Timeless Marketing Truth - Bring Your Message Alive
Making
a character out of the advertiser brings the message alive. Maxwell Sackheim is
most famous for inventing the Book-of-the-Month Club. But before that, he
invented some dramatic, and dramatically successful, advertising.
One of
his patented techniques was to make a character out of the advertiser, writing
ads as if the clients themselves were actually talking. One Sackheim client was
Frank E. Davis, “The Gloucester Fisherman”. This is how Sackheim wrote for him:
“There
is no use trying. I’ve tried and tried to tell people about my fish, but I
wasn’t rigged out to be an ad writer and I can’t do it. I can close-haul a sail
with the best of them. I know how to pick out the best fish of the catch But
I’ll never learn the knack of writing an ad that will tell people why my kind
of fish freshly caught, with the deep sea tang still in itis lots better than the
ordinary store kind.
“At
least you can taste the difference. So you won’t mind, will you, if I ship some
of my fish direct to your home? It won’t cost you anything unless you feel like
keeping it. All I ask is that you try some of my fish at my expense and judge
for yourself whether it isn’t exactly what you have always wanted.”
This
copy sold tens of thousands of tubs of fish right across the country. The
authentic character of the Gloucester Fisherman brought life, and customers, to
the product.
You're
thinking, Great then, but now? Come on. Maybe you've heard of a couple
multi-millionaires named Harry and David? Ever wonder how they got started?
Years after Sackheim, a copywriter called G. Lynn Sumner wrote an ad for a pair
of pear growers. The ad set off with the headline: “Imagine Harry and Me
Advertising Our Pears in Fortune!”
Here’s
a snippet of Sumners copy:” Out here on the ranch, we don’t pretend to know much
about advertising, and maybe we’re foolish spending the price of a tractor for
this space; but my brother and I got an idea the other night, and we believe you
folks who read Fortune are the kind of folks who’d like to know about it.So
here’s our story…”
Years
later again, in the 70s, Frank Schulz took a Joe Sugarman seminar. Joe
suggested the character formula. Frank wrote a headline: “A Fluke of Nature. He
told of the accidental invention of the ruby red grapefruit, and about how
picky they are in picking the fruit. The rest is marketing history.
One
variation on the character gambit is the open letter. Norman Cousins resigned
from The Saturday Review to launch his own World Review Magazine. Showing one
heck of a lot of character, he put up $15,711 for three insertions in The New
York Times. They were headed, “An Open Letter to the Readers of The New York
Times.” He told them what was wrong with the journalism of the day and what
they'd get from the World Review. That first round of advertising netted Cousins
$54,923.00 in subscriptions.
Every
viable enterprise has a character behind it somewhere. When you find it, then
you know what's unique about the company and that's at least halfway to great
advertising!
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