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Headlines are used in ads, commercials, telemarketing
calls, direct mail letters, websites, sales presentations
and more. Can you write great ones?
Every guerrilla destined for marketing victories
knows very well that if you have ten hours to spend creating
a marketing weapon, you should spend nine of them creating
the headline. It's the first impression you make, often the
only impression, and the rest of your marketing weapon will
live or die by the quality of that headline.
Don't think that just because you don't run
print ads your headline is not important. Another way of thinking
about a headline to think of it as the first thing you say
to prospects. Wise marketing people have said that you should
picture yourself knocking on someone's door which is then
opened by a very busy person. You can say one thing before
that person slams the door in your face or opens it widely
and invites you in. You have the opportunity tell your whole
story in one line or to say something so intriguing that the
prospect will want to hear more.
You'll have this opportunity in print ads to
be sure, but also with first lines of TV spots and radio commercials,
with opening lines of letters and postcards, with first statements
made by sales reps or telemarketers, in brochures and on websites,
in yellow pages ads and sales videos, in classified ads and
infomercials, at trade shows and catalogs. People will decide
to read or hear your message or to ignore you completely.
It all depends on your headline. If your headline is a loser,
you have three strikes against you when you step up to the
plate. Lotsa luck!
All guerrillas on earth are delighted that technology
now makes marketing easier than ever, that websites enable
them to market with even more fervor, that new software lets
them create dynamite marketing materials right in their own
offices -- but they never lose sight of the fundamentals and
headlines are the cornerstone. It's the headline that dictates
your positioning in your prospects' minds and it's the headline
that will attract either attention or apathy. Nothing you
say to a prospect is more important.
In print, you have one line to get that attention.
On radio or TV, you have three seconds, and you have those
same three seconds with any sales presentations or telemarketing
calls. Win attention and interest during that brief period
or you won't win it later. There will be no later.Now that
I've alerted you as to the importance of headlines, here are
20 hints to help you create winning ones:
1. Know that your headline must either convey
an idea or intrigue the reader or listener into wanting to
learn more.
2. Speak directly to the reader or listener,
one at a time, even if 20 million people will be exposed to
your message.
3. Write your headline in newsy style.
4. Use words that have the feeling of an important
announcement.
5. Test headlines that start with the word "announcing."
6. Test headlines that use the word "new."
7. Put a date in your headline.
8. Feature your price, if you're proud of it,
in your headline.
9. Feature your very easy payment plan.
10. Announce a free offer and use the word "free."
11. Offer information of value right in your
headline.
12. Start to tell a fascinating story; guerrillas
know that marketing really is the truth made fascinating.
13. Begin your headline with the words, "How
to."
14. Begin your headline with "why,"
"which," "you," "this" or "advice."
15. Use a testimonial style headline.
16. Offer the reader a test.
17. Use a huge one-word headline.
18. Warn the reader not to delay buying.
19. Address your headline to a specific person;
every day there are specific individuals who want exactly
what you are offering.
20. Set your headline in the largest type on
the page and start your verbal presentations right with the
headline.
If the reader or listener isn't stopped by your
headline, they'll move onto something else that does stop
them. After all, they're looking to be stopped by something
and if it's not your message it will be someone else's. Headlines
and opening lines are your initial bonds to your prospects.
And never forget for one second that what you say is the manner
in which you say it. Bend over backwards to be believed. Boring
and indirect headlines sabotage thoughtful copy and brilliant
graphics every day of the year, including Christmas.
Stupendous offers are not accepted by a ready
public because the headline or opening line fell down on the
job. There are far more terrible headlines than great ones
in every edition of every newspaper and magazines. In such
an atmosphere, guerrillas thrive. They love when others run
headlines that are cutsie pie and off the point. They are
enthralled when competitors run ads that draw attention away
from the prime offering because a copywriter wanted to make
a pun or get a laugh.
But you can be sure their own headlines always
get noticed, generate readership, attract responses, and result
in profits. Although a company cannot achieve greatness solely
based upon their headlines and opening lines, without solid
first impressions, its growth will be seriously impeded. Your
job may be to create headlines or to judge them. It is one
of your most important tasks.
(C)2000 Jay Conrad Levinson www.gmarketingcoach.com
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