World famous sales quotes

January 1st, 2010 by Wayne Davies 17 comments »

Remember, you only have to succeed the last time. Brian Tracy.

You don’t get paid for the hour. You get paid for the value you bring to the hour. Jim Rohn.

Some men have thousands of reasons why they cannot do what they want to, when all they need is one reason why they can. Willis Whitney.

Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity. Coach Darrel Royal.

The first step is to fill your life with a positive faith that will help you through anything. The second is to begin where you are. Norman Vincent Peale.

To give yourself the best possible chance of playing to your potential, you must prepare for every eventuality. That means practice. Steve Ballesteros.

If there were no problems, most of us would be unemployed. Zig Ziglar.

The greater danger for most of us is not that our aim is too high and we miss it, but that it is too low and we hit it. Michelangelo.

Keep away from people who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people always do that, but the really great ones make you feel that you too, can become great. Mark Twain.

Self pity is an acid which eats holes in happiness. Earl Nightingale.

Tough times never last, but tough people do. Dr. Robert Schuller.

My advice is to go into something and stay with it until you like it. You can’t like it until you obtain expertise in that work. And once you are an expert, it’s a pleasure. Milton Garland.

One man with courage makes a majority. Andrew Jackson.

Most of the important things in the world have been accomplished by people who have kept on trying when there seemed to be no hope at all. Dale Carnegie.

Show me someone who has done something worthwhile, and I’ll show you someone who has overcome adversity. Lou Holtz.

Nothing builds self-esteem and self-confidence like accomplishment. Thomas Carlyle.

Kites rise highest against the wind-not with it. Sir Winston Churchill.

If at first you don’t succeed, think how many people you’ve made happy. Duane Black.

Real integrity is doing the right thing, knowing that nobody’s going to know whether you did it or not. Oprah Winfrey.

Work for the fun of it, and the money will arrive some day. Ronnie Milsap.


Go ahead – jump in

December 28th, 2009 by Wayne Davies No comments »

The best thing about being human is that we’re all blessed with a large brain. Compared to almost every other species on earth, our brain is massive relative to our body size.

The worst thing about being human is that we’re all cursed with a large brain. Compared to almost every other species on earth, we spend an inordinate amount of time worrying.

And for the most part, we waste our time worrying about things that never happen.

What’s stopping you?

Starting your own Internet business is a fantastic thing to do. You’ll love it! So what’s stopping you?

If you’re like me, then it will probably boil down to a fear of the unknown. Will your business fail? Will anybody want to buy your product? What don’t you know that you need to know?

Will your friends laugh at you?

The strange this is, when I really looked at what was stopping me, it came down to that last one. Will my friends laugh at me if it doesn’t work?

I remember sharing with one friend that I wanted to start an Internet business. He gave me a scornful look, and told me it was a stupid idea, because ‘nobody makes any real money off the Internet.’

That was 10 years ago. I quit my job within 6 months of starting my business, and am now working full time in business on the Internet. What’s more, I’ve traveled the world with this business. The entire operation is run out of a laptop, and I can literally pick up my business and go.

It’s a wonderful experience, and made possible only because I decided to jump in.

Looking good

Of course, it’s easy to look back now and see what a great idea it was to start my own Internet business. But back then, when I was just getting started, I was terrified.

Back in 1999, I remember sharing my fears and dreams with a more supportive friend. She suggested I take a good hard look at myself and find out what I was scared of. She hinted that I might find out it was something unexpected that was stopping me.

I took up her challenge, and yes, I really was surprised. When it came down to it, my fears about losing money and failing at business were completely overshadowed by a fear of how other people might think of me if I failed.

I realized that my fear came down to fear of how others would view me. I wanted to look good in their eyes, and was scared that I wouldn’t.

This was a fantastic discovery to make about myself, and I’ve since come to realize that I’m not the only one who is stopped by this fear.

Just do it

Maybe you’re also afraid to start your own business, in case you fall flat on your face in front of other people?

The best advice I can give you, is to stop thinking about it and jump in. One of my favorite sayings is ‘leap, and the net will appear.’

This is certainly backed up by my experiences. My first two attempts at business were miserable failures. My third was moderately successful, and allowed me to launch the fourth. It was the fourth idea that finally took off, and allowed me to quit my job.

Each of these ‘failures’ may have lead others to snicker behind my back. Frankly, I was too busy to notice. And by the time I quit my job, nobody was laughing any more.

The point is, don’t spend too much time thinking before you get started. I believe you’ll learn much more by jumping in, and learning as you go. Nothing beats experience when it comes to fine-tuning your business skills.

And you can’t get this kind of experience any other way.


Weasel words, doubt and sales

December 28th, 2009 by Wayne Davies 7 comments »

Weasel words are mostly used by politicians and journalists. As a result, most of us treat weasel words with the same contempt we normally reserve for politicians.

There are 2 kinds of weasel words…

1. Words carefully designed to mean nothing
2. Words that leave room for doubt

Words carefully designed to mean nothing

An excellent example of the first variety of weasel words was uttered by former US President, Bill Clinton, on a tour of New Zealand in 1999. In one of his many speeches he uttered the immortal phrase…

Example 1:
We are building a bridge to the 21st Century

Let’s take a look at this sentence. A bridge is a physical entity that spans 2 points in space. It makes it possible to get from one point to the other.

How on earth do you build a bridge between 2 points in time?

The sentence in example 1 contains nothing but feel-good nonsense. It sounds good, but is designed merely to have unthinking people overlay their own interpretation and respond in agreement with rapturous applause.

Weasel words of this variety should not be used by people in business.

Your business is more important than anything a politician does. You create wealth and opportunity with your business, and it’s vital you don’t waste your time wallowing in this type of language.

Words that leave room for doubt

The second variety of weasel words are also used by politicians, but the best practitioners are product reviewers. For example…

Example 2:
This could well be the best computer game I’ve ever played

At first glance you might think this is glowing praise. And coming from a journalist, it’s probably as close as he or she will ever get to glowing praise.

The words ‘could well be’ introduce an element of doubt into the sentence. The writer is saying that he or she isn’t prepared to fully endorse the game.

It’s an idiotic thing to say, anyway. Isn’t the reviewer sure? Then why say the sentence in the first place? And please do note the doubts this type of wording raises.

It doesn’t really matter in a computer game review. It does matter when it comes to your advertising.

The following examples demonstrate the difference…

Example 3:
This is the best computer game I’ve ever played

Example 4:
This is the single best computer game I’ve ever played

Examples 3 and 4 show you how to strengthen an endorsement even further by adding a single word (the word single).

It’s vital that you eliminate both kinds of weasel words from your advertising.

Now you’ll look at specific weasel words, and see how to replace them with words that increase the power of your advertising.

Up to

The phrase ‘up to’ occurs a lot in advertising. The following example shows a typical use…

Example 5:
Up to 50% off everything in store this week only

The phrase ‘up to’ has lost its power in advertising through over-use. You and I know that ‘up to 50% off’ includes the entire range of possible discounts from 1—50%!

Most of us will automatically assume that the item we’re likely to be interested in is one of the ones with the smallest discount.

The other problem with the phrase ‘up to,’ is that it describes an abstract concept. It’s left to the reader to apply the unspecific ‘up to 50% off’ to the specific item he or she actually wants.

That’s probably not going to happen. It’s far more powerful to list the items that you’ve discounted.

Make sure you contrast the original price against the discounted price. You inject more power by mentioning the specific amount saved. For example…

Example 6:
Huge savings on these items this week only…

  • 2-person UltraLite tent. Was $195. Now only $125. You save a whopping $70!
  • 4-season UltraLite down sleeping bag. Was $98. Now only $76. You save $22!

Naturally it works best when you list your biggest discount first, and your next biggest last.

Might or could

The word ‘might,’ when used to mean ‘maybe,’ immediately drains a sentence of its power. As shown in these examples…

Example 7:
This experience might change your life

Example 8:
This experience will change your life

Most of us wouldn’t cross the street for something that might change our lives, because we’re too busy to waste time on something that may or may not make a difference.


How to get your creative juices flowing

December 26th, 2009 by Wayne Davies 3 comments »

Stuck in a rut? Need to come up with new ideas, but can’t? Maybe you simply need a break? Perhaps you need to introduce your mind to new things?

Whatever the cause of your rut, here are nine things you can do to get your creative juices flowing…

  1. Take a break
  2. Do something different
  3. Sleep on it
  4. Go for a walk (take a notebook)
  5. Read a random article on Wikipedia
  6. Tell a friend all about it
  7. Play the Creativity Challenge game
  8. Random word process
  9. Get a coffee and listen to Bach

Take a break

Sometimes I find I get more done in the 20 minutes following a break, than I achieved in the previous hour while hard at work.

Maybe your next creative block can be solved simply by taking a break?

Do something different

More serious creative blocks can be broken by introducing new things to your environment.

Do you always come home the same way? Then find a different route home. Do you always have the same thing for lunch? Try something different. And by different, I mean something you’ve never had before.

Introducing something new to your life not only boosts your creativity, it adds a little spice too.

Sleep on it

Your subconscious can be a powerful ally when it comes to creative breakthroughs. It’s not uncommon to go to bed completely flummoxed by a problem, only to wake up with the solution.

If you’ve been struggling with a new idea (or even the solution to a problem), put it aside and tell yourself you’ll have the solution by tomorrow.

You may wake up with the answer.

Go for a walk (take a notebook)

Take yourself right out of your workplace, and head outside for a nice long work. Assuming you’re healthy enough, plan to be away for at least 45 minutes.

Walk at your own pace, and have no particular agenda in mind. Let your mind wander where it will.

Oh yes, and take a notebook. It’s amazing how often an idea will pop into my mind while I’m out and about. And when it does, I immediately jot it down in a notebook, because I’ll have forgotten all about it by the time I get back to the office.

It’s useful to walk down streets you’ve never seen before, and to really explore your neighborhood. Naturally, you should stick to places (and times of day) where you feel safe.

Read a random article in Wikipedia

Are you stuck for ideas? Are you ready for a challenge? Then head over to Wikipedia and click the random article link.

No matter what the article it comes up with is about, set yourself the challenge of applying what you learn to your current problem. It doesn’t matter how silly the resulting ideas are. What matters is that you’re forcing your brain to think laterally.

Give yourself at least 15 minutes at this challenge, and then marvel at just how creative you are.

Even if you don’t come up with anything usable, your subconscious may well stumble onto something later in the day. The point is, you’re exercising your mind. You’re teaching it to step outside of it’s normal boundaries.

Tell a friend all about it

Stuck on something? Looking for an idea out of left-field, but find your brain is unwilling to help? Then maybe the answer lies in somebody else’s head.

But please take note. There are some people who, when you tell them you’re looking for ideas and can’t seem to come up with anything, will start empathizing with you. You’re not looking for emotional support here! You’re looking to tap into the creative power of their mind (two heads being better than one).

If the person you’re talking to is empathizing, rather than helping, let them know you admire their abilities in this area, and would appreciate their help to find a solution.

Then shut up (something I find difficult), and let them talk. Give only positive feedback. If you don’t like an idea, tell them you’re really interested in it. And ask them to elaborate on it. The more you hate the idea, the more important it is that you do this.

This technique is especially useful, because it forces you to open your mind. Remember, you’re the one who is stuck for ideas here! That means you should regard yourself as unfit to judge an idea (yes, I know…easier said than done because you and I are the only people who have good ideas).

But if you do master the art of accepting any idea as valid, and show interest even in ideas you think are silly, it lets your friend know it’s safe to get really creative.

The other possibility is that your friend’s idea only seems ‘silly’ because you don’t fully understand it. That’s why paying special attention to ‘bad’ ideas is such a good idea! You might uncover pure gold if you ask your friend to elaborate.

I can almost guarantee that in those situations where you simply can’t come up with an idea, the answer will lie in an area that you personally don’t like on first hearing about it.

Instead of shutting down this avenue of exploration, give your friend permission to explore it fully and see what happens.

Play the Creativity Challenge game

The Creativity Challenge website offers hundreds of different challenges designed to expand your creative ability.

Use it.

Random word process

Are you stuck for an idea? Do you have a dictionary? Then you have a potential solution.

Close your eyes, open the dictionary, and place your finger on a word at random.

Give yourself 15 minutes, and find different ways to apply the word to the situation. Don’t judge any idea or solution you come up with. Simply let your mind go free, and explore.

Get a coffee and listen to Bach

Maybe you do simply need a break, but aren’t willing to admit it.

In that case, make yourself a cup of coffee and listen to Bach. Or Mozart.

Music by either of these composers is thought to help improve creativity. And even if they don’t, you give your mind a welcome break and feed it some inspiring music.

If you don’t normally listen to classical music, then you should do this (introducing new things improves creativity). If you can’t stand classical music, then you should definitely do this.

Remember, the key to creativity is introducing your mind to new things.


Say what you mean

December 24th, 2009 by Wayne Davies No comments »

I’m a fan of unintentional humor. I’ve previously listed a number of genuine road signs that demonstrated how easy it is to get things very wrong.

This article follows on from that one, with more unintentional humor and suggestions on how to avoid making the same mistake in your ad.

In two minds

Consider this sign, seen in tailors…

We do not tear your clothing with machinery. We do it carefully by hand.

Yes, it’s funny. But this type of mistake is all too easy to make. The problem is, the author knows exactly what he or she means to say, and doesn’t take the time to consider other possible meanings for the sentence.

You really do need to be in two minds when you’re writing, and then proofing your ad. One mind should focus on what you’re saying, while the other concentrates on what your words actually mean.

Here’s another example to illustrate the point…

No matter what your topcoat is made of, this miracle spray will make it really repellent.

Typos

Take a careful look at this exultation…

Save regularly in our bank. You’ll never reget it.

Did you spot the typo? You’ll never “re get” your money. This is probably not the kind of message a bank wants to send to its customers!

Yet such a typo is incredibly hard to spot. How easily did you find it? How much harder would it have been if you’d written that sentence, given that your mind will automatically take in groups of words and correct them on a subconscious level.

This is why it pays to get someone else to proof-read your ad. Here’s another example, just because…

This is the model home for your future. It was panned by Better Homes and Gardens.

Thinking things through

Thinking things through before you actually sit down and write an ad is a good idea. Here’s what happens when a person doesn’t bother…

Stock up and save! Limit: one

I suspect this advertiser is working his or her way through a list of “power” phrases, and giving little thought to what the words in those phrases actually mean.

Take it from me, an ad isn’t powerful simply because it contains “power” words. An ad is only powerful when it clearly communicates the benefit on offer.

Red face, anybody

Some people find themselves insulted and outraged over things I find amusing, and vice versa. It’s in our nature to make a virtue out of anything we love, and a sin out of the things we don’t.

That’s why it pays to keep a special look out for a double entendre. Here’s an example…

Modular Sofas. Only $299 for rest or fore play.

What would you pay to erase that unintentional “e,” had this been your ad in a highly conservative part of the world?

Mind you, sometimes you have to ask yourself whether or not the humor really was unintended…

Mixing bowl set designed to please a cook with round bottom for efficient beating.

And that’s the problem you face. Your reader doesn’t know whether or not you intended to be humorous. If your unintended humor causes offense, you may well lose several sales.

Going out with a bang

Here are a several more examples of unintended humor for your enjoyment.

Sheer stockings. Designed for fancy dress, but so serviceable that lots of women wear nothing else.

Used Cars: Why go elsewhere to be cheated? Come here first!

Our bikinis are exciting. They are simply the tops!

Tired of cleaning yourself? Let me do it.

Auto Repair Service. Free pickup and delivery. Try us once, you’ll never go anywhere again.

Ladies and gentlemen, now you can have a bikini for a ridiculous figure.

For Rent: 6-room hated apartment.


Pssst….want to make more sales?

December 24th, 2009 by Wayne Davies 3 comments »

Getting somebody to buy your product is a challenge. And when your sales medium is nothing more than words on a web page, it’s even harder still.

When you ask somebody to buy, you’re asking him or her to…

  • Believe the claims you make for your product
  • Hand over money to a complete stranger
  • Trust that you’ll deliver the product

As you might expect, most people are a little reluctant to do that right off the bat. Every one of us has been in this situation, haven’t we. We like the product, but we’re afraid to buy because we still have unanswered doubts.

In this article, you’ll find out how to combat doubt and discover new ways to boost your sales.

Familiarity

They say “familiarity breeds contempt.” Not in sales, it doesn’t. At least, not if you’re an honest trader.

The better you get to know somebody, the less doubt you experience. Of course, you may discover a person is untrustworthy, and so avoid them. For the purposes of this article, we’re talking about your sales page, so it’s safe to assume that finding ways to give your prospects more contact with you is a good thing.

Your goal must be to give people a reason to return to your site often. There are two reasons for this…

  1. You want them to get used to dealing with you (reduce doubt)
  2. You want more chances to make a sale

The question is, how do you get people to return often? Here are some ideas for you to consider…

  • Start an ezine and give-away free subscriptions
  • Start a members-only area
  • Start a Blog and publish original content daily
  • Compile a weekly Digest of your Blog and invite readers to subscribe
  • Publish plenty of useful content on your website

Start an ezine

Your ezine should pick a subject, and specialize in it. If your site covers several different topics, create an ezine for each one. That way, you pick up highly focused subscribers. This will be invaluable to you when…

  • You need to advertise a product to your subscribers
  • You want to sell advertising to others

The main advantage of your ezine (from your perspective), is that you now have a way of attracting your subscribers back to your site.

TIP #1: Publish your ezine weekly, and mail the subscriber list at the same time on the same day each week.

TIP #2: Publish your ezine articles on your website. The ezine should simply describe the article in a paragraph, and link back to it on your site. This achieves two aims…

  1. It gets people back to your site
  2. It increases the amount of actual content on your site. If you link to these articles from within the site itself, your search engine ranking will start to improve

Don’t load up your ezine with ads. Your subscribers want content, so give it to them. This will ultimately deliver many more sales than a mailing that contains nothing but ads.

Start a members-only area

Do you have certain content that you don’t want to simply give away to anyone that visits your site? Then why not start a members-only area?

In other words, get visitors to register with you before they get access to the members-only part of your site. Make this registration free, and require that the person verify their email address. This is a great way to build a mailing list.

You should then mail all your members once per week, with a summary of everything you’ve added to the members-only area over the last week. Link to each new item in your email.

Start a Blog

A Blog can take many different forms. For example…

  • A forum for publishing information
  • A personal record
  • A way for a group of people to publish information

This Blog (the one you’re reading right now) allows anybody to submit articles, but doesn’t guarantee publication. Other Blogs will publish every submission.

How you run your own Blog comes down to what you want to achieve. If you’re interested in building a large amount of information quickly, then you might want to open it up to everybody.

If you’re more interested in quality (a good idea), it’s best to first read a submission and reserve the right to edit it to suit your format.

Publish plenty of useful content

The web is awash with sites that do nothing more than link to other sites. Human beings don’t tend to find these sites all that interesting.

Neither do the major search-engines, which typically assign a low ranking to link-sites.

If your goal is to get people coming back to your site, you’re going to want to find a way to publish new content.


Sweeping out your storefront

December 24th, 2009 by Wayne Davies 2 comments »

When you’re shopping, do you notice if the store is messy? Do you avoid stores that aren’t clean? Or are cluttered with mess?

Chances are, you do notice a messy storefront, and this affects the likelihood that you’ll buy something from them.

A tidy site

As in the physical world, so it is on the net. Your customers are looking at your website, the exact same way you might view a storefront.

If it’s messy, your clients are less likely to call in. And far less likely to buy.

Keeping a tidy site is important. By tidy, I mean an uncluttered site that is easy to look at, up-to-date, loads quickly, and has a consistent interface.

Easy to look at

Here are my tips for ensuring your page is easy to look at…

  • Go for a conservative look and feel. Funky may be fun, but not if it’s hard to read
  • Limit your use of colors. Choose a color-scheme of 3-4 colors, and stick to it.
  • Limit your use of fonts. Choose a font-scheme of 1-2 fonts, and stick to it. Use bold-face, underline and italics to convey something specific, rather than willy-nilly (e.g. italics for the name of a publication).
  • Use your color-scheme and fonts consistently, so visitors learn to associate particular fonts and colors with particular functions (e.g. blue is always a link)
  • Use tables or style-sheets to create a design template for your site. Each page will conform to this template, making it easier for people to find their way around
  • Use the same navigation bar on each page, so people always know where to look to visit another page on your site
  • Use Google’s free site search utility. This gives visitors a way to find things on your site using a state-of-the-art search tool
  • Keep graphics small, and optimize them for web display. Limit the number of graphics to reduce download time
  • Limit the number of animated graphics and Flash objects on any page that contains a lot of content (unless the animation is the content). Animation is distracting, so should be avoided on pages you want people to read

keep it up-to-date

Remove links to old pages that no longer exist, and pages with information that no longer applies. Update old pages that contain out-of-date information.

Add new content from time-to-time. I suggest you add at least one new page per week, and put a link to that new page on your homepage.

This makes the site more interesting to both human visitors, and search-engine spiders.

Make sure it loads quickly

These days, most people have fast Internet connections. This means we don’t have to be as concerned about download times as we used to.

Even so, any page that attempts to make a sale should download immediately. Some factors that affect download speeds are outside of your control, but the page content isn’t.

Remove as many graphics and Flash objects as you can from your sales page. Keep the design of the page simple, and remove anything not specifically required to make the sale.

If you’re using HTML tables, and have a lot of information on your sales page, make sure the first few paragraphs appear in their own table. This will ensure the first few paragraphs appear instantly, and your visitor can start reading.

Consistent interface

Every website has an interface, which consists of those parts of the site that help a visitor find their way around.

The best favor you can do for your visitors, is to have a consistent interface.

Ideally, your interface will be exactly the same on every page.

It will look the same. It will have the same options. And it will work in the exact same way.

Your visitors will work out how to use the interface far more quickly, if it’s the same on every page. And they’ll always be able to find their way back to your home page.

Sweeping out your website

Keeping your website clean and tidy is an easy thing to do. I personally like to tweak my site every day. I invest a few minutes in cleaning up, and keeping things fresh.

These few minutes cost me nothing, but contribute greatly to my site.

I recommend you do the same.


Ownership: Your access to power

December 16th, 2009 by Wayne Davies 1 comment »

As soon as you take full ownership of the problems in your life, you become a powerful man or woman. Full ownership means you accept responsibility for everything that happens to you, whether it’s your fault or not.

I’m not saying that you accept the blame for something you didn’t do. I’m saying that, to become powerful, you must accept responsibility as if you were the cause.

Victim culture

This is a hard concept to grasp, because we’re raised to think of ourselves as victims.

It’s in the interests of government agencies, and law firms, to encourage this mentality. The victim mentality is even taught in school! Unfortunately, several generations of Americans (as well as citizens of many other countries) have been rendered almost helpless.

The victim culture is, I believe, designed to keep us helpless. Its function is to make us increasingly dependent on government agencies. In such a society, the individual slowly becomes less and less able to act powerfully in his or her own best interests.

In the context of The Online Marketing Blog, victim thinking keeps us unsuccessful. It leaves us unable to act in the face of problems that crop up everyday in a business situation. The victim mentality is incompatible with your success in business on the Internet. Here’s an example of how this kind of thinking makes it impossible for a person to succeed…

It’s not my fault I’m fat

An excellent example of the victim culture can be seen in the actions of a New Yorker who took legal action against four popular fast-food restaurants. He says they mislead him about the nutritional quality of the food they serve.

As a result of what he describes as ‘their negligence,’ he has suffered several heart attacks, has diabetes, and other weight related health problems.

The man in question is grossly overweight, and may die years earlier than would otherwise be the case. In my opinion, it’s entirely his own fault. The decision to eat more food than his body needed was entirely his own. Nobody forced him to eat the majority of his meals at fast food restaurants.

Yet this man is not willing to accept responsibility for his own actions, even though he may soon die as a result of his own choices. This man will not admit that the problem lies with him, and as a result his quality of life has suffered terribly.

His inability to take responsibility for the predicament he finds himself in is the reason why this man is not able to make the life changes he needs to make to survive. He needs to wake up, and fast! This man is facing the ultimate fact of life—that it ends. Even in the face of death, this man is unwilling to accept the blame for his own actions.

This man is not unique in America today. Even corporations have gotten in on the act (and it is an act). Consider the despicable actions of the companies that whined and complained about Microsoft, running off to tell tales to the Department of Justice. They’re like a bunch of little kids, throwing a tantrum just as soon as reality doesn’t immediately deliver whatever it is they want this minute.

No responsibility = no power

Personal power is the natural result of a willingness to take responsibility for one’s own life. Without a willingness to fully own one’s circumstances, and to be responsible for them, a person cannot be powerful in their own life.

The man I mentioned above has blamed four corporations for his obesity and lack of health. He admits no culpability of his own. As a result, he is powerless to do anything about his obesity.

He is powerless, because he must rely on disinterested 3rd parties to do the work for him. But it’s not possible to force a person to lose weight and eat a balanced diet.

The man is a fool. His sniveling approach to life, and the blame he readily assigns to others for his poor state of health, are beneath contempt. He is like a spoiled child, quick to blame everyone but himself for the inevitable result of the eating choices he made. Unfortunately, this spoiled child has an equally disgusting lawyer who was all too ready to suck undeserved funds out of 4 successful corporations.

With great responsibility comes…

Imagine how different this man’s life would be if he woke up to himself, admitted that it was his own choice to eat too much fast-food, and so decided to stop doing so. He would lose weight, and the health problems that go with it. In around 10 months, this man would have completely revolutionized his life.

His lack of power in this problem comes directly from his own unwillingness to recognize that he is the source of his problem. Until he does so, a solution to his problem will elude him. In fact, his current approach requires that he remain overweight and unhealthy. The basis of his legal action requires that he continue to endanger his life.

Isn’t that crazy?

There’s an old cliche that states ‘With great power comes great responsibility.’ This saying works in reverse too. With great responsibility comes great power.

The more ownership you take over the events in your life, the more power you’ll wield over the circumstances in which you find yourself. There’s little point trying to ascribe blame, even if you’re justified in doing so. Blaming some 3rd party won’t solve the problem. The solution lies in the actions you take. It lies in your ownership of the problem.

NOTE: I’m not saying that you shouldn’t initiate legal action if it’s required to resolve a matter that can’t be resolved some other way. For example, a neighbor who damages your property, but won’t pay for the repairs, has forced your hand. You’re going to have to initiate legal action to get your money back.


Success Tips from History’s Greatest

December 8th, 2009 by Wayne Davies No comments »

Success in business requires training and discipline and hard work. If you’re not frightened by these things, the opportunities are just as great today as they ever were. David Rockefeller

A man is only as happy as he makes up his mind to be. Abraham Lincoln

Many of life’s failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up. Thomas A. Edison

People fail forward to success. Mary Kay Ash

Try not to become a man of success but rather to become a man of value. Albert Einstein

You always pass failure on the way to success. Mickey Rooney

To follow, without halt, one aim: There’s the secret of success. Anna Pavlova

The person who makes a success of living is the one who sees his goal steadily and aims for it unswervingly. That is dedication. Cecil B. DeMille

Always bear in mind that your own resolution to succeed is more important than any one thing. Abraham Lincoln

Success usually comes to those who are too busy to be looking for it. Henry David Thoreau

There is only one success – to be able to spend your life in your own way. Christopher Morley

Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm. Sir Winston Churchill

I can’t give you a sure-fire formula for success, but I can give you a formula for failure: try to please everybody all the time. Herbert Bayard Swope

Eighty percent of success is showing up. Woody Allen

Success isn’t permanent, and failure isn’t fatal. Mike Ditka


Why do they buy? (part 2 of 2)

December 7th, 2009 by Wayne Davies 2 comments »

NOTE: This is part 2 of a two-part series. Please read part 1 before starting part 2.

In the first installment, we looked at the number one killer of sales — doubt. In this article, we’ll look at what you need to do to overcome doubt and encourage people to buy.

Desire

There’s only one reason why a person buys a product or service. They want it. This sounds simple enough, but there’s more to it than first meets they eye. The would-be buyer has to want the product more than the money it costs. It’s up to you to bring the prospective buyer around to that conclusion.

Most advertising generates some degree of desire, but not enough to overcome natural human inertia. This article looks at how to generate desire through your advertising, and use it to get people to take the risk involved in making a purchase.

Doubt

In part one, we looked at the way doubt kills sales. Doubt has the ability to overcome desire. It acts as a warning bell, leaving the potential buyer with the feeling that taking no action is less risky than buying your product.

If doubt kills desire, what kills doubt?

Paradoxically, you can counter doubt with desire. Let me explain…

Desire is an emotion, and human beings are emotional creatures. We are driven to act on emotional impulses. The emotions that spur us to act are…

  • Fear
  • Greed
  • Need

Here are some examples of these three emotions to illustrate the point…

A man with a broken leg is in the path of a charging bull. His fear compels him to act in spite of his pain.

A woman with large debts is offered the chance to place her last $500 on a horse paying 100 to 1. She places the bet in the vein hope that a win might solve her financial problems.

A socially immature man joins a club he has little interest in because his need for approval overrides his desire to occupy his time with activities that interest him.

A woman with poor self esteem, and little money, spends $2,500 on a designer dress that she will wear only once. She believes the dress will compensate for her feelings of inadequacy.

A man borrows heavily to buy an expensive sports car. The car is impractical for his needs, but he believes his friends will admire the car, and that this admiration will extend to him.

In each case, a person was driven to act by an underlying emotion.

If you were to ask, these people wouldn’t consider their actions to be irrational. In fact, they’d give you seemingly rational reasons for acting the way they did. From their own point of view, they had a genuine need to take the action they did. In each case, the motivation to act was driven by desire, not need.

Fear of loss

Fear of loss is another powerful motivator. Some say the fear of loss is actually more powerful than the desire for gain.

You can combine desire with the fear of loss to create a powerful sales tool that inspires immediate action from potential clients. We’ll look at how to do that in an online ad later in this article.

When doubt is stopping someone from making that final commitment for something they desire, the fear of losing it is a useful countermeasure.

Greed

Greed is a powerful desire built into all of us. Greed is not so much a sin, as a powerful survival tool in a world where resources are scarce.

Our species has evolved in a world of scarce resources, and we’ve learned to horde things as a result. You can see this even in our body chemistry, which has us overeat when food is abundant so the excess can be stored as fat.

This natural greed extends to all areas of our lives, and can be used as a tool to sell products that promise to multiply any particular thing people might wish to horde.

A more “evolved” form of greed is exclusivity. Any product that generates an aura of exclusivity, instantly becomes more desirable. Modern art is an excellent example of this. Blotches of paint splashed on paper by a five year old, are worthless. Blotches of paint splashed on canvas by an Internationally recognized artist can command a small fortune.

Exclusivity is an extension of the principle of scarcity. As a general rule, an object is seen as more valuable if it’s desired by more than one person, it’s not easily duplicated, and there isn’t enough of them for everybody. How much would you pay for a glass of water right now? How much would you pay if you were lost in the desert, and hadn’t had a drink in 2 days? How much would you pay if two of you were lost in the desert, hadn’t had a drink in 2 days, and there was a single glass of water?

Guilt

Guilt is a by-product of our overdeveloped brains.

Certain types of product lend themselves to guilt, such as charity appeals. Guilt is paired with a need for approval, which is to say the need to feel good about ourselves. There is a certain satisfaction that comes with giving something away, and this may simply be the removal of guilt!

The need for approval runs through all of us, and is almost certainly related to our social evolution as a species. We developed abstract language as a tool to help us survive the predatory activities of creatures far more powerful and better equipped than we are. Our advantage requires that we cooperate, and it’s likely that our need for approval finds its source in this aspect of our species.

This need for approval can be used to generate desire for certain products. Overpriced automobiles, clothing, art, and jewelry spring to mind.

Buyer’s don’t believe they act on emotion

If you’re finding this article to be rather cynical about human beings, it may be due to this next point. People are generally not conscious of the emotions that underpin the actions they take. This applies as much to our buying decisions, as to any other area of human activity.

An excellent example of this can be seen in a colleague of mine, who once swore black and blue that every buying decision he made was based totally on logic, and was the result of painstaking research over several months. He believed that all his buying decisions were entirely rational.

My colleague failed to grasp two points…

  1. The way he went about purchasing is a separate step from taking the decision to purchase
  2. His desire to get the lowest price was still based on an emotional need

Yes, the person I have in mind does not strike you as one given to high emotion. Yet he buys things that he does not need to survive. Why does he do so?

For example, he already had a very expensive SLR camera. He didn’t need a digital camera. It will take around 10 years to recover the cost of not having to develop an entire film just to get the few photos he wants to keep. He’ll almost certainly have upgraded to another digital camera by then! More to the point, why does he want to take and keep photos anyway?

The plain fact is, despite his painstaking research to find the very best camera, and all the haggling to get the lowest possible price, his underlying motivation was emotional. Nobody needs a camera, but plenty of us desire the photos that result. They’re memories of good times, and rekindle the emotions that accompanied those events.

His desire to get the best price is not based on logic either. He enjoys the process of getting the lowest price on Earth for anything he buys. How do I know this? Because every time he buys something new, the first thing he tells me is how much he saved. The next thing he tells me is how he managed to save so much.

The point is, buying decisions are emotional acts. A person buys something to fulfill an emotional need. You will make more sales if you find a way to speak to that need.

Forcing the issue

Generating desire for a product or service isn’t difficult. Desire is easily aroused in people, simply by clearly communicating the manner in which a product or service meets one or more basic human needs.

Unfortunately for us, desire alone isn’t enough! People are reluctant to act. This tendency is seen during the sales process. A person may well make a decision to buy, yet doesn’t actually do so.

For whatever reason, he or she decides to delay the act of purchasing until some later date. All kinds of reasons may be given for the delay, and most will sound totally convincing. None of these reasons matter. The simple fact of the matter is, it’s usually safer to do nothing.

In a sense, your job as a writer of ads, is to make it safer to act now.

This is especially important on the Internet, because you’re relying on words and phrases to secure the sale. And you have little hope of ever seeing that person again if they don’t buy now.

You need to force the issue.

Use scarcity to force the issue

The way to force the issue is to use the law of scarcity. This law speaks to the fear of loss that resides in all of us, and has its basis in a fundamental understanding of economics that we all share.

Most of us know there is a limited amount of any given item, so it’s usually better to grab something while it’s available.

Capitalism has lessened the impact of this truth in all western nations. It’s very unusual for something to be scarce in a free market. Competing businesses will always outperform a monopoly. That’s especially true of a government-run monopoly.

The lack of scarcity that we all enjoy in the western world, has lessened the impact of scarcity as a selling tool. This is especially true for digital products, where the cost of manufacture is zero. Despite this, you can still use scarcity by imposing a time limit on a special offer.

The special offer

A special offer increases the desirability of any item that a person wants to buy. For example, if you’ve already been sold on a particular brand of car, the ability to get it with $3,000 worth of factory options at no extra cost increases the desirability of that particular car.

If you’re interested in several different models, the special offer is likely to affect your buying decision in favor of the car that includes the extras.

Of course, a special offer won’t get a person to act in and of itself. Why should someone act today, when they can still get the special offer tomorrow? Or next week? Or next month?

For a special offer to invoke action, it needs a time a limit.

The time limit

Consider the above special offer. You get your car at the agreed price, and then the dealer includes $3,000 worth of factory options.

This would certainly cause you to think about this model of car. But in an of itself, that’s all it does.

What if the dealer then told you that the special offer expired tomorrow?

This forces you to think a lot more seriously about the car. If you’re going to buy that model…if you’re really serious about it, you’re going to be better off if you act immediately.

If the special offer is desirable, and the time-limit reasonably strict, it’s safer to act now. It’s more risky to delay. The advertiser has successfully reversed the normal circumstances in which a buyer finds him or herself!

The time limit forces a person to make a real decision, rather than a theoretical one. And it helps get the buyer over the hurdle of risk, by rewarding him/her for taking the next step.

When to disclose the special offer

Time limited special offers are an excellent way to get people to act. But they only work if a person has already decided to buy.

You must first sell the person on buying your product or service. A person must first make a theoretical decision to buy. Once a person has decided to buy, in principle, you can then clinch the deal buy making it safer to act immediately.

Recap

Why does a person buy your product? Because they want the benefits that come with owning and using it.

What are the benefits of owning and using your product? If you don’t know, you’d better find out, because you can’t write a powerful sales ad until you know.

By clearly explaining the benefits of that come with using your product, you build desire for it. But desire usually isn’t enough to secure the sale. You’ll get more sales if you use a time-limited special offer, and make it more beneficial to act now.