But as a copywriter, value for someone else starts in your mind's eye.

Hey, I'll give you an example. A friend of mine told me today he's going to put a comment on one of my other rants in this blog about a single piece of advice in that other rant, that he said was drenched with value. He said the advice I gave solved a problem he had had in an earlier business...

... a problem he and a partner had paid marketing consultant Jay Abraham $10,000 to solve. My friend told me my solution was better, in the way I conceptualized, templated and articulated it, than all the advice he and his partner had gotten from Jay in two hours... which, he said, was well worth the money all the same.

Now the question is: What is value? I urge you to go back to Robert Kiyosaki's book Rich Dad, Poor Dad, and read about the exercise the author's Rich Dad used to give him.

The exercise was to take a blank balance sheet, and within it, draw up a plan to create a money-making business without having to invest any capital.

Sound like sorcery? Financial bullshit? An old master giving a young kid a task he knew he couldn't complete, just to teach him the importance of plowing through frustration?

I suppose you could look at Rich Dad's assignment to young Robert in any one of those three ways.

But as a copywriter, you should consider looking at it in a fourth way: He was teaching Robert to create value first in his mind's eye, so that later he could realize it as cash in the physical world.

I promise you, this is an ethical, viable skill you can learn and bring to term. For yourself. For your clients. For people who are neither copywriters nor protegés of Rich Dad.

You can do it for every consumer, client and business-to-business customer on the face of the planet. It is the mental skill of millionaires, fund-raisers and the visionaries who midwife businesses into being.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

March 08, 2006

"Profit: How to Grow a Fatter Bottom Line With Almost No Math Skills At All" by David Garfinkel

As we Americans prepare for a day of edible abundance, it's good to think about the currency that puts the food on the table -- financial abundance.

Not just money. Profit.

I bring this up because yesterday I was talking with a client who is has over a quarter-billion dollars' worth of sales to his credit. He's savvy. But he's starting a new business, and he's in learning mode about the Web.

I asked him if he knew about Direct Marketing Math. You don't need graduate degrees in statistics to understand this. You don't even need to have finished high school.

Direct Marketing Math is very simple... and yet it is basis for fortunes. Countless millionaires; maybe even some billionaires.

It works like this:

You put a dollar in, and you get more than a dollar back. You've made a profit.

Systematize that. Scale it up. Keep control of your costs and watch the profitability of each ad like a hawk.

And that's all there is to it.

Now, while it's simple, it's not necessarily easy. But it's a heck of a lot easier than textbook accounting.

And, if you like direct marketing, I think it's easier - or at least more enjoyable - than other ways of making a living and accumulating a nest egg or two.

What I find amazing is not that my client grasped this instantly - as a natural-born businessman, he found it right in line with all his experience -- but what I find amazing is how few other people can grasp this at all.

I blame the school system, the media, Wall Street and the pervasive need for looking good over getting results.

I have yet to find a school that teaches entrepreneurship that has anything to do with the entrepreneur I am, the ones I know as friends and peers, and the ones I mentor and write copy for.

The only places where Direct Marketing Math is discussed with any degree of fluency and practicality is in private newsletters, high-end seminars, and non-institutional blogs and Web sites.

Wall Street has undoubtedly created the underpinnings of the greatest economy in the history of the world. But there are no instances I'm aware of where The Street has promoted the understanding of, and proficiency in, Direct Marketing Math.

Looking good? I won't blame Elizabeth Arden or Giorgio Armani. They're the effect, not the cause. If you have any ideas why the vast majority of people would rather look good than get measurable results they can put in the bank or take to Hawaii, please leave a comment. I'd really like to know.

Now's a good time for me to express thanks to the people, some of them, anyway, who have helped me learn Direct Marketing Math:

Dan Kennedy
Denny Hatch
Perry Marshall
Jay Abraham
Gary Halbert
Ted Nicholas
Mark Joyner
Jim Edwards
I have a confession to make: Though I got 782 on my Math SATs, I have never been able to pass an accounting course (a traditional one) -- and I've tried almost a dozen times.

I'm starting to wonder if it wasn't a blessing that traditional accounting doesn't compute.

However, as a Direct Marketer, I have learned (to steal a line from a Wall Street Journal ad), "to teach nickels to become quarters."

And, I have one of the world's best accountants, H.M. of Hollywood, Florida, to help me figure out how to allocate those quarters.

Happy Thanksgiving. Don't give money another thought, until it's time to make your next marketing investment. Then, remember Direct Marketing Math.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

March 06, 2006

"Mistakes to Avoid When Writing Headlines" by David Garfinkel

When Your Headline Sucks, It Doesn't Really Matter How
Good The Rest Of Your Copy Is. Here's What Not To Do:

1. Don't be clever. Most of the time, the urge to be clever is a short-cut to avoid doing the work of creating an enticing promise that will prepare the reader to take the action you are looking for. Resist the temptation; a straightforward headline almost always works better than a clever one.

2. Don't be boring. Remember that ultimately, what you are looking for is action. Action involves motion. Motion is prompted by emotion. And emotion is generated by excitement. Don't settle for a headline that is more likely to produce a yawn than anything else.

3. Don't assume your prospect knows what you know. It's easy to fall into the trap of forgetting all the time and effort you put into building the knowledge and expertise you have on the product, service or information you are marketing. Make the effort to turn back the clock, in your mind, to when you knew far less. Don't write your headline for sophisticated people; write for the person who needs to learn more.

4. Don't focus on your process. The founder of Scott's, the company that sells lawn care products, once said "People aren't buying grass seed from us. They're buying greener lawns." What this means is, people are not interested, initially, in how the seeds are selected, or developed, or, for that matter, stored or shipped (the process). People are interested in greener lawns (the end result). Don't focus on your process; focus on what the prospect gets.

5. Don't merely try to arouse curiosity. You have to do better than that if you want your prospect to get up enough of an emotional head of steam to be ready to buy, or take some other crucial action, after they finish reading your copy. Curiosity at the outset won't do it. Curiosity's good, but what's more important is desire. And intrigue.

By the way, you'll learn how to write great headlines (in minutes) and a whole lot more at the Breakthrough Copywriting Seminar in Las Vegas February 18-20. This small-group, high-powered, exclusive program is only for people who really want to take their copywriting to the next level... and are willing to learn (and do) what it takes to get them there!

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

March 02, 2006

"Capped" by David Garfinkel

The not-so-secret code of a fast-food restaurant offers a value meal of ideas for great copywriting:

If you live almost anywhere in the U.S. but California (where I live), you know what Waffle House is.

In case you don't, it's a fast-food restaurant franchise open 24-hours-a-day. In Atlanta, where I had Sunday morning breakfast at a Waffle House with friends one week ago today, everybody loves Waffle House.

Well, maybe not everybody. But I see more people drinking Coke in Atlanta than anywhere else. And on this Sunday morning, we waited a good 25 minutes, sitting in a line of chairs, to get our table. This is typical, I was told.

Now Waffle House has a special language for when you order, and they use the language they way I have seen other million-dollar copywriters use words for copy... and the way I have used it myself.

At the top of this little rant, you saw a picture of four mushrooms. Now at Waffle House, you can order your hash-browned potatoes with mushrooms, but don't use that word to describe them -- you'll be corrected.

To order hash browns with anything extra, you have to say "scattered" (since the hash browns are "scattered" among the other ingredients). So if you want to order hash browns with mushrooms, tell your waitress "scattered and capped."

"Smothered" means with onions; "covered" means with melted cheese.

Rock band Hootie and the Blowfish released a CD in tribute to Waffle House called "Scattered, smothered and covered" in 2000; the chain was founded in 1955 and buying a Waffle House franchise is considered getting a license to print money.

So... copywriting?

Wayull, it just turns out that there are a few dozen words and phrases that work really, really well in sales copy. Words like "new." "Amazing" "Value" Phrases like "And here's the best part... " "Not only that... " "And what you'll really like, is... "

Two years ago, I wrote a book called Advertising Headlines That Make You Rich, which revealed these proven phrases in headlines, and showed how to adapt them to your own copy.

A friend of mine, who just happened to have degrees from among the most prestigious business and law schools in the world, wondered (as many people do) if the world would tire of these words and they would lose their effectiveness.

The continuing success of a fixed menu and a fixed vocabulary at the Waffle House is one indication that the basics of direct marketing copy - including the words and phrases themselves - will never change (much, that is).

I cover the surprising reason for this in the free bonus teleseminar you get for signing up to my also free newsletter, The World Copywriting Newsletter.

It's the fifth of the 11 secrets about copy I reveal in that teleseminar.

I miss the Waffle House, now being home in San Francisco this fine Sunday morning. But we have something even you guys in Atlanta don't have ... the actual diner where George Lucas filmed American Graffiti ... Mel's!

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

February 12, 2006

"Munchies: Trader Joe's Takes Cheap Gourmet Marketing To A Fine Art; How To Take A Page Out Of Their "Mouthwatering Copy" Brochure" by David Garfinkel


Do you know the way to Trader Joe's?

The California-based grocery chain has outlets in 19 U.S. states. Yesterday I got their catalog in the mail and it is as rich with copywriting tidbits as it is with tempting teriyaki and appetizing ales.

I don't like to go to the Trader Joe's in my neighborhood -- on Masonic Ave. in San Francisco -- because it's almost impossible to park there. They have a good-sized parking lot and there's always a wait... just to get a parking space!,"

But I like the way they market. Here are some of the things I saw in their catalogue, called "Trader Joe's® Fearless Flyer®," that I thought were good examples for everyone who writes copy:

1. Trader Joe's marketing has a personality. This is important, and believe you me, it's rare. In San Francisco, we also have Trader Joe's advertising on the radio. The announcer announces his or her name and then tells a story about a special... and thanks you, the listener, for listening.

Compare that to Safeway or Albertson's or other big grocery chain's ads. First, you can't tell one from the other. Second, they have campy and witless little skits that get you to hear something about a special. And third, they have no personality.

2. There's a congruency in the message, the method and the medium. Trader Joe's is known for cheap gourmet stuff. (The headline at the top of the front page of the Fearless Flyer is "Red Wines from Villa Mt. Eden Just $2.99 a Bottle.") The entire 24-page catalogue has low-end, silly graphics and is printed on newsprint.

It works. It's congruent. And I still can't get into the damned parking lot.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

January 29, 2006

"Most Copywriters Don't Really Know What A Bullet Is, And What It Does. Do You?" by David Garfinkel

A bullet (bullet point in copy) is a short phrase, sometimes as long as two or three lines, that in a very concentrated, power-packed, and dynamic way sums up what’s really powerful or exciting, usually about one aspect of what you’re writing your copy about. It stokes desire while, at the same time, it builds confidence and comfort with what you're offering.

And the interesting thing is, the bullet doesn’t just lie there on the floor like a glob of goo. A bullet is something in action.

Let me give you a very easy way to understand this. This is important because a lot of people have good headlines, or decent headlines, and their copy is okay.

But, when it comes to the bullets, the whole thing just falls apart. You can really do well with your bullets once you understand this:

Think of a hot summer day.

Now on this summer day, I want you to forget for a moment about air conditioning here and instead think about a simple table fan.

OK. The blade of the fan – that’s not a bullet. That’s a piece of the fan – it’s a feature, a component.

You plug the fan in, push the switch, the blade starts spinning. A breeze starts going through your house, and now there’s this cool breeze blowing on you.

You are all hot and sweaty, and the breeze starting to cool you off now. That breeze is the bullet. It’s the air in motion. It’s the satisfying, relieving result that the fan provides for you.

If you ever get stuck on bullets, think of your prospect as someone who’s hot and sweaty, and uncomfortable. And your product, your service, or your information product is the fan that’s going to cool them off and make them feel comfortable again. You have to get them to imagine that comforting, soft breeze that’s calming them down. That’s what a bullet is.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

January 27, 2006

"Slice of Life: The Way Real People Really Talk Can Add Real Power to Your Copy" by David Garfinkel

A long time ago, I thought I might become a screenwriter. In the Hollywood sense.

(I guess anyone who writes to be read on someone else's computer screen could be called a "screenwriter"... but... I had something else in mind at the time.)

Agents and lawyers and stars, o my! Hey, it hasn't happened yet and, the more I learn about the way Hollywood works, the more I think I'm in the right business as a copywriting mentor and educator (and copywriter).

Anyway... one time I took this screenwriting class in Marin County, California. It was back in the '90s, and we had the most interesting assignment -- one that would work exceptionally well for copywriters, too.

The assignment was basically to snoop.

Yeah, snoop.

We were supposed to hang out somewhere in public, with a notebook and a pen, and eavesdrop on conversations. Then, transcribe them word-for-word.

It's an amazing exercise in tuning up your hearing. You'd be surprised how you don't hear exactly what other people are saying, the way they are saying it -- until you really start listening, that is.

The purpose of this exercise was to discover the way people actually say things. Word for word. In real life.

So that when you wrote your movie dialogue, you'd have a base of authentic talking to draw from.

Most amateur dialogue sounds corny and awkward. It's neither entertaining, nor believable.

Movie dialogue is not exactly what people say in real life, either -- it's stylized, compact, rhythmic, clever, sometimes memorable and profound.

But it starts as authentic speech, and gets refined -- goes Hollywood -- from there.

Now... how does this all relate to copywriting?

Simple.

Good copywriting is the spoken language in written form. I was the first person to say that, back in 1999. In the first five minutes of Killer Copy Tactics, the audio/workbook program that Mark Joyner's company aesop.com put on the Web.

Some people still haven't gotten the message about spoken language in written form. So I'm putting it out in this free format, for all to see.

You might want to try some public eavesdropping yourself. Amazing exercise.

Just don't be too obvious about it.

Paranoid people might get the wrong idea.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

January 24, 2006

"Stories: The Six Words That Will Rivet The Attention Of Anyone Who Reads Or Hears Them" by David Garfinkel

Here they are:

"Let me tell you a story."

Many "story experts" say we are hard-wired to deliver our full (and uncritical) attention at the very prospect of hearing a story. It's genetic. To survive, we developed a reflex to blot out all else to hear stories. This was particularly important when all wisdom (including information about how to survive) was passed along in spoken form.

The good news: It works in writing, too. There's nothing like a story to get people engaged in reading what you've written.

A few days ago, I got an email from...

... a very bright entrepreneur in Chicago who has a strong business on the Web.

He asked for some help in sprucing up the Web site copy. It was good (and the fact that the business was already working quite well was proof positive of that), but the first thing I noticed was that just about everything was bullet points.

No stories.

It's not that he had no stories to tell. It's not that he was unable to tell them. It's just that he didn't know the best way to use them in his copy.

I like his business so we're working together. I can tell the Web site is going to be even stronger when I take the stories he's been telling me and strategically place them into the copy.

Stories aren't hard. They're the most natural thing in the world.

Every time someone tells you about something that happened, you've just been told a story.

The key to making stories work is to make them lively and relevant to what your reader is interested in.

Use visual descriptions. Use dialogue, instead of paraphrasing what someone said. Describe feelings, both positive and negative ones.

And don't forget about beginning, middle and end. Some people begin halfway through their stories so you have no idea what they're talking about; other people get off-track and never finish the tale.

Look for examples of stories in copy -- they're few and far between, but well worth searching out.

Did you know that the world's most successful advertisement of all time, which has brought in over $1 billion in sales, is the Wall Street Journal's "Two Young Men" letter?

It begins, "On a beautiful late spring afternoon, twenty-five years ago, two young men grauduated from the same college. They were very much alike, these two young men... "

Think about it. A story. Sorta folksy, wouldn't you say?

Last night an old friend called out of the blue and told me he needs to increase his telephone sales. Let's see if you've been paying attention. Can you guess what I told him?

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

January 09, 2006

"Zilch: Want to guarantee zero response to your copy? Here's how most advertisers do it!" by David Garfinkel

One of the great things about advertising copy is it allows you to take a successful sales pitch that you deliver in spoken form, to one prospect at a time, and multiply it.

Some simple math: If you have a winning formula with your spoken words, and you get 1% response, and you put it in writing and in front of 100,000 people (in an ad, or a sales letter, or on the Web), then you get 1% x 100,000... = 1,000 responses.

That saves you from having to make a whole lot of sales calls.

The problem comes in when you start out with a written sales pitch that would never work in a personal, spoken, one-on-one situation. That's like trying to multiply zeros. No matter how many people you put those words in front of, you still get no response at all.

But since so many advertisers use techniques that all but guarantee zero response -- almost defiantly -- I thought you'd ...

... like to know what the techniques are, so you can decide for yourself if you want to put your time, money, and not to mention blood, sweat and tears, into creating such copy for yourself and your business.

Introducing... The World Copywriting Blog's Five Techniques Designed To Get You Zero Response From your Advertising

Note: Many thanks to the thousands of TV commercials, newspaper and magazine ads, and Web sites which have provided instructive examples necessary to come up with these five response-killing techniques.

Zero-Response Technique #1: Be Clever

Everyone loves a good laugh. (Especially your competitors, who realize you are no threat to them in the advertising space.) Puns, slapstick humor and sexual double-entendre words and phrases work exceptionally well in getting prospects' attention off the inherent value and desirability of your offer and focused on something else.

Also, coming up with some clever angle annoys and intimidates prospects who don't feel they are as smart as you are... a very good way to keep them from ever responding to your advertising.

Zero-Response Technique #2: Be Boring

Go ahead and take the leap -- make the assumption that everyone is as interested in you, your business, all the details of your product, or of your service, and other endless minutia regarding your offer... as you are. Stay blissfully ignorant that nobody gives a rat's ass about anything but themselves -- initially -- when they're reading an ad, and all they care about is what you can do for them.

This of course is true as well if you have an altruistic offer. People contribute money because they feel "right" about it... or simply feel good doing it... or feel some of their guilt relieved, if only for a moment. So even when it's all about others, it's still about the prospect, first and foremost.

But if you don't want to be bothered with the time-consuming task of processing credit cards or depositing checks, you can ensure zero response by making your case in an extremely boring way.

Zero-Response Technique #3: Assume Your Prospect Already Knows What You Know

Don't bother explaining technical jargon or insider shorthand. It's a lot of trouble anyway, and besides, you might not look as cool if you have plain-Jane language in your copy when you are so sophisticated about your subject.

On top of all that, you've already done your homework getting to this level of expertise, so why pay your dues a second time?

The only catch to this approach is: You have to be willing to let your prospects make all their purchases from your humble competitor... you know, the goof-ball who's willing to dumb it down to the prospect's level so they can understand what the hell they're buying!

Zero-Response Technique #4: Focus On Your Process, Instead Of Focusing On The Results Your Customer Will Get

Go on, tell them about how you do what you do and how unique and wonderful it is. Hey, you're paying for the advertising space or the Web hosting, right? So you can say whatever you want. And you have every right to be proud of your superior way of doing what you do. So tell the world about it.

Just be sure to set aside any expectations that this will turn into business for you, since... as you are conveniently ignoring... prospects could care less about your process and procedures.

At least initially. Because the only thing they're really interested in, in this realm, is the results you can get for them. So to make sure you get zero response, don't even mention results. Just tell your story the way you want to tell it.

Zero-Response Technique #5: Just Make Your Prospect Curious. Don't Say Anything That Would Actually Make Them Want What You Offer

Be coy. Hint. Tease. Dangle. Revel in your mysteriousness. But don't come out and hit the nail on the head. Make no promises; identify no problems; offer no solutions.

This is probably the most widely-used and dead-certain zero-response technique known. It has the unbeatable combination of being confusing, annoying and disinteresting to prospects all in one fell swoop. And the best part is, it's so much easier to use than any of the other four techniques. No thought required, and you don't need to use many words at all.

Well, that wraps it up -- five tried and true zero-response techniques.

We'll get back to more constructive ideas in my next rant!

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

December 27, 2005

"Gratitude" by David Garfinkel

In America every year this time the holiday Thanksgiving rolls around. We forget our vows of low carbs and low-percentage body fat, and gorge ourselves gleefully with the bounty of the land.

I like this holiday. Heck, I love this holiday. It celebrates abundance and food, two of my favorite things in life.

My only concern is that people - Americans, and others - could be making the mistake of seeing Thanksgiving as an event, rather than as an attitude -- a way of living.

The attitude of gratitude is especially important (and valuable) in copywriting, since...

... people definitely pick up on how you're feeling when you're writing copy, and they respond accordingly.

See, if you're feeling good, guess what -- they'll feel good when they read what you wrote.

If you're feeling bored, well, so will your readers.

If you're feeling resentful that you have to write this gol-durned copy, you'll repel your readers and discourage them from taking action.

But if you come into your pitch with gratitude and appreciation, you'll get a lot bigger return from your customers.

You know, I've met a lot of successful people; a lot of multimillionaires in my time.

True, some of them bring to mind that famous icon of stinginess at Christmastime, Ebeneezer Scrooge. I guess just about everyone's met someone like that.

But I have a surprise for you: Most of the winners in business I've met have a profound sense of gratitude. They don't take their bounty for granted; and though they have accumulated much themselves, at the heart of it they're givers, not takers.

Something to bear in mind as you enjoy that second helping if you're celebrating Thanksgiving on Thursday... and certainly something to remember when you put together your next killer promotion.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!


December 16, 2005

"Source: Red Hot Super Tab Rakes In The Dirt, But Serves Up Gems For Copy Scribes!" by David Garfinkel

"Source: Red Hot Super Tab Rakes In The Dirt, But Serves Up Gems For Copy Scribes!" by David Garfinkel

I am one of two copywriters ever to have been featured in a profile by the National Enquirer, and it's not because I'm so darned good at writing copy.

It's because I openly admitted that a lot of my success in pulling orders from my copywriting came from what I learned reading America's Favorite Newspaper.

(The other copywriter is some guy named Gary who announces from the audience at Internet marketing seminars that more people read the Enquirer each week than have read the Bible in all of history -- a claim I don't even think the Enquirer would make.)

My new Enquirer (October 25 issue) arrived in the mail today and I can't wait to read it. Here's why...


● Tatum O'Neal Ignites Brutal Family War - beatings, drugs, orgies revealed!

● Lisa Marie's Weight Soars! - Secret reason she's packed on the pounds - EXCLUSIVE PHOTOS

● Roy Marked For Death - Shots Fired at Siegfried and Roy - Enquirer exposes plot to kill him

● Mafia Doctor Exposes Gangsters' Secrets

Now don't tell me this is hype. (Tell me something I don't know.)

What I just bulleted out for you are the headlines from next Thursday's cover. You can get a gold-plated education in writing headlines just from studying the covers.

What's great about the Enquirer is the writing, and the way visuals are integrated with the words to get attention and hold attention.

That's the copywriter's first job.

And where else you gonna find examples that really work?

The Enquirer has taken everyday drama and elevated it to a high art. People make fun of it, but most advertising pales by comparison, when you look at the sheer energy and magnetic quality of Enquirer prose and graphics.

Now, can you take what you learn in the Enquirer and use it as a cookie-cutter template for your own copy?

Almost assuredly not - unless you're selling to the Enquirer crowd and it's a high-drama, very personal type of consumer product.

But you can take the techniques, principles and turns of phrase, and adapt them to your situation and circumstances.

By the way, do you think it's fun getting profiled in the Enquirer?

Yes, and mostly no.

Yes: A girl I was courting finally agreed to go out with me. It was one of the wildest affairs of my life!

No: I got an email from an attorney working for the IRS. (Turned out it was someone I knew from childhood. The Enquirer made it look like I was rolling in cash simply because I was a reader -- and he wanted to let me know that he was an Enquirer reader himself and wasn't making a lot of money himself as a result.)

No: My mother told me the Enquirer was taking too much credit for my success, and the credit in fact should go to her.

No: I got a copywriting client in Hollywood that made every other unworkable situation in my life look pleasant and desirable by comparison.

OK. So. You don't have to get profiled by the Enquirer for your copy to benefit from it. But you can learn a heck of a lot just reading it and studying how they do what they do.

And if you hurry, you'll learn the secret reason Lisa Marie has packed on the pounds!

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

December 15, 2005

"Voices: The Most Bizarre Show on Talk Radio Has A Pot of Gold For You, Amid The Absurdity" by David Garfinkel

One of my guilty pleasures is listening to non-stop weirdness known as The Phil Hendrie Show. It's three hours, five days a week, and 100% spoof.

97 stations in 38 U.S. states carry it, as well as two Ontario stations in Canada. If you get XM Satellite radio, it's on channel 152.

What's so weird about this show? The guests. Not one of them is real, but every one of them is outrageous. All are offensive -- racially, or sexually, or socially, or religiously. No politically-correct stone gets left unturned.

But the most amazing thing of all about this show is...

... that the "guests" are all inventions of the host. He's a quick-change ventriloquist. He can play himself and up to four other characters at the same time, in rapid-fire sequence.

Sure, you do catch on after a while that every guest is a gag, a comedy routine.

But you might never realize that the voices are all the work of one person -- in real time.

I probably never would have figured it out if I hadn't read numerous articles on Hendrie's Web site that describe how he does it, in intricate detail. He's that good.

In fact, Hendrie was the voice of the computer "I.N.T.E.L.L.I.G.E.N.C.E." in the cut-up marionette feature film farce "Team America, World Police."

But the show's the thing. One reason it's so hard to figure out what Hendrie's up to is, not only do the "guests" have different accents, speech patterns, voice inflections and vocal tonalities, but they have distinct (and usually obnoxious) points of view that are consistent, intriguing, and up to a certain point, even believable.

Towards the end of their segment, each "guest" usually goes over the top, past the point of crackpot, into stark, raving absurdity. Stuff you couldn't get away with in a mental hospital. Beyond-nutcase material.

But -- and this is important -- always in a way consistent with the oddball person they started out to be.

You have "guests" like Jay Santos, of the "Citizens' Auxiallary Police," who goes around to tables at restaurants and tries to quell conversations that oppose the war effort in Iraq. Telling people to step outside if they want to discuss that topic.

Or Bobbie Dooley, of the "Western Estates Homeowners Association," who was "carded" (asked for age I.D.) at a liquor store, even though she's 45 years old -- and so, she convened a meeting of the Homeowner's Association to announce that fact.

And that's mild, compared to the high school football coach who feels entitled to sexual favors from the widowed mother who wants her kid to play in the starting lineup; the waiter who pours triple-shots into drinks of senior citizen customers to wheedle a bigger tip out of them (never mind the lives he's endangering when his customers get back in their cars); the private-school teacher who makes broadside racial slurs about his students... and the list goes on and on.

Hendrie is one talented guy. A character actor, you could say. Maybe a character actor on maniac-grade crystal methamphetamine, doing what Joanne Woodward did in "The Three Faces of Eve" -- in triple-time.

A dark, dark comic mind, but the funniest thing going on radio today.

So by now you must be itching with the question, what in blazes does all this have to do with writing copy?

Simple. Getting into the head of another person -- not necessarily a beyond-certifiably-insane one, like Jay Santos or Bobbie Dooley -- but another person, to the point where you can voice their opinion in a way that really sounds like them.

See, your copy is a conversation with your prospect.

It doesn't hurt if you sound a little like your prospect, or a little like one of their friends, in what you say.

But the real breakthrough comes when you can "mock up" an imaginary conversation with the prospect... hear their questions and objection in your mind, just the way they would say those things, and respond in a satisfying way.

Just save your walks on the wild side for other parts of your life. Comedy bits don't work too well in sales copy, unless you really know what you're doing -- and what not to do. And almost nobody does.

But real conversation -- ah, that's what they pay the big bucks for.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

December 07, 2005

"Stuffed: What does the day after Thanksgiving have to do with great copywriting? Plenty" by David Garfinkel

He's an ex-Marine and a college dropout. He was the Dave Barry of an earlier generation; on October 20 he turned 79 . In the liberal suburban Washington, DC-area household where I spent my first 18 years, columnist Art Buchwald was a hero.

He's still a hero of mine. I don't buy his politics but I love his sense of humor. And I greedily lust after his track record.

In 1952 (or 1953, depending on who you want to believe), Mr. Buchwald wrote a very silly (and well worth tracking down) column called "Explaining Thanksgiving to the French." It concludes:

And so, on the fourth Thursday in November, American families sit down at a large table brimming with tasty dishes, and for the only time during the year eat better than the French do.

True? Maybe; maybe not. One thing's for sure: On Turkey Day we definitely eat more than French do, no matter how many courses their feast is!

As I was filling myself up with turkey and trimmings yesterday, I couldn't help but think how what we do to our stomachs on Thanksgiving is exactly the same thing expert copywriters do to create home-run sales promotions. That is...

... we stuff our offers with appetizing value. Almost to the point of bursting.

This is exactly what Jim Edwards and I did when we put together eBook Secrets Exposed: How to Make Massive Amounts of Money with Your Own eBook (Whether You Wrote It Or Not!)

As you can imagine, there's so much information you need to know, to successfully create and market an ebook. Several libraries could be filled with other books that have only tackled one portion of the topics we covered.

What we decided to do was create bonuses - five of them, in fact - over and above the 191 pages of no-fat how-to material that went into the main book. The five extra bonuses we created come with the book.

But we still had more information, and we made a strategic marketing decision -- a very good one, it turned out -- to send people four additional unadvertised bonuses, at the rate of one a week, for four weeks.

That's a little like overloading the groaning board and still leaving unexpected surprises in the kitchen, don't you agree?

Now you might think this is slicing the salami too thin, but I would beg to differ. The way people absorb information -- even speed learners and Photo Readers -- is one topic at a time.

And we were not merely dispensing knowledge, but actually laying out action plans and supplementing them with detailed directions, suggestions and illustrations every step of the way. So we knew that even the fastest learners (and most prodigious action-takers) could only take in, and do, so much at any given time.

Are you starting to see how we actually delivered more value by adding nine bonuses to our main product (which, by itself, covered more than enough topics to get the most detail-oriented ebook publisher on his or her way and into the black)?

Yes, we "stuffed" our offer... and then we added extra trimmings and dessert, unannounced. Bonus bonuses, as it were.

It's worked pretty well. In Las Vegas two weeks ago I was having dinner with a friend who I didn't realize was also a customer of Jim's and mine. She told me how amazed she was that we kept "piling on the value" week after week, after she thought she'd gotten all she had paid for.

And just yesterday, a gentleman in South Africa bought a copy of the book online. People keep buying it. Does our stuffing strategy have anything to do with it?

I think it does. I can't prove it. But I've seen more examples that confirm it than examples to the contrary.

What's your experience been? As a buyer or a seller? Does cramming more value into an offer create additional sales, and make a customer feel more satisfied?

I'd love for you to leave a comment.

Here's my reasoning as to why it makes sense to break massive amounts of value into smaller components... bundle the components together into a single offer... and then highlight the value of each component in your copy:

It fits right into the habitual behavior of your customers, and how they are already used to measuring pleasure and worth.

Look at how people "consume" at the most basic level: One bite at a time.

Just the way they would enjoy an overflowing Thanksgiving table in America. Or a full 7-course meal in France.

Let me know what you think.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

December 06, 2005

"Dude: Rock Star Winemaker Doesn't Advertise, But His New Releases Sell Out Faster Than A Speeding Grape" by David Garfinkel

It's the triumph of will over reason.

"Science is asking the wrong questions," winemaker Sean Thackrey told the San Francico Chronicle in a story published yesterday.

"A winemaker is not asked to make scientific decisions. You're there to create a pleasure. You don't have to get a degree in food science to be a chef."

Thackrey lives 29½ miles from me in the lost-from-the-world town of Bolinas, California, where people are so jealous of their privacy that they routinely rip down road signs on the freeway telling people how to get there.

In fact, eccentric covers nearly everything about Thackrey. But if you look closely at what he does, you'll realize his way of thinking and way of doing can make your copy as irresistible as his wines, if...


... you apply those thinking and doing ways to your particular situation.

The thing to know about Thackrey is that he is very learned, but he has created his own science. He's empirical, rather than derivative.

"Empirical," in this case, means, guided by his own experience, rather than depending on theory or conventional wisdom.

"Derivative," in this case, means, copied or adpated from others. One sheep following the flock, unthinking and in lockstep. In winemaking, that would be the bland leading the blind.

In copywriting, when you don't put your heart and your guts and your feet and your all into what you're writing, you get a predictable and same response every time:

"Ho-hum."

Which, in this case, means: yawn.

Now, am I suggesting that you write with passionate abandon, knowing that if you follow your heart, the high-percentage response rates and thusly the money will follow you, wherever you go?

No. I don't take you for a fool.

"Write what you love, and the money will follow." Hey, that's a good one!

Sorry. Affection and passion are important, but not enough to make the ka-ching sound over and over again.

You need to find out what works, universally, and develop skill in that as technique.

But then you need to find out what works for you... who you are as an enthusiastic proponent of what you are promoting... how you say it best... and weave that into your finely honed technique. Your personal stamp, as it were.

The Chronicle article says of this one-man-industry Thackrey: "He relies on intuition, his own palate and tips gleaned from what he beleives is the world's largest collection of ancient texts on winemaking."

ð knowledge

ð technique

ð personal stamp

You want to know what makes great copy? Just study the life and times of Sean Thakrey. Get, if you can, one of his impossible-to-obtain wines. Put the unopened bottle near you in the place where you write. And mull over what you have just read.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

December 02, 2005

Determination: When You Write Advertising Sales Copy, Your Inner Resolve Gets Reflected On The Last Row of Your Excel Spreadsheet" by David Garfinkel

If I had to pick one aspect of attitude that makes the difference between profit and loss in copywriting, I would pick determination every time.

You know, the maniacal holiday shopping season has started here in America. I heard on the radio at one Connecticut Wal-Mart, a shopper arrived at 3 in the morning just to be among the first to get in when the doors opened three hours later.

Now that's determination.

The shopper, Claude Samson, was quoted by the Associated Press as saying, "I think it's a little crazy and there's probably a simpler way of doing this, but at the same time, you are saving so much.

"When you are saving $30 or $40 on a gift, you're going to do what you have to do."

Good for her. I'm sure she got what she wanted.

But how many times do we write copy without...

... having that same "do what you have to do" attitude?

Judging by most of the copy I see all around me -- both in big-time commercials and ads, and in entrepreneurial Web sites and sales letter emails -- we write without that attitude most of the time.

Determination. You know it yourself.

There have been times in your life when you had to make something happen. When you focused on an outcome and you gave it your all. Frustration be damned, you plowed straight ahead.

And what happened?

You may have gone through a little hell to get there... but... you got there, didn't you?

Why people are not willing to put the same level of commitment and intention into their copywriting is beyond me.

But you know it's true that they're not, don't you?

If it weren't true, you'd at least be tempted to buy after you saw every single ad, sales letter, email, Web site, Google AdWords ad and TV commercial, wouldn't you?

If, that is, the ad in question were about something you would be interested in, and the person or people behind it knew you and your wants and needs -- you hot buttons -- like the back of their own hand.

But, alas, there's so little determination in what most people put into their copy. I mean, their determination is to get it done... so, I guess, they can say "I did it" and check it off on a list.

It's so rare that the determination is really to make it happen.

When I wrote the sales letter for Abacus Travel Management that added $5 million dollars a year to their sales, do think I just fit it in between reading the comics at Starbucks and watching reruns of daytime cartoons?

Gosh, I'd love it if you believed I had those kind of superhuman powers. But I didn't and I don't. I rewrote the letter seven times -- and each time I rewrote it, I gave it my all.

And, as you can see, it paid off. (duh)

So... what about you?

Next time you write some copy, try this more extreme approach. Be determined. See what happens. And put a comment under this rant so we all can know.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

November 30, 2005

"David Garfinkel"s In Search Of Heroes Interview Was So Astounding I Had To Listen To It Twice" by Ralph Zuranski

Click Here to listen and read David's amazing interview.

Ralph Zuranski: Hi, I’m on the phone with David Garfinkel. He is the best teacher of copywriting in the world today. How are you doing tonight, David?

David Garfinkel: I’m doing great, Ralph. How are you?

Ralph Zuranski: I really appreciate the opportunity to have you answer some of these Hero questions. You’ve been a real hero of mine for a long time. I’ve seen you at a lot of the different conferences that I’ve been to.

David Garfinkel: Thank you.

Ralph Zuranski: Probably one of the first questions that I wanted to ask you, what is your definition of heroism?

David Garfinkel: Okay, in my mind, a hero is someone who has faced challenges and exhibited great courage in the face of risks and danger. I tend to think of a hero as someone who acts courageously for a goal or a purpose that’s greater than him or herself.

David Garfinkel: Absolutely. You know it’s funny. We have this image of heroes because we have such a media culture and a celebrity culture. We tend to think of heroes as the ones that are best known and who do these great dramatic things. I think those people are heroes, but I don’t think they are the only heroes.

I think that what you’re talking about fits my definition very well. I just saw a movie called “Hostage” with Bruce Willis. I don’t know if you’ve seen it.

Ralph Zuranski: Yeah, I've seen that one too.

David Garfinkel: I don’t know if any of our listeners have seen it. I was seeing it with a friend who talks about heroes all the time and in fact she is a hero of mine. She says things, like when you do her a favor, she’ll say, “Well, you’re a hero!”

But during the movie, there’s this scene with a young boy. He’s tied up and he uses broken glass. Do you remember that scene?

Ralph Zuranski: Yeah, I do.

David Garfinkel: And he cuts the ropes? My friend got all upset because the broken glass was not only cutting the ropes, but it was cutting his hand. Blood was spurting all over the place and she sort of grabbed my arm. But you know the thing is, he wasn’t doing this because he was stupid or just to save himself. He was also trying to save his sister. The bad guys were holding them hostage. I remember whispering to my friend, “That’s what a hero does.”

He was sacrificing his own comfort and his own safety to save himself and another person. That’s my definition. Of course, you don’t always literally get your hands bloody and often a hero is selfless to help more than one person. I mean what you are talking about with your own parents is a great example.

Ralph Zuranski: I've also seen in working with kids for many, many years is that kids really and truly do have the potential of heroism within themselves. A lot of times, they don’t even realize that they have that potential.

David Garfinkel: No, and maybe one reason is that it is not recognized and valued when it’s at a small personal level. But I do. I recognize it and value it and you certainly do. You see it.

Ralph Zuranski: Well you know, when we were young, I created a secret hero that helped me overcome all the problems that I had as a kid, being a 99 pound weakling. You know, big nose, big ears, horned-rimmed glasses. I just sort of hated who I was and I had this fictional hero in my own mind that kept on telling me that, “It’s going to be okay. You can do this.” Did you ever create a hero in your own mind to help you through difficult situations?

David Garfinkel: I think it’s terrific that you did that. That’s really great. No. I never did. I’ll tell you a little bit about heroes in my own life though. I had some pictures of real heroes on my wall. This is after I was older. Thomas Edison and Albert Einstein are real heroes to me.

But they are living people. I know some are very famous and some are not that I can tell you about. There’s a guy named Bob Parsons. He founded a company named GoDaddy that makes it real easy to do a lot of things on the Internet. He's a real hero of mine.

Steve Jobs is a hero of mine even though I’m not a Mac guy. You know? I don’t even like the attitude that a lot of people have about Macintoshes. But what Steve did makes him a hero in my mind.

Someone we both know – Armand Morin. What he's done for Internet Marketers and Internet Marketing, he's a hero of mine.

Mike Stewart, we both know him as well. He's helped ordinary people do things with audio, with recording and with video on the Internet, especially in business that no one else has done. He's a hero of mine.

I know a doctor named Dave Wienerawski; he's a friend of mine. I’m a customer of his. He's a client of mine and he's an MD. He gave up his practice and this might not sound like a big deal to a lot of people, but you have to understand. His father was an MD and that was what “he was supposed to do”. He gave it up. He retired to dedicate his life to creating better nutritional health solutions for people.

All of those people are heroes.

Ralph Zuranski: What is your perspective on goodness, ethics, and moral behavior?

David Garfinkel: Well, that’s a great question. I think that there is such a thing as good and there is such a thing as evil. There’s no doubt in my mind, but an interesting twist on that is I've come to realize that almost all people consider themselves good even though other people may consider them evil.

For example, I was very interested in writing movies for a long time. I studied screen writing and I will never forget, there was a very famous teacher of screen writing named Robert McKee.

He said that almost all people believe themselves to be good. The example that he gave and this is what I've come to believe, as I've just stated it, he said that the people in the Mafia, the mobsters, they call themselves The Good People.

Because they believe they’re providing drugs, prostitution and all of these other things that the middle class and the other people want, they consider them hypocrites. They consider themselves good people because they’re not hypocrites.

I just think that everyone should know that. That doesn’t mean that I consider them good. Okay? I just wanted to state that. People have different points of view. What some people call the law of cause and effect, in the Bible there’s a saying, “As you sow, so shall you reap.”

From some area of India, there’s a concept of karma. It’s the same idea. I believe that if you do things that you consider evil, that evil will befall you. If you do things that are good, good things will come to you. Not right away and not always in ways that you would have expected.

I think in terms of being ethical, it’s a lot harder to be ethical in the short run. But because of the law of cause and effect, it’s much easier in the long run. I also believe, and for all of the kids that are listening to this, I really, really would like to say this.

The happiest people, the most wealthy people, the most successful people, either they started to or they eventually grew to have a long-term perspective on life. They do things for the long run.

Ralph Zuranski: It’s funny that you talk about people thinking themselves good. One of the first heroes that we interviewed was Gregory Allen Williams. He was one of the stars on Bay Watch. He was the cop, Sergeant Ellerby. He was a Shakespearean actor. He actually saved the life of an Asian man during the L.A. riots. He was able to get the guy out of the car while he was being beaten to death.

David Garfinkel: Really?

Ralph Zuranski: He was an Asian guy and Gregory Allen Williams is a black guy, so when the mob turned on him to kill him and finish off the Asian guy, there was a Mexican gentleman who stepped in to take the beating so he could get him to the neighbors so they could get him to the hospital. I still remember this one quote. He said, “There’s a little bit of good in the worst of us and a little bit of bad in the best of us.”

David Garfinkel: That is so true.

Ralph Zuranski: People want to be heroes when they step up and do something to help others.

David Garfinkel: That’s right. I agree with you. That’s a wonderful story.

Ralph Zuranski: Anybody could be a hero if they just did something good to help somebody else.

David Garfinkel: Yes.

Ralph Zuranski: You know everybody has had low points in their life. What was the lowest point in your life? How did you change your life path to win a victory over all obstacles?

David Garfinkel: Well, there are a couple of things that come to mind. One was when my father died when I was nineteen. I don’t have much to tell you about what I did. I don’t think I did anything particularly heroic. I just went on with my life.

I don’t know if I did anything heroic at the other low point. I think the very worst time was, oh gosh, twenty years later when I was around forty. I had been trying to build a business for eight years and I had been trying to do everything right. I had been doing many things wrong without knowing it.

I was broke and my business was crumbling. The IRS had frozen my bank account. There were a couple of things and I can't remember a day when this happened, but I think that fairly rapidly I came to make a couple of changes.

One is I learned what I call the “Entrepreneurs Secret.” I will tell you this, I came to recognize later from an excellent coach named Dan Sullivan. He has something called “Strategic Coach”. It’s for Entrepreneurs.

The Entrepreneur’s Secret is very different from the entitlement mentality. I know that those are big words for a lot of people, but the entitlement mentality is, “The world owes me a living. Screw you. Give me what’s mine.”

The Entrepreneur’s Secret is that you have to create and deliver a massive amount of value before you can really expect anything in return. You have to step up first. So that’s one thing that changed things for me.

Another thing was when I switched my focus from being a narrative writer; I had been a professional writer as a journalist. I think that people who do that, they serve a very important function. I’m not saying that there’s anything wrong with it. But for me, what really changed my life, not only my financial fortune but also allowed me to do more things for more people, is I switched my focus from being that kind of writer who just told stories, to being a copywriter who also told stories, but told stories that helped people to improve their lives and help businesses to make more money.

My own belief is that when you can do that, you can tell a story that is going to have a positive effect on someone, rather than it’s internal like inspiration. Or external, like helping a person to make more money, that’s when you can really make a difference for them.

Ralph Zuranski: Was your dad a hero to you? I know that you mentioned that when you were nineteen, he died. Was he that type of person?

David Garfinkel: I looked up to him. I don’t know if I would call him a hero. I mean, I missed him terribly. I guess I would say no he wasn’t because I didn't want to live the same kind of life that he had lived. I don’t mean, getting sick and dying, but no, I wouldn't say he was a hero.

I respected him and I loved him, but I wouldn't put him in the hero category.

Ralph Zuranski: Do you have a dream or vision that set your course of life?

David Garfinkel: Actually, I’m really glad that you just asked me that question, because I think I’m going to probably do an about face on my last answer about my dad. When I was about fifteen, this was about four years before my dad died, he was writing this book with his boss. My dad was a scientist. He was having such a hard time writing the book.

You know, writing has always come easily to me. Now I’m going to make a little distinction here, writing well never comes easy to me. Actually, just getting words down on the page, just writing, that’s always been easy. He was having the hardest, hardest time and I really wanted to help him. I wanted to help him so bad, Ralph.

I offered to and of course, it was nice of me to do that, but I didn't know how I could help him. I didn't understand anything about physics or what he writing about. I remember him looking at me and saying, “David, if you could do that, if you could help people to write more easily, that would be the most wonderful thing.”

I think that more than being a hero, he was an inspiration for my dream and my vision. I created the World Copywriting Institute and I have the vision of eradicating copywriting illiteracy in this world. What’s copywriting illiteracy? It doesn’t mean that you don’t know who to write. It doesn’t mean that you can't read or write, which is what people normally think of as illiteracy.

What I call copywriting illiteracy is the inability to write words that prompt other people to do something - to take action. I would say that someone is copywriting illiterate even if they are a copywriter, or work for an ad agency or anything. If they can only write advertising that doesn’t work. It doesn’t inspire or motivate other people to take action, so this is a long-term goal – to eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.

This is the mission for the rest of my life.

Ralph Zuranski: Wow. That’s a great vision because part of the Heroes program is that once the kids learn to find their own hero within and then go and publicize local heroes, their job will be to write good copy, sales copy that will promote that person’s business in the local community so they can afford to do more good things in the community itself.

Once the kids get out of school, they become the ultimate copywriter resource for the local businesses. A lot of times local businesses can hire kids, but they can't hire copywriters like yourself for $500 per hour.

David Garfinkel: Ralph, thank you. That is such a wonderful goal that you have for your program.

Ralph Zuranski: I guess that we’re both optimists and wanting to change the world in a specific way to make it a better place, starting off with the kids.

David Garfinkel: Yeah.

Ralph Zuranski: You are obviously an optimist.

David Garfinkel: I am an optimist, but I'm also a pragmatist. I know that things always work out best in the end if you stay the course, if you persevere. But I also know that we don’t always know, we usually don’t know what’s going to happen along the way.

Ralph Zuranski: Boy, isn’t that true?

David Garfinkel: Yeah. There's a very controversial author name Robert Ringer. He wrote a book called Winning through Intimidation, Million Dollar Habits, Looking Out for Number One. A lot people think he's all about selfishness. He's really not in my opinion.

He has a really neat concept called “Positive Thinking with the Expectation of a Negative Result”. What he means by that is that, things are always going to work out, but they’re not always going out the way you expect them. You're going to have a lot of false starts.

You're going to have a lot of disappointments along the way. If you expect that, it’s not going to destroy you. It’s going to remind you that you are on your path and you just have to keep at it.

To use a baseball analogy, you have to swing a few times and you have to miss a few times before you get a hit. You can't win all the time. I've gotten to the point in my life now, and I'm a big optimist. A lot of people can't believe how optimistic I am, and yet I consider a project or even a day to be a success as long as I've won more than I've lost.

It doesn’t mean that I'm going to win everything. I'm just going to win more than I lose.

Ralph Zuranski: That’s a great concept. You look at the flip side and what everybody is expecting – instant gratification. You know, when people don’t get that instant gratification they sort of get embittered. They start saying, “No good deed goes unpunished.”

David Garfinkel: Well see, I love instant gratification. I do. Maybe that’s why I'm a copywriter because I understand that concept in others. If you can appeal to people’s sense of getting a real quick reward, you’re will work better. But I also have fifty years of life experience and I just have seen the way that things go for me and everyone else.

Ralph Zuranski: Do you think that it’s hard for people to change and that it takes a lot of courage to pursue new ideas?

David Garfinkel: Yeah, I think it is hard. I think for most people it is very hard and I think that I've been blessed in that I have that courage. It’s one of my greatest strengths. You know, courage by the way, doesn’t mean fearlessness in my mind. Courage means willingness to act in the face of fear.

I want to tell you, Ralph, I've also learned to hear and to listen to and to trust my intuition. That’s important with new ideas. I want to say something. The world does not accept new ideas. If you have new ideas, that’s going to be a lesson for most people.

You have to learn how to sell and you have to learn how to accept rejection. Especially when you know the idea is right and people all around you are just shaking their heads.

Ralph Zuranski: Yeah.

David Garfinkel: Or even violently arguing with you. You have to endure that. You have to endure temporary setbacks. The other thing is that you have to understand that not every new idea is a good idea. But if you believe in something with all your heart and soul and you can be open to feedback, you have to understand that most new ideas have the germ of a good idea in them. It may not be the way that you originally expected it.

Experience over time helps you a lot to improve your success ratio.

Ralph Zuranski: So do you feel that when you are pursuing your dreams, you are probably going to experience a lot of discomfort in that process?

David Garfinkel: Yeah, yeah. You have too. Let me tell you. It’s different than you might expect if you’ve never done it, because even when things are going good, even when you are winning, there are frustrations. It’s just the nature of life.

The other thing is when you are pursuing your dreams; you're not the same person today that you were a week ago. If you are really pursuing your dreams, you start to grow. You start to become more than you were.

A funny thing happens when you start to grow. What happens is you become a different person in the same world. So, the world is reacting to you differently and you're not going to quite believe all the things that are happening. You're not going to be familiar with them. You're going to be out of your comfort zone.

When you are out of your comfort zone, that’s the definition of discomfort, right?

Ralph Zuranski: Yeah.

David Garfinkel: But that’s not an issue for me. In fact, for these days I would say that it’s more uncomfortable to do nothing than to do something that’s a little uncomfortable.

Ralph Zuranski: I know that to attain your dreams, you have to believe that they can become reality. How long did it take it for your dream to become the greatest copywriter teacher to become reality?

David Garfinkel: It didn't take that long. I think I first sort of owned that, claimed that, discovered that, asserted that, in the late 90’s. Here we are in 2005 and I would say that by 2001, 2002 I was there. Not everyone accepted it but no one ever said, “No David, I'm a better copywriting teacher than you. Here’s the proof.”

It didn't take that long, but one thing is that there were a lot of other goals of dreams and goals that I had before that the seed of this, the essence of this. I was writing; I was first published when I was eight. I was a professional writer in my 20’s and I was doing seminars in the 80’s, teaching people to write, but not copywriting.

It took a while for me to see this particular dream. But whenever I've had a dream, not necessarily as big as this, they’ve always become reality. There are a couple of important things that I've learned about that.

One is that you can create an outcome of your dream, the end results. A lot of people, I think certainly me, I used to think that if I can be in charge of the outcome, I can be in charge of my path to get there. This is, “what is it going to look like”.

That part isn’t true. You don’t know what you're going to go through. After all if you did then you would already be there, because, it’s an adventure to achieve a dream.

You have to become someone else. You're the same person, but you have to become more of who you truly are. That’s an adventure and there are unknowns. Maybe nobody knows. Maybe you're blazing a trail that’s never been blazed before.

The other thing is you're not in control of the time table either. I know that a lot of people suggest that you set goals with specific dates on them. I do that. But I find that it doesn’t always work out that way.

Sometimes it takes longer and sometimes it happens a lot faster. Ultimately, we’re not in control. There's something bigger than all of us. I would call it God. A lot of people call what’s in control God, other people have other names for it. I think it’s funny. It’s a delicate balance. You have to do your part. You have to give your all to try to control it but then you have to understand that there’s more to this than just you.

Ralph Zuranski: When you are pursuing your dreams and you're striving to be the best that you possibly can, given the realization that you're not going to get anything until you actually give everything that you can. You're sort of prey to doubts and fears. I know that great people, like yourself, that along the pathway and when you are going through the difficult times in life that fear and doubt seems to rear its ugly head. How did you overcome that?

David Garfinkel: What I find is that I have a lot of doubts until I make a decision. Once I make a decision and I'm fully committed; I don’t have any doubts anymore. I really can't explain this, because it doesn’t make a whole lot of sense.

Doubts are not usually a problem for me. Fears are very real and I would be lying to you if I said that I didn't have fears. I do. I've even learned that fear is for me, and I bet for other people too, disguise themselves as something else. I mean, I know what it is to be shaking with fear.

But I also know what it is to be very tired or to come up with all these excuses or to feel overwhelmed. I now believe that those are just fear in other clothing. I wouldn't say that I've overcome them, Ralph; I would say that I've learned to live with it.

It’s about acting and I think faith is the answer for me. I'm not a religious person. I want to be very clear. I'm a spiritual person. I believe that there's more to us than we can see or observe with our senses, but I don’t go to temple or church. I'm just sort of an independent person in that way. Yet it is faith. It’s faith in God and it’s faith in this process that helps me get there.

The other thing that I want to say is that I'm a creative person. You are too. You had an imaginary hero who helped you through some tough times, right?

Ralph Zuranski: He's still with me.

(laughter)

David Garfinkel: Well, that’s good. Our imaginations can go in all different directions and for me; I've imagined some horrible things that were going to happen to me when I was afraid.

The worst things that I have ever feared have never once come to pass.

Ralph Zuranski: Do you feel that 90% of the things that we fear and worry about never become reality?

David Garfinkel: I don’t know if I would put a number on that. I think that if you worry about something long enough, it will become a reality. I think that whatever you focus on is what your life tends to become. But, I think that if you worry about something once and I think that a lot of worries go away when you take action toward a goal that’s meaningful to you.

Ralph Zuranski: Do you believe that fear of failure is probably the most crippling element in most people’s lives that keeps them from achieving the success that they desire.

David Garfinkel: That might be. Yeah, I don’t know if it’s the most, but I think that it’s probably lack of permission and lack of belief in the possibility. But fear of failure is right up there. There's a wonderful book that I have that I read constantly. I read snippets from (I keep it in my bathroom). It’s called Failing Forward by John Maxwell. He documents in a very down-to-earth, understandable way how failure is part of the success process.

How you can’t succeed at something without going through failure. So, I think fear of failure is a big impediment towards people getting what they want.

Ralph Zuranski: Do you experience service to others as a source joy in your life?

David Garfinkel: Absoloutely. Let me tell you a story. As you know and anyone listening to this interview can tell, I'm a talker. I'm a speaker. I talk a lot. One of the things the people like me do is we will find people who are good at transcribing stuff to transcribe it for us.

I have one friend; I just had breakfast with him the other day. I used to hire him to do transcription. I don’t that much anymore, but we’re still friends and he has other clients. We’ve gone different ways in our lives a lot, but he was telling me, five or ten years ago. He's a very intelligent man. A friend of his ended up with breast cancer.

He wanted to raise some money for her. He remembered what he had learned from me. I hadn’t taken him on as a student, but he had just learned it from listening to my materials. He ended up writing a letter for her that raised $7,000.

Ralph Zuranski: Wow.

David Garfinkel: This guy is not a copywriter. I cannot tell you the joy that brought me. I hold very expensive seminars and I mentor people, it’s very expensive. There's nothing that brings me more joy than when one of those people has a win or has a breakthrough.

But I also have a free newsletter and I have a free blog. I try to give away a lot of content. I have to make a living and for what I want to do, I need a lot of money. I'm not talking about changing one copywriter’s life; I'm talking about the whole world.

I also want to reach as many people as I can. I know that some people can't afford it. There a lot of people that are not willing to pay what its worth, so they may not get the same value as those who are but they can get something. Often, I’ll send something in my newsletter and I’ll get e-mails back from people and they say, “David, what you just told me solved a problem that I've been wrestling with. Thank you so much.”

Ralph, that brings me more joy than when I get a big check and I put it in the bank - a lot more joy. I certainly like money and I certainly like help making other people make money, but it’s not my biggest joy in life.

Ralph Zuranski: How can people benefit from your newsletter and your blog? What are the URLs of those?

David Garfinkel: Oh, that’s easy. The newsletter is called the World Copywriter Newsletter and the URL for that is www.CopyNewsletter.com. The blog, I don’t have an easy to remember URL, so I'm just going to tell you the easiest way to get to the blog is for you to sign up for my newsletter, I’ll send you an e-mail afterwards automatically. Or the other way is just go to Google and type in “world copywriting blog” and you’ll get a lot of links to it.

There's a more complicated way, but I don’t expect people to even get this. It’s www.World-Copywriting-Institute.com/blog. The easiest thing is type in copywriting blog. I think I've got the top search engine rankings with my blog.

Ralph Zuranski: That’s great. I know that I've been to a lot of the conferences taking photos of everybody and you seem to have a good sense of humor. How has that been able to help you in the face of serious problems?

David Garfinkel: I'm going to answer that in a couple ways, okay? Often when I'm under a lot of stress, I can tell I'm under a lot of stress because my sense of humor just goes. Boom. When things get really tense, my sense of humor just disappears. But on the other hand, I can't say that I'm relaxed when things aren’t going so well.

Once I get over some crisis points, humor is what carries me through. It’s so important. Joking around with friends, listening to comedy that I think is funny, and those kinds of things. It’s what carried me through, Ralph. If I didn't have that I don’t know if I could have made it this far.

Ralph Zuranski: I believe that’s true.

Who do you believe are the real heroes in our society today?

David Garfinkel: I think that anyone that is trying to make a difference in the lives of others is a hero.

Ralph Zuranski: I do too.

David Garfinkel: There all kinds of people who get recognition in the media and they're famous. Those people are heroes. There's no doubt about it, but I think that there are people in all walks of life.

I want to say something important that people need to realize. We look to others for signs of how we are doing, but a hero is not always recognized by everyone as a hero. Some heroes run up against tremendous opposition.

Ralph Zuranski: Boy. That’s true.

David Garfinkel: I also want to say that just because I think someone is not a hero, maybe someone is not a hero to me or I don’t like them, doesn’t mean that they're not a hero. This is most obvious in politics or competition. You could have a quarterback for a team that you didn't like and he could still be a hero.

Maybe you don’t think so. But maybe he's helping his teammates out or he's helping kids or a fundraising drive to wipe out a disease or something. The other thing is because we have this star-studded society, I've come to realize that in a very limited way, I'm sort of a celebrity. Not like a household name or anything, but in the particular world that we know about; the Internet Marketing seminars and the entrepreneur seminars.

You tend to see that people are always looking to see who the celebrities are. You know, we may be heroes. I understand that I'm a hero to people. I think that’s great.

I also want to say that ordinary people in life, a teacher in a school can be a hero. A coach can be a hero. A brother can be a hero to his little brother. A sister can be a hero to her brother or her sister. The guy who owns the corner store can be a hero. An executive in a business that you’ve never heard of can be a hero. An athlete can be a hero.

I would say that it’s anyone who is putting some time in their life, making some effort to make the world a better place. My mother is still alive, which I'm grateful for. I just talked to her today, in fact I mentioned before this call, her phone, she's only taking calls. She can't make calls out and she can't use the Internet until Saturday when the phone company, Verizon, can get its little truck and go to her house and fix the phone.

She, at the age, I don’t know if I'm allowed to say her age, but she's older than I am. I'm 51, so do the math. She goes the schools and she mentors kids that come in from other countries and who need help. That’s heroic.

Ralph Zuranski: Yeah, that’s the truth.

David Garfinkel: I'm so proud of her. She said that she wanted to listen to this interview. So there you go, Mom. I'm really proud of you. You're my hero.

(laughter)

Ralph Zuranski: So you really think that heroes are really important in the lives of young people?

David Garfinkel: Absolutely. We tend to have this very ennobled, sophisticated, superior, advanced view of ourselves as people. We tend to see ourselves as this really advanced race of people – six or seven billion of us. But there is something that I've noticed as a teacher and that is that we learn by imitating. Monkey see, monkey do sort of thing.

It’s true. I don’t care if the person is a world class athlete, a genius, a leader, the head of a corporation. It doesn’t matter. People will look to other people for cues. That’s where leadership comes in. that’s where heroes come in. There’s a joke. Hopefully not your parents, but some parents say this and sometimes people say this. In life they say, “Do as I say, not as I do.”

That’s ironic but it’s also really backwards from the way life really works. I think that these days, all the negativity and all the confusion in our world, we need heroes more than ever. Kids really need heroes and positive role models. Just as an example of what to do.

Ralph Zuranski: I know what you mean. It’s so important and I think that you pretty much defined how people become heroes and helping other individuals. I see that you are making the world a better place through your copywriting college and helping people learn to transform their lives and the lives of others by helping people to write copy. It actually generates income.

David Garfinkel: Thank you, Ralph.

Ralph Zuranski: Let’s face it. That’s what makes the world go round.

David Garfinkel: Yeah, it’s not just money. There's a guy named Zig Ziglar who trains people, who says, “Money isn’t everything, but it’s right up there with oxygen.”

Ralph Zuranski: That’s true. Life is better with it than without it.

David Garfinkel: It sure is.

Ralph Zuranski: What do think about the In Search of Heroes Program’s impact on the youth, parents and business people?

David Garfinkel: I think that it’s such a great idea and I know that you’ve had this idea for a while. Until you sent me these questions and I had a chance to think about them, I didn't realize how important it is and why it’s important.

One of the most important things is that we don’t talk about heroes that much as a society in general. I know that there are programs, leadership things, organizations that do, but I mean as a society as a whole. To go out to schools and tell kids, “Hey, you don’t have to turn on the T.V. set or go to the movie theater, or open the newspaper to find heroes. You can find them right in your own back yard, in your own school, in your own community. You can find business people who are heroes.”

I think that is terrific. I also want to say that there is so much negativity these days. It’s almost cool to be cynical. Its been that way for a while in our society. It seems to run through the course of the fabric of everyday life. I think that you are doing something to offer an alternative to that, Ralph.

That’s great.

Ralph Zuranski: I was just listening to a tape today and they said that 80% of all the news that people hear on T.V. (most people watch T.V. about 30 hours per week) is about negative things. Things that people have no ability to have any impact on at all other than just creating fear in their lives.

David Garfinkel: I think that’s true. I also know that from a marketing point of view, somebody tried once to come up with a newspaper that only had good news and they couldn't sell anything. So I think that we are oriented towards that. It’s a complex problem; nevertheless, we are looking for good news. We are looking for things to feel good about. We are looking for people to inspire us, people that we can identify with.

People that we can relate to and if you can help people focus on that – and you are. The fact that you are doing that is very positive, it’s very important.

Ralph Zuranski: What do you think are things that parents can do that will help their children realize that they too can be heroes and that they can make a positive impact on the lives of others?

David Garfinkel: The first thing I would say is that parents should encourage their kids to try things. Parents need to help kids understand about risk, because it’s important to take risks. But, it’s important to not take crazy risks. If you grew up with parents who were risk takers, you might have a better sense for that. If you didn't, you may have to learn the hard way.

Ultimately the worst ‘hard way’ is to take such a big risk that you die. Then you don’t get to take any more.

(laughter)

Ralph Zuranski: That’s true.

David Garfinkel: You need to learn to answer the question, “What’s the worst thing that could happen?” If you can't handle the worst thing that could happen, you need to take a smaller risk. I think parents need to encourage kids to take risks that they can handle.

There's another thing. I think parents can demonstrate helping others by their own actions, not just by their own words. I don’t think parents need to be perfect nor can they.

There's no perfect being walking around on this planet walking around in a body that I know of. Okay? But, just because you can't be perfect doesn’t mean that you can't be good. You can't focus on what’s good inside you and I think that by demonstrating the activity of helping others with their own actions and not just their own words, I think parents can be very helpful and empowering their kids to realize that they can do the same thing.

I think that it’s also good; I'm not a parent so I'm talking a little out of my area of direct experience here. I still think to do activities together that celebrate acts of heroism and the hero point of view, people positive accomplishments, acts of service, by doing those kind of things together that’s probably the most important thing.

Ralph Zuranski: Yeah, I believe that’s true. As your final question, this is one of my favorite ones.

(laughter)

David Garfinkel: Uh, huh.

Ralph Zuranski: I was wondering what you thought of this. If you had three wishes for your life and the world that would come true instantly, what would they be? Three wishes for your life and the world.

David Garfinkel: I don’t know. I think that the world is a classroom for everybody all the time but it’s a different classroom for each person. I think part of our path here is to learn. To learn the rules, the way things work. To learn who we are and what we are here to do. If what we’re here to do is to make the world a better place, then I think that it’s important to find a way to do that.

I'm not sure that everyone is here to do that. I don’t know.

(laughter)

Ralph Zuranski: It’s a tough question.

David Garfinkel: When I was a little kid, my mother tells me that my parents had a nickname for me. The nickname was ‘instant coffee’. Because I wanted stuff and I wanted it now! I didn't even want to take the time to brew the coffee. Well, these days, I brew the coffee. It tastes better.

I think that one of God’s greatest gifts to us is the fact that things don’t always happen instantly, that there is a process and that we can learn. We can experience the joy of that and even that we can experience the pain of learning how not to do things so that we have a real reason not to do things the wrong way again.

Ralph Zuranski: So, sort of a learning experience then.

David Garfinkel: Yeah.

Ralph Zuranski: Like you can't learn what you need to do until you failed doing it a number of times the wrong way.

David Garfinkel: I think so. One of the most valuable things in my life was studying screen writing even though my own life path has gone in a different direction. I remember one of my teachers, not the teacher but his wife. He was a wise man, but she was a lot wiser. I remember she told me that somebody said, “You can't really learn anything until you’ve learned it and forgotten it seven times.”

It sounds silly. The way that we learn in school is that you are supposed to learn it once and get it right on the test. They don’t seem to think much about how much you are going to know it later.

But I think that it’s not only about failing and doing it wrong, it’s about repetition. I think one of the greatest movies anyone can watch is The Karate Kid. Mr. Meogi going, “Wax on. Wax off.” He's making the kid wax all of his cars so the kid is going nuts. Then when it comes time to fight, he realizes that through the repetition, he has learned to protect himself against the punch better than he ever would have thought.

Do you see? There's a lot of value in doing things right over and over again too.

Ralph Zuranski: Do you think that’s the best way to ingrain it into a person’s mind so it becomes a reflexive action? They are ready for their moment of great glory because they have put in the practice, they put in the work, they put in the effort so that when the moment comes to experience great success, they're ready.

David Garfinkel: Yeah. I think so. I think that you want to be open to failure, but you want to focus on success. I think that when you find something that works, and maybe this is a problem for a lot of people, especially creative, adventurous people. I've noticed this with businesses that I've worked with too, they found something that works and they get bored with it so they go out and try to find all of the things that don’t work, instead of sticking with what works.

You have to have a combination of both.

Ralph Zuranski: You feel that it’s important to have a balance in life, a balance of success, and a balance of failure.

David Garfinkel: I don’t think that you need to seek out anymore failure. I think that it will find you, but I think that you need to allow for failure and don’t see it as a bad thing. Just understand failure is one of the stepping stones in the path to your next success.

Ralph Zuranski: So rather than call it failure, you just think that it’s like Thomas Edison. He found a gazillion ways that the light bulb didn't work rather then identifying it as a failure. It was just a way that it didn't actually work.

David Garfinkel: I think that you’ve got to be careful. In Thomas Edison’s case that’s true. He was looking for the one way it was going to work and he found 10,000 ways that it didn’t. It’s okay to say failure and it’s okay to experience it. Pick yourself up, dust yourself off.

Most important, think about what happened. Think about what you learned from it. Try to not to make the same mistakes too often.

Ralph Zuranski: So do you think that even though we do fail, that doesn’t make us failures?

David Garfinkel: Absolutely. I think that is a great point. The biggest successes have had more failures than most people who consider themselves failures. A lot of people give up when they fail once and they think, “Oh, I'm a failure.”

No. you just experienced one failure on the path to success. It’s resilience. It’s bounce-back. It’s being able to say, “Okay, that didn’t work. I failed on that. No big deal. I'm not going to do that again. Let me try a different way.” Or, “Let me try to do it right.” Or, “Let me try to do it the way I was trying to do it, but let me get it right this time instead of getting it wrong.”

That’s Okay.

Ralph Zuranski: Do you think that it’s important just to say, “I'm never going to give up. I'm just going to keep on trying until I finally figured out the way it works”?

David Garfinkel: That’s been important for me and also I think you need to realize that sometimes, changing your plans, changing your course, course correction, adjustment, you have to be careful about that too. You can become so headstrong about a goal that’s not really the goal that you should be going after.

I think that you just need to be alert and aware. If you know that there is something you are supposed to do, if you really know in your heart that it’s something that is right for you – never give up. Keep at it. But be willing to try different ways. Be willing to be flexible. Be willing to be open to new information, feedback.

Ralph Zuranski: Do you think that is where the heroes in people’s lives come in handy in helping to guide them in the direction that is best for them.

David Garfinkel: I think of people like that are more like teachers, coaches and mentors. But, I think that a teacher, coach or a mentor can certainly be a hero.

Ralph Zuranski: Yeah, absolutely, because they can definitely take kids lives and get to know the kids and who they are. Then they help to direct them on a pathway that they don’t even know that would be the best. Just like your dad, you are becoming a great teacher of copywriters. That seed started back when you were fifteen and your dad gave you that.

David Garfinkel: I don’t know what he knew. I certainly didn't know it at the time. I just thought, “Oh” and went off and did something else. The funny thing about that, Ralph, I didn't even realize until a couple of years ago, I didn't even remember that. It has just sort of been developing in my unconscious mind for a long time, that whole incident with my father.

Ralph Zuranski: That’s amazing. I really appreciate your time and coming on the phone for your “In Search of Heroes” interview. Is there one piece of wisdom that you would like to leave for the kids?

David Garfinkel: Yeah. It’s tough being a kid. It’s tough because sometimes you feel like you are an adult and all of these people are putting all of this pressure on you. You have all of these responsibilities, but you don’t have all of the privileges of being an adult.

You have all of these people telling you what to do and you get these conflicting signals. All I can say is stick with it. Every person listening to this, you have something that you came here to do. You may know what it is or you may not know what it is, but if you can stick around, keep your eyes open, be curious, be willing to try things, be willing to get help, and be willing to help others, you can have a life better and more fulfilling and more exciting and more important than you ever imagined.

Ralph Zuranski: That’s really great, David. I really appreciate your time and again thank you so much.

David Garfinkel: You're welcome. Thanks, Ralph.

Ralph Zuranski: I hope to see you at the Big Seminar.

David Garfinkel: Yeah, I will see you there. This was fun.

Ralph Zuranski: Okay, you take care.

David Garfinkel: Bye.

November 17, 2005

"Concise vs. Curt: How to Keep Them Reading Your Copy Without Turning It Into Empty-Calorie Sound Bytes" by David Garfinkel

You've seen ads that have maybe a sentence and a logo, at best; and if you're an Internet shopper and/or marketer, you've surely seen those sales-letter Web sites that scroll on and on forever.

Why such a wide variation in advertising theory and application, between minimum words and no end in sight?

And, what rules of thumb should you keep in mind the next time you put together some copy?

Or, more specifically:

● Is shorter, better?

● Is long and laborious necessary?

● What's a copywriter to do?

It all boils down to...

... keeping the reader reading... and keeping your prospect interested.

This rant was titled "Concise vs. Curt" because once you understand the difference, you are well on your way to writing copy that works -- whatever the length.

"Concise," by the way, refers to saying what you have to say in the most compact and effective way possible.

Not the fewest number of words, necessarily... but, the fewest number of words to get your message across and get the result you're looking for.

"Curt" is not the name of a friend who happens to like long, rambling copy.

No. "Curt" is a word that refers to using too few words, and in an unpleasant way. The Merriam-Webster definition that applies here is, "marked by rude or peremptory shortness : BRUSQUE."

So it stands to reason that your copy needs to be friendly, or at the very least, warm and personal (you can get heated in outrage, and while that may not be friendly, it can be effective in copy when you're railing against an injustice that your prospect feels he or she is at the short end of).

The key word here is relevancy. You can go on for quite a while as you build your case for your product, but what you say needs to be both emotionally and mentally relevant to what the prospect is feeling and thinking, respectively.

Including:

● Testimonials that your prospect can identify with

● Descriptions of problems and frustrations that your prospect will recognize as authentic and believable

● Credentials and accomplishments of the person or people that put the product, service or info product together -- credentials and accomplishments, that is, that show they know what they're doing and are highly likely to deliver on your main promise or claim

The answer to the questions I started out with at the top, I think, is a combination of short-copy snappiness and conciseness, along with button-pushing, resonating detail so characteristic of successful long copy.

Me, I always write until there's no more to say... and then, edit mercilessly until there's no shorter way to say it.

But I've written sales letters that go on for as much as 15 typed (paper) pages... and they've made lots of moolah.

So don't shortchange your reader. Say what's got to be said to get the action you're looking for. But brainstorm, experiment and edit until you've found the most lively, intriguing, readable -- and streamlined -- way of telling your story.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

November 16, 2005

"Emotion: 4 Ways to Use Emotion to Get Very Happy About Your Sales!" by David Garfinkel

Two questions for you:

1. Have you ever gotten so mad about a situation that you finally got jolted out of indecision... and took strong action which resulted in a purchase (to fix the situation)?

2. Or... have you ever gotten so excited about a possibility that you made a decision, took action, and bought something?

You're not alone. In fact, just saying "yes" to one of those two questions, above, qualifies you as a member of the human race.

The question for you as a marketer, copywriter, entrepreneur, is: How do you credibly and effectively stimulate motivating emotion in the people who read your copy, so that they will take action... and buy?

You got questions? I got answers.

Here are four ways:

1. Get in touch with the pain and/or frustration your prospects are feeling in their current situation.

Here's an example from a sales letter I wrote for a product Jim Edwards and I put together:

"It's enough to make you wanna puke!

"You see all these people talking about how well they're doing on the Internet... almost like they single-handedly invented Internet marketing... selling "Internet money-making" products that promise the moon...

" ... but when you get down to it, where the rubber meets the road, they can't tell you a single damned thing that makes any sense for you. Know what I mean?"

This is how we open the Web page for our ebook "Immediate Money Immediately." To see the whole sales letter, click here.

2. Get your prospects longing for the relief/peace of mind/excitement/happiness of what it will be like after they have gotten the result you are offering and promising.

TV commercials for diamond jewelry do a masterful job of this. What red-blooded husband wouldn't want his wife to burst out in tears of adoration and emotion, after he gives her a special new ring.

Beats the heck out of arguing over who's going to take out the garbage tonight, doesn't it? :)

Word pictures in copy can work just as well, and the product doesn't have to be diamonds, either.

3. Share your prospects' anger about an injustice or frustration by voicing the same feelings yourself.

Here's an example from another sales page I wrote for a mega-ebook package Jim Edwards and I put together. The copy is in Jim's voice:

"It makes me MAD to see all the MISinformation there is about making money on the NET. And when David gets on a roll about all the fraud and deception being passed off as solid business information, the freaking PHONE starts to melt!

"So we've decided to set things straight. For a small fraction of what we could (and maybe will) charge. And you are the beneficiary.. if you act now! Click here!"

This is from the Web page for "eBook Secrets Exposed." To read the full sales letter, click here.

4. Let your prospects off the hook. Relieve their guilt, and they'll give you money.

Despite what they say, most people secretly blame themselves for things they can't reasonably be expected to be responsible for.

If you didn't know the right way to do something... if you'd been given misleading information... if you'd never been trained... if the correct information had been withheld from you... how in the world could you be expected to know?

When you bring up how badly most people feel about screwing up... and then show your prospects why it's not their fault... but to avoid making the same mistakes in the future, they are going to need something that you offer... they'll feel good about buying from you.

And they will.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

November 15, 2005

"The Underwhelming Power of Logic: How Rational Copy Can Stop Sales Momentum Dead In Its Tracks" by David Garfinkel

“Most of us, in our civilized society, rely too heavily on reasoning capacity to make things happen. We’ve been raised to believe that logic will prevail. Logic, in and of itself, will rarely influence people. Most often logic doesn’t work.”
- Herb Cohen, You Can Negotiate Anything

Perfect example: After the U.S. presidential election debate last night, the first news story out was an instant ABC News poll report. A large variety of Bush supporters said that Kerry won the debate (logic) but they were still voting for Bush (something else).

Bush may win the election, or Kerry may win... but what's important here is the "something else" that kept Bush supporters with Bush, all the while admitting that Kerry demonstrated superior logic.

So what is that “something else?” It’s the very heart and soul of copy that moves people to take action. It’s …


... emotional connection and appeal, which occur, by the way, in your unconscious mind.

A quick dramatic example to instantly illustrate this truth:

Remember the movie A Beautiful Mind, where the Russell Crowe character makes a perfectly logical proposition to a college girl in a bar... and gets slapped?

There you have the limitations of logic in reality, with all its blazing glory.

Now... it's uncomfortable for some of us to deal with the fact that, at the end of the day...

... we are not controlled by nobler (i.e. thinking, refined) aspects of mind....

.. but by those "baser" desires and impulses, from our emotional selves.

However... and what I'm about to say is crucially important... every successful copywriter knows this.

When you have to make something work, you lead with a believable yet intense emotional appeal, and then you make your logical case to justify the impression you've made on your prospect's emotions... to keep the effects of all the good work your hot copy has done, from slipping away.

Negotiations master Herb Cohen says that before logic comes into your message, your listeners (or readers) need to...

* understand what you're saying

* be convinced of what you're saying by overwhelmeing, indisputable proof, and

* believe that what you are offering them will meet their needs

Next time you need to make something happen with your copy, think about that.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

November 12, 2005

"When You're Selling Information, Here's Why A Good IDEA Is Never Enough How do you all but guarantee success in marketing information products?" by David Garfinkel


Most people think it’s by having a good idea.

I’ve got some news for you. A good idea is a necessary first step. But it’s not enough.

I remember a marketing consultant – a brilliant woman, gifted in many ways, but afraid to make mistakes – who would craft beautiful ideas for people and charge them a lot of money.

There was only one problem. Often, her ideas wouldn’t work. People didn’t get the results she SWORE up and down they “SHOULD” get.

I’m sure you’ve known bright and talented men and women who have had the same problem. Maybe you’re even one of them.

If you’re lucky, you USED to be one of them.

Here’s what I’m getting at...

... There’s the concept – the idea – and then, there’s the execution.

Great idea + flawed execution = mediocre result.

You need to have excellent execution to get excellent results.

Example: You need to focus on the details – ALL the details – of how your email teaser and sales letter Web page will be READ (execution). Don’t focus merely how brilliant your copy is (idea).

Recently a friend sent out an email teaser to a large list that got truly disappointing results. He was in fact confounded, because his writing had demonstrated his knowledge of the subject inside out. His writing was snappy. It really flowed.

In other words, his idea was great. Flawless, in fact – as an idea.

He asked me what went wrong. After I studied it for a while, I found a few problems with the execution:

1) His subject line made his message look very much like spam (bad execution). So even if readers knew it was from him, they would start reading with a bad taste in their mouths.

2) His content was not about the reader and the benefits the reader would get – his content was all about him, and the impression he had of the product he was promoting, and what he had learned from it (bad execution).

While he is a skilled and in fact an ingenious writer, not focusing exclusively and compellingly on the READER’s self-interest is a recipe for mediocre sales results.

3) His intention was, at the bottom of it, to obtain admiration and respect from the reader – not to obtain sales (bad execution).

When you’re going for sales, your copy contains answers but one underlying question – “How is what I am talking about going to benefit YOU, the reader?”

Here's the bottom line:

When you have a promotion that’s working, take it apart. Isolate and identify both the good idea, and the good execution. Store that information away, for you will need it to repeat your success.

But… When you have a promotion isn’t working… now you have a simple two-step process to analyze and fix it.

STEP 1: Check out the idea. Is it sound? Is it something your prospect would want? How do you know?

STEP 2: Check out the execution. Is there ANY step of the way where prospects could fall out of your sales process? If so, FIX it.

Just by runnning your copy through this simple process, you can breathe new life into old successes, and turn abject failures into high-potential winners.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

"Case Study: How to Use A Press Release To Generate Direct Response Here is a "sneak preview" of a press release scheduled to go out over the Web on Friday" by David Garfinkel


Breakthrough Copywriting Seminar Reveals

Fast-Track To Results-Based Advertising

Now direct marketing copywriters can eliminate hours of preparation time, writer's block and indecision with new methods pioneered at the Breakthrough Copywriting Seminar, February 18 -20 in Las Vegas. Small-group, hands-on program tailored to new and experienced copywriters seeking better results, more quickly, on the Web and in print advertising.

Bye, bye frustration.

For the first time in direct marketing history, techniques to break through writer's block and indecision -- along with with a proven "connect the dots" approach to creating powerful sales messages -- have created a startling new system to generate high-impact copywriting.

David Garfinkel, founder of the World Copywriting Institute, San Francisco, is leading a team of top-grade copywriters in Las Vegas, February 18 - 20, to deliver "Breakthrough Copywriting," a small-group, hands-on workshop.

The Web address is http://www.breakthroughcopywriting.com

"What makes this seminar a little different is Dr. Melissa Andersson, a peak performance coach who has developed special, almost-instant techniques for releasing writer's block, increasing mental energy, and banishing hesitation, indecision and sagging personal confidence," says Garfinkel, author of "Copywriting Templates," a privately published set of fill-in-the-blank guides and formulas that dramatically speed up the process of writing advertising sales copy.

Also teaching will be high-powered specialists in Web site copywriting (Michel Fortin), email copywriting (Craig Perrine), Web-based audio and video copywriting (Mike Stewart), and press release copywriting (Randall Blaum).

"We will solve a lot of problems that keep copywriters, and their copy, from reaching full potential," says Garfinkel. "Once you get the barriers out of the way, there's really nothing anyone else can do to put a limit on how far you can go."

# # #

I spent 10 years as a journalist before becoming a copywriter, so I have a bit of an advantage in writing press releases, although I never would have thought to do this without the suggestion of Dr. Harlan Kilstein, a reader of this blog and a superb copywriter in his own right.

I'd love your comments and questions on what I did and how I did it.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.

November 11, 2005

"Pinpoint: How To Exactly Present Your Business To Your Market? Here's a Surprising Source of Information for You!" by David Garfinkel

"Pinpoint: How To Exactly Present Your Business To Your Market? Here's a Surprising Source of Information for You!" by David Garfinkel

"The difference between the almost right word and the right word is really a large matter -- it's the difference between the lightning bug and the lightning."
- Mark Twain, in a letter to author George Bainton

Sooner or later, you have to set yourself apart.

This is true whether you are you, yourself, and thou; you are a business; or you are method-acting as the client or business you are writing copy for.

The tightrope you walk is just about the biggest upside/downside risk that exists:

● Get your unique identity in the marketplace right (stay on the tightrope all the way to the other side), and huge rewards are yours;

● Miss it by a hair (fall off the tightrope) and you're condemned to mediocrity in the marketplace -- at best -- or miserable failure at worst.

So how do you get your pinpoint identity identified and stay on that elusive tightrope?

There are many ways, but the easiest and most reliable is paying attention to the questions, comments, kudos and complaints of your customers.

This might sound like a big "duh" to you -- and it would be, except for the fact that almost nobody does it.

Here are some examples of those who have:

● My friend, mentor and collaborator Jay Conrad Levinson wrote the world's best-selling series of books in his field, Guerrilla Marketing. Jay spent a dozen years teaching an extension course at the University of California on this very subject before he wrote the first book. Do students who need to apply what you teach in the real world -- in their businesses, where the difference between success and failure ripples through many aspects of their lives -- do these students provide feedback to help you pinpoint your marketing identity?

Hello???

● My San Francisco Bay Area neighbor John Gray, who also created an empire with Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus, based his initial book on years of couples counseling and seminars. I bet he heard plenty of questions, comments, kudos and complaints. To his credit, he listened and acted on them.

● Another nearby phenomenon, Richard Bolles, originally started the job-seeking bestseller What Color Is Your Parachute? as a church course. If things worked, he heard about them. If they didn't, I'll just bet people weren't too shy pointing that out. Now look at him.

I can almost hear what you're saying.

"Great. Best-selling authors. But how about a real person like me?"

OK. First, these are all real people who took an idea, put it out there, got feedback, and ran with it.

Check out businesses that have nothing to do with book publishing and you'll find there is a pattern. Fred Smith and FedEx. Barry Gordy and Motown. H & R Block and taxes. Ray Kroc and Mickey-D's.

Second, if your customers don't know, who does? Think about it. The fastest way a client can get a forlorn sigh out of me is to say, "I just know that people need this. I can't understand why nobody's buying it."

Of course, there is a way to find out why: Ask them.

Postioning, branding, developing your Unique Selling Proposition, crafting your marketing identity -- whatever you want to call it -- is not an instant process. Nor is it a pure science.

But there are some reliable steps you can take to narrow the choices and all but insure that sooner or later, you'll make your way across that tightrope. Maybe not the first time.

When you do, though, your day in the sun has just begun.

David Garfinkel is one of the best copywriters on the internet and was a speaker at Armand Morin's Big Seminar Series and Carl Galletti's Internet Marketing Super Conference. You can learn more about his books and training courses by clicking the links below.

David Garfinkel is founder of the World Copywriting institute and is considered by many people to be the best teacher of copywriting in the world. The stated mission of the World Copywriting Institute is to “eradicate copywriting illiteracy in the world.” Jay Conrad Levinson, author of the world’s best selling series of marketing books, Guerrilla Marketing, says, “David Garfinkel is the best copywriter I know.” Sign up for David’s free World Copywriting Newsletter. and you get a free one-hour downloadable teleseminar on copywriting. Also visit David’s World Copywriting Blog:

E-book Secrets Exposed
By David Garfinkel
This incredible ebook explains things nobody else has ever published before! This ebook explains the real way to make real money online with ebooks... Finally! Somebody gives people the truth about what it takes to make massive amounts of money with your own ebook... whether you wrote it or not!

KillerCopyTactics.com
By David Garfinkel
A fully interactive multimedia course by David Garfinkel, the man many call "The World's Greatest Copywriting Coach." David will show you "how to turn words into cash" in this groundbreaking tour-de-force. This course sets the bar for what Internet based learning should be.

AdvertisingHeadlinesThatMakeYouRich.com
By David Garfinkel
This ebook makes it unnecessary to write another headline ever again. David Garfinkel has been described as, "the world's greatest copywriting coach." He's a successful results oriented copywriter and his new ebook shows you exactly how to adapt proven money-making headlines to your business.