This document summarizes key points from a workshop on using language effectively for marketing and sales purposes. It discusses how subtle word changes can significantly impact reader response, such as using active voice, questions, or emotional language over neutral terms. Specific word pairs are analyzed to show differences in tone and impact. Attendees are encouraged to thoughtfully choose words that resonate best with their target audience.
Examines how the English language can be unwittingly manipulative. And while we think we're communicating clearly, we are subtly hurting each other. This is most true when arguing or disagreeing. Learn some of the bad patterns of speech and the armaments we use during our wars (arguments!). Learn how to spot them so you can then take the high road and partner with each other to develop solutions that suit everyone.
The document discusses strategies for transferring deep consumer insights and a brand's message into creative development and media innovation. It describes a workshop called Transfermagination that uses techniques like metaphor, conceptual blending, and intelligent exaggeration to stimulate creative thinking focused on motivating consumers. The goal is to develop engaging creative ideas and media forms that align with key psychological insights from research and ensure brand messages are not lost in translation during the creative process.
Training Games, a company with more than 15 years of experience applying gaming and simulation as experiential learning methodology to the development of systemic competences.
This presentation is part of a 4 hours workshop called "Innovation Workshop –Games and Reality". During the workshop students from the Recanati School of business in Tel Aviv University thought of games and startup related games ideas and "fought" against each other discovering if their idea has a chance to become the great big next hit.
I really liked some of the ideas, for example: a game you need to run in real life in order to "charge" your character in the game. A game you "scan" your real pet and play with it in a virtual world, including a virtual dog fight with real dogs . A real cart driving game you play wearing Google glass. The glass allows you to see virtual power ups or virtual avatars to enhance your driving experience (did someone say zombies)
For me the workshop was really fun. I hope the students had fun as well and I do hope some of these ideas will become actual games.
This e-book is an accompaniment to the book "Creative Workshop: 80 Challenges to Sharpen Your Design Skills," more details here: http://www.davidsherwin.com/creative
"Creative Workshop" contains 80 creative challenges that will help any designer reach a breadth of stronger design solutions, in various media, within any set time period. Exercises range from creating a typeface in an hour, to designing a paper robot in an afternoon, to designing web pages and other interactive experiences. Each exercise includes compelling visual solutions from other designers and background stories to help designers increase their capacity to innovate.
Before the book, however, there was a quarter-long class where design students had to complete 80 projects in just 11 weeks. This Teacher's Guide describes the pedagogical methods behind the book, how to create your own Creative Workshop class or workshop series, as well as how to utilize challenges from the book most effectively in a classroom setting. This text is intended for teachers of design and creative thinking, but it may also be helpful for designers and creative managers.
This document describes several training games to engage participants at a workshop. Game 1, called "Push the Wall", teaches participants to focus on issues they can influence rather than issues outside their control. Game 2, "Don't Alaap Apna Raag", demonstrates the need for standardization and working towards a common goal. Game 3, "Sky is the Limit", shows participants they can achieve more than they initially think by pushing their limits. The document provides details on setting up and playing each game to convey the intended lessons.
The document presents 10 puzzles with clues and solutions about unusual events that require creative explanations. The puzzles include a man dying from a lion attack during a photo, a mail courier visiting foreign embassies and thus foreign soil, and a woman giving birth and dying in a locked car. The solutions provide logical explanations for events that seem impossible or unexplained at first glance.
Examines how the English language can be unwittingly manipulative. And while we think we're communicating clearly, we are subtly hurting each other. This is most true when arguing or disagreeing. Learn some of the bad patterns of speech and the armaments we use during our wars (arguments!). Learn how to spot them so you can then take the high road and partner with each other to develop solutions that suit everyone.
The document discusses strategies for transferring deep consumer insights and a brand's message into creative development and media innovation. It describes a workshop called Transfermagination that uses techniques like metaphor, conceptual blending, and intelligent exaggeration to stimulate creative thinking focused on motivating consumers. The goal is to develop engaging creative ideas and media forms that align with key psychological insights from research and ensure brand messages are not lost in translation during the creative process.
Training Games, a company with more than 15 years of experience applying gaming and simulation as experiential learning methodology to the development of systemic competences.
This presentation is part of a 4 hours workshop called "Innovation Workshop –Games and Reality". During the workshop students from the Recanati School of business in Tel Aviv University thought of games and startup related games ideas and "fought" against each other discovering if their idea has a chance to become the great big next hit.
I really liked some of the ideas, for example: a game you need to run in real life in order to "charge" your character in the game. A game you "scan" your real pet and play with it in a virtual world, including a virtual dog fight with real dogs . A real cart driving game you play wearing Google glass. The glass allows you to see virtual power ups or virtual avatars to enhance your driving experience (did someone say zombies)
For me the workshop was really fun. I hope the students had fun as well and I do hope some of these ideas will become actual games.
This e-book is an accompaniment to the book "Creative Workshop: 80 Challenges to Sharpen Your Design Skills," more details here: http://www.davidsherwin.com/creative
"Creative Workshop" contains 80 creative challenges that will help any designer reach a breadth of stronger design solutions, in various media, within any set time period. Exercises range from creating a typeface in an hour, to designing a paper robot in an afternoon, to designing web pages and other interactive experiences. Each exercise includes compelling visual solutions from other designers and background stories to help designers increase their capacity to innovate.
Before the book, however, there was a quarter-long class where design students had to complete 80 projects in just 11 weeks. This Teacher's Guide describes the pedagogical methods behind the book, how to create your own Creative Workshop class or workshop series, as well as how to utilize challenges from the book most effectively in a classroom setting. This text is intended for teachers of design and creative thinking, but it may also be helpful for designers and creative managers.
This document describes several training games to engage participants at a workshop. Game 1, called "Push the Wall", teaches participants to focus on issues they can influence rather than issues outside their control. Game 2, "Don't Alaap Apna Raag", demonstrates the need for standardization and working towards a common goal. Game 3, "Sky is the Limit", shows participants they can achieve more than they initially think by pushing their limits. The document provides details on setting up and playing each game to convey the intended lessons.
The document presents 10 puzzles with clues and solutions about unusual events that require creative explanations. The puzzles include a man dying from a lion attack during a photo, a mail courier visiting foreign embassies and thus foreign soil, and a woman giving birth and dying in a locked car. The solutions provide logical explanations for events that seem impossible or unexplained at first glance.
This document provides guidance on writing effective direct response copy. It discusses the importance of word choice and emphasizes that words can be chosen to elicit different emotional reactions from readers. The document encourages optimizing information to direct readers' perceptions without changing facts and explains various rules for effective copywriting, including using present tense, benefits over features, and emotion over intellect.
The document provides advice and guidelines for writing effective fundraising communications using impactful language. It recommends using clear, concise language and active voice to establish rapport with recipients. Specific examples and stories are emphasized over general statistics to increase reader involvement. Power words like "relief" and "reward" can increase response rates when used appropriately. Overall, the document stresses optimizing information for the recipient to change perceptions without altering facts.
The document discusses different types of product promotions and their effectiveness. It mentions that price cuts may have little effect on sales volumes and can reduce profits due to costs associated with fluctuating stock levels. Research suggests that when price promotions are withdrawn, sales often return to previous levels, and having more product options can paradoxically reduce purchasing.
This document provides guidance on word choice, tone, and design elements to improve marketing communications. It suggests replacing vague words like "quality" and "service" with more specific language. Emotional and impactful words are preferred over bland terms. Proper use of formatting like punctuation and capitalization can strengthen messages. High contrast in design makes text easier to read versus low contrast that hinders comprehension. Color and positioning of images and text also impact readability. The goal is to engage readers and spur them to action through clear, compelling writing and layout.
The document provides tips for creating an effective nonprofit fundraising appeal in 20 minutes or less. It emphasizes the importance of clarity, brevity, and a clear call to action. Key recommendations include focusing on one compelling benefit for donors, using short paragraphs and active language, and crafting an attention-grabbing message for the envelope to maximize open rates.
This document provides guidance on clear and effective writing. It discusses several key principles:
1. Think clearly before writing and use a who-what-why-when-where structure. Get straight to the point without long introductions.
2. Use familiar words and short sentences to ensure readers can easily understand the writing. Prefer concrete language over vague terms.
3. Write in an active voice using a conversational tone similar to how one would speak. Limit unnecessary words and adjectives.
The document discusses addressing audiences effectively when presenting information. It emphasizes the importance of understanding the audience's backgrounds, views, and experiences. Knowing the audience helps determine the appropriate language, writing style, evidence used, and how to best make your case. The document provides tips for tailoring a presentation based on whether the audience is neutral or unfriendly toward the issue. It also discusses word choice, figures of speech, definitions, and tone.
Summarize Paragraph In Short. Online assignment writing service.Christina Bauer
The document provides instructions for creating an account and submitting a paper writing request on the HelpWriting.net site. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with an email and password. 2) Complete a form with paper details, sources, and deadline. 3) Writers will bid on the request and their qualifications can be reviewed. 4) Place a deposit to start the writing. 5) Review the completed paper and authorize final payment or request revisions. The summary highlights the key steps involved in obtaining writing help through the site.
Creative Masterclass: From Mail to Social MediaVivastream
This document provides guidance on writing effective marketing communications for the digital age. It emphasizes the importance of clarity, brevity, and direct calls to action. Key points include using imperative language to grab attention, being highly specific with offers, and optimizing messages for fast decision-making on mobile and email platforms where attention spans are short.
Creative Masterclass: From Mail to Social MediaVivastream
This document provides guidance on writing effective marketing communications for the digital age. It emphasizes the importance of clarity, brevity, and direct calls to action. Key points include using imperative language to grab attention, being highly specific with offers, and optimizing messages for fast decision-making on mobile and email platforms where attention spans are short.
Selling has always been something that you "do to a customer". A sale does not take place till a customer buys. Traditional selling is relegated to the history books. How about exploring a new paradigm? The buying game!
Connect with me on LinkedIn (https://linkedin.com/in/kalpeshdesai) should you wish to have a copy of this deck.
Creative Masterclass: From Mail to Social MediaVivastream
This document summarizes key points from a creative masterclass on direct marketing. It discusses trends in increasing informality, persuasion, validation and promises of fast action on the internet. It provides tips for direct marketing communications, including using an imperative tone, specifying benefits, and ensuring clarity and a clear call to action. Marketing approaches like social media are discussed, with notes about losing control and phony pitches becoming obvious.
This document provides guidance on copywriting best practices. It recommends choosing one customer avatar to speak directly to, conducting customer interviews to understand pain points and desires, and mirroring customers' answers in the copy. It also suggests using contractions, idioms, short words, and reading copy aloud to ensure it sounds natural. Several headline formulas are presented, including questions over statements, problems over solutions, and specifics over generalizations. Online tools for copywriting are listed at the end.
This document discusses logical fallacies and provides examples of the slippery slope fallacy. It begins by outlining common core standards around evaluating arguments, claims, and evidence. It then defines the slippery slope fallacy as making an argument that one action will inevitably lead to a chain of worse outcomes without evidence. Examples are provided of both strong and weak slippery slope arguments. Students are asked to evaluate whether scenarios present slippery slope fallacies and discuss in pairs. The document concludes by asking students to write their own slippery slope argument.
The document discusses different types of relationships in writing such as addition, time, illustration, comparison, contrast, and cause and effect. It provides examples of transition words and phrases that indicate each relationship type and examples of how they are used in sentences. It also includes activities for teachers to create lessons incorporating these relationship concepts in their own classrooms.
The document discusses various rhetorical devices and techniques of persuasion that can be used to positively or negatively frame information, including euphemisms, comparisons, definitions, explanations, loaded questions, exaggeration, ridicule, and implied or unavailable evidence. It notes that even subtle or fleeting uses of such techniques can influence behavior and have long-lasting effects below the threshold of consciousness. Critical thinking is important for identifying non-argumentative persuasion attempts and checking spontaneous beliefs.
This document discusses logical fallacies and how to identify them. It defines and provides examples of common fallacies such as hasty generalization, missing the point, post hoc, slippery slope, weak analogy, appeal to authority, ad populum, ad hominem, appeal to pity, appeal to ignorance, straw man, red herring, false dichotomy, begging the question, and equivocation. It encourages readers to ask questions to determine if an argument relies on one of these fallacious techniques rather than sound logic.
This document discusses social, emotional, and plan-related growth for youth in transition. It covers three main areas:
1. Social growth, including developing verbal and nonverbal communication skills, resolving conflicts, having conversations in different settings, and understanding different social contexts.
2. Emotional growth, such as identifying and dealing with various emotions like happiness, sadness, frustration, and managing stress.
3. Plan-making growth, or setting goals and making plans for the future.
The document provides information, examples, and exercises to help youth strengthen these skills as they become more independent. The overall message is that growing up involves social, emotional and planning skills, which this resource aims to support.
The Customer Engagement Roadmap - The Key to Increasing the Value of Your Membership Base
Want to increase your subscription site’s profitability? The Customer Engagement Roadmap will show you how!
This document provides guidance on writing effective direct response copy. It discusses the importance of word choice and emphasizes that words can be chosen to elicit different emotional reactions from readers. The document encourages optimizing information to direct readers' perceptions without changing facts and explains various rules for effective copywriting, including using present tense, benefits over features, and emotion over intellect.
The document provides advice and guidelines for writing effective fundraising communications using impactful language. It recommends using clear, concise language and active voice to establish rapport with recipients. Specific examples and stories are emphasized over general statistics to increase reader involvement. Power words like "relief" and "reward" can increase response rates when used appropriately. Overall, the document stresses optimizing information for the recipient to change perceptions without altering facts.
The document discusses different types of product promotions and their effectiveness. It mentions that price cuts may have little effect on sales volumes and can reduce profits due to costs associated with fluctuating stock levels. Research suggests that when price promotions are withdrawn, sales often return to previous levels, and having more product options can paradoxically reduce purchasing.
This document provides guidance on word choice, tone, and design elements to improve marketing communications. It suggests replacing vague words like "quality" and "service" with more specific language. Emotional and impactful words are preferred over bland terms. Proper use of formatting like punctuation and capitalization can strengthen messages. High contrast in design makes text easier to read versus low contrast that hinders comprehension. Color and positioning of images and text also impact readability. The goal is to engage readers and spur them to action through clear, compelling writing and layout.
The document provides tips for creating an effective nonprofit fundraising appeal in 20 minutes or less. It emphasizes the importance of clarity, brevity, and a clear call to action. Key recommendations include focusing on one compelling benefit for donors, using short paragraphs and active language, and crafting an attention-grabbing message for the envelope to maximize open rates.
This document provides guidance on clear and effective writing. It discusses several key principles:
1. Think clearly before writing and use a who-what-why-when-where structure. Get straight to the point without long introductions.
2. Use familiar words and short sentences to ensure readers can easily understand the writing. Prefer concrete language over vague terms.
3. Write in an active voice using a conversational tone similar to how one would speak. Limit unnecessary words and adjectives.
The document discusses addressing audiences effectively when presenting information. It emphasizes the importance of understanding the audience's backgrounds, views, and experiences. Knowing the audience helps determine the appropriate language, writing style, evidence used, and how to best make your case. The document provides tips for tailoring a presentation based on whether the audience is neutral or unfriendly toward the issue. It also discusses word choice, figures of speech, definitions, and tone.
Summarize Paragraph In Short. Online assignment writing service.Christina Bauer
The document provides instructions for creating an account and submitting a paper writing request on the HelpWriting.net site. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with an email and password. 2) Complete a form with paper details, sources, and deadline. 3) Writers will bid on the request and their qualifications can be reviewed. 4) Place a deposit to start the writing. 5) Review the completed paper and authorize final payment or request revisions. The summary highlights the key steps involved in obtaining writing help through the site.
Creative Masterclass: From Mail to Social MediaVivastream
This document provides guidance on writing effective marketing communications for the digital age. It emphasizes the importance of clarity, brevity, and direct calls to action. Key points include using imperative language to grab attention, being highly specific with offers, and optimizing messages for fast decision-making on mobile and email platforms where attention spans are short.
Creative Masterclass: From Mail to Social MediaVivastream
This document provides guidance on writing effective marketing communications for the digital age. It emphasizes the importance of clarity, brevity, and direct calls to action. Key points include using imperative language to grab attention, being highly specific with offers, and optimizing messages for fast decision-making on mobile and email platforms where attention spans are short.
Selling has always been something that you "do to a customer". A sale does not take place till a customer buys. Traditional selling is relegated to the history books. How about exploring a new paradigm? The buying game!
Connect with me on LinkedIn (https://linkedin.com/in/kalpeshdesai) should you wish to have a copy of this deck.
Creative Masterclass: From Mail to Social MediaVivastream
This document summarizes key points from a creative masterclass on direct marketing. It discusses trends in increasing informality, persuasion, validation and promises of fast action on the internet. It provides tips for direct marketing communications, including using an imperative tone, specifying benefits, and ensuring clarity and a clear call to action. Marketing approaches like social media are discussed, with notes about losing control and phony pitches becoming obvious.
This document provides guidance on copywriting best practices. It recommends choosing one customer avatar to speak directly to, conducting customer interviews to understand pain points and desires, and mirroring customers' answers in the copy. It also suggests using contractions, idioms, short words, and reading copy aloud to ensure it sounds natural. Several headline formulas are presented, including questions over statements, problems over solutions, and specifics over generalizations. Online tools for copywriting are listed at the end.
This document discusses logical fallacies and provides examples of the slippery slope fallacy. It begins by outlining common core standards around evaluating arguments, claims, and evidence. It then defines the slippery slope fallacy as making an argument that one action will inevitably lead to a chain of worse outcomes without evidence. Examples are provided of both strong and weak slippery slope arguments. Students are asked to evaluate whether scenarios present slippery slope fallacies and discuss in pairs. The document concludes by asking students to write their own slippery slope argument.
The document discusses different types of relationships in writing such as addition, time, illustration, comparison, contrast, and cause and effect. It provides examples of transition words and phrases that indicate each relationship type and examples of how they are used in sentences. It also includes activities for teachers to create lessons incorporating these relationship concepts in their own classrooms.
The document discusses various rhetorical devices and techniques of persuasion that can be used to positively or negatively frame information, including euphemisms, comparisons, definitions, explanations, loaded questions, exaggeration, ridicule, and implied or unavailable evidence. It notes that even subtle or fleeting uses of such techniques can influence behavior and have long-lasting effects below the threshold of consciousness. Critical thinking is important for identifying non-argumentative persuasion attempts and checking spontaneous beliefs.
This document discusses logical fallacies and how to identify them. It defines and provides examples of common fallacies such as hasty generalization, missing the point, post hoc, slippery slope, weak analogy, appeal to authority, ad populum, ad hominem, appeal to pity, appeal to ignorance, straw man, red herring, false dichotomy, begging the question, and equivocation. It encourages readers to ask questions to determine if an argument relies on one of these fallacious techniques rather than sound logic.
This document discusses social, emotional, and plan-related growth for youth in transition. It covers three main areas:
1. Social growth, including developing verbal and nonverbal communication skills, resolving conflicts, having conversations in different settings, and understanding different social contexts.
2. Emotional growth, such as identifying and dealing with various emotions like happiness, sadness, frustration, and managing stress.
3. Plan-making growth, or setting goals and making plans for the future.
The document provides information, examples, and exercises to help youth strengthen these skills as they become more independent. The overall message is that growing up involves social, emotional and planning skills, which this resource aims to support.
The Customer Engagement Roadmap - The Key to Increasing the Value of Your Membership Base
Want to increase your subscription site’s profitability? The Customer Engagement Roadmap will show you how!
This document contains a list of 14 single words, each beginning with a different letter, ranging from A to T. The words include various materials, colors, audio equipment and other nouns. Overall, the document presents an alphabetical listing of short single words from different semantic categories.
This document provides an overview of software quality assurance. It discusses key quality concepts, quality control, the cost of quality, and software quality assurance. It also describes formal technical reviews, statistical quality assurance, software reliability, and the components of a software quality assurance plan. The goal of software quality assurance is to achieve a high-quality software product through standards, reviews, testing, and other quality control measures.
The document describes JEEVA, a mobile application for recognizing, collecting, sharing, surveying, and exploring flora and fauna. The app allows users to take photos of plants and animals and upload them to the system for identification. If the photo is of a new species, the user can start a new section for it. Otherwise, the user can update existing details. The app is intended for academic, conservation, exploration, and nature lovers to study nature. It has features like image recognition of species, location-based species reporting, automatic species notifications, guides and checklists, article writing and sharing, and discussions. Potential users include students, researchers, tourists, Ayurvedic practitioners, conservation organizations, nature lovers
This document provides tutorials for learning Apex programming using the Force.com platform. The tutorials cover topics such as creating custom objects, using the Developer Console, creating sample data, defining classes, Apex language fundamentals like data types and variables, executing transactions, adding triggers, writing unit tests, and integrating Apex with Visualforce. The goal is to provide hands-on exercises to help developers learn the Apex language and how to develop applications using the Force.com platform. Completing the tutorials will equip developers with essential Apex programming skills.
Breaking Up is Hard to Do: Small Businesses’ Love Affair with ChecksVivastream
This document discusses small businesses' reliance on checks and the challenges they face in adopting electronic payments. It notes that small businesses write billions of checks per year at high costs. While checks meet their needs of being easy to use and widely accepted, electronic payments could offer benefits like cost savings and fraud protection. However, small businesses are often too busy with core operations to prioritize alternatives. The document also outlines hurdles small businesses face in using ACH or credit cards, such as navigating bank requirements and understanding fees. It suggests that businesses more open to electronic payments tend to have standardized payment processes or receive remittance data with payments.
Banks see Smart Commerce as a growing threat that could distance them from customers. Smart Commerce is defined as involving digital payment methods that simplify purchases and enriched communication between merchants and consumers using mobile technology. It is driven by demand from both consumers and merchants, and by large profit pools outside of just payments, particularly merchant sales promotions. Many banks believe Smart Commerce will become widespread within two years and pose the main risk of intermediating banks and reducing their relevance in consumer commerce.
This document summarizes key findings from a global consumer banking survey conducted by EY. Some of the main points include:
1. Customer advocacy and trust in their primary banking provider is high, driven largely by positive customer experiences. However, banks still have opportunities to improve certain aspects of the customer experience.
2. Convenience through digital banking channels is important to customers, but mobile banking features still lag online banking. Simplifying fees and communications remains a top priority.
3. Customers are generally satisfied with their primary bank but open to switching for better service or advice. Segmenting customers reveals opportunities for banks to better meet different needs.
4. Banks should focus on making banking simple and clear
This document summarizes the key findings from EY's 2014 Global Consumer Banking Survey. Some of the main points include:
1. Customer trust and advocacy are important drivers of growth for banks. Customers with complete trust in their primary bank are much more likely to recommend them.
2. Customer experience is a key factor influencing trust and advocacy. Customers cited how they are treated and quality of communications as important reasons for trust. Experience also influenced account openings and closings.
3. Banks can improve the customer experience by making banking simple and clear, providing helpful advice, and resolving problems well. Specifically, banks should improve fee transparency, mobile and online banking, and customer service.
Sereno is a fraud detection solution that uses image analysis and multi-source correlation modeling to identify check fraud. It integrates with existing image processing systems and analyzes check images using multiple recognition engines to flag potential fraud. Sereno reduces false positives and focuses analysts on a small number of suspect transactions. It builds databases of check stock and signatures over time to improve accuracy. Sereno provides cost savings through reduced manual review and losses from fraud while allowing banks to expand their fraud detection capabilities.
Orbograph's new Accura XV solution leverages Next Generation Recognition (NGR) Technology to provide virtually 100% check processing performance at the teller. The solution achieves read rates as high as 95% and can attain 100% read rates on small transactions using V100 mode. It provides tangible benefits like reducing data entry costs and recognition errors as well as intangible benefits like highly reliable technology and streamlined processes. Accura XV is the foundation for all of Orbograph's centralized and distributed recognition solutions and services.
Growth in remote deposit capture is driving additional requirements in check recognition. Orbograph provides a scalable check recognition solution for RDC that uses multiple recognition engines to achieve read rates from 90-98%. The solution can identify alterations, validate fields, and ensure image quality to reduce fraud while streamlining the deposit process. Orbograph offers flexible licensing and deployment options to meet the needs of various sized financial institutions supporting desktop, consumer, and mobile RDC.
The document introduces Orbograph's Healthcare Payments Automation Center (HPAC), a cloud-based platform that hosts two services: P2Post for converting paper explanation of benefit forms into electronic files for practice management systems, and E2Post for matching electronic funds transfer payments to remittance advices. By leveraging image processing and recognition technologies, HPAC can convert claims at high volumes while reducing costs up to 60% by eliminating manual data entry and exceptions. The platform provides adaptive onboarding of forms, HIPAA compliance, and guaranteed performance.
The document discusses next generation check recognition technologies that can improve teller image capture (TIC) and remote deposit capture (RDC) workflows. It outlines several business problems with early generation technologies like low read rates, balancing issues, and fraud risks. Next generation technologies aim to solve these by using multi-engine correlation, dynamic thresholding, item verification, and check box detection to achieve near 100% recognition performance and reduce errors. The benefits include cost savings, improved efficiency, customer experience, and reduced fraud.
Orbograph introduces Automation Services and Automation Services LE, innovative recognition solutions that provide up to 40% labor cost savings through high levels of automation and accuracy. Automation Services achieves 98% automation and 99%+ accuracy, while Automation Services LE attains 90% automation with 99% accuracy. Both solutions support various check processing workflows and can be implemented on Orbograph's legacy OrboCAR platform or new G6 Enterprise Recognition Technology platform. Orbograph also offers managed recognition services to continuously monitor performance and ensure solutions meet guaranteed service levels.
Orbograph is a provider of electronic solutions for healthcare revenue cycle management and check processing recognition software. It has over 1,500 financial institution and biller clients that process billions of documents annually using Orbograph's technologies. Orbograph converts paper-based documents like EOBs into electronic files to automate payment data reconciliation and provide reporting tools. It is a subsidiary of Orbotech and was founded in 1996, employing over 50 people who serve the banking, financial, and healthcare industries.
Party Photo Booth Prop Trends to Unleash Your Inner StyleBirthday Galore
Are you planning an unforgettable event and looking for the best photo booth props to make it a memorable night? Party photo booth props have become essential to any celebration, allowing guests to capture priceless memories and express their personalities. Here, we'll explore the hottest party photo booth prop trends that will unleash your inner style and create a buzz-worthy experience with Birthday Galore!
For more details visit - birthdaygalore.com
Explore Treydora's VR economy, where users can trade virtual assets, earn rewards, and build digital wealth within immersive game environments. Learn more!
Taylor Swift: Conquering Fame, Feuds, and Unmatched Success | CIO Women MagazineCIOWomenMagazine
From country star to global phenomenon, delve into Taylor Swift's incredible journey. Explore chart-topping hits, feuds, & her rise to billionaire status!
Unveiling the Future of TV- Eternal IPTV Trends in 2024.pdfXtreame HDTV
As we step into 2024, the landscape of television continues to evolve rapidly, and Eternal IPTV is at the forefront of this transformation. With technological advancements and changing viewer preferences, IPTV (Internet Protocol Television) is reshaping how we consume entertainment. Eternal IPTV, known for its diverse and high-quality streaming options, is setting new trends that will define the future of TV.
Morgan Freeman is Jimi Hendrix: Unveiling the Intriguing Hypothesisgreendigital
In celebrity mysteries and urban legends. Few narratives capture the imagination as the hypothesis that Morgan Freeman is Jimi Hendrix. This fascinating theory posits that the iconic actor and the legendary guitarist are, in fact, the same person. While this might seem like a far-fetched notion at first glance. a deeper exploration reveals a rich tapestry of coincidences, speculative connections. and a surprising alignment of life events fueling this captivating hypothesis.
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Introduction to the Hypothesis: Morgan Freeman is Jimi Hendrix
The idea that Morgan Freeman is Jimi Hendrix stems from a mix of historical anomalies, physical resemblances. and a penchant for myth-making that surrounds celebrities. While Jimi Hendrix's official death in 1970 is well-documented. some theorists suggest that Hendrix did not die but instead reinvented himself as Morgan Freeman. a man who would become one of Hollywood's most revered actors. This article aims to delve into the various aspects of this hypothesis. examining its origins, the supporting arguments. and the cultural impact of such a theory.
The Genesis of the Theory
Early Life Parallels
The hypothesis that Morgan Freeman is Jimi Hendrix begins by comparing their early lives. Jimi Hendrix, born Johnny Allen Hendrix in Seattle, Washington, on November 27, 1942. and Morgan Freeman, born on June 1, 1937, in Memphis, Tennessee, have lived very different lives. But, proponents of the theory suggest that the five-year age difference is negligible and point to Freeman's late start in his acting career as evidence of a life lived before under a different identity.
The Disappearance and Reappearance
Jimi Hendrix's death in 1970 at the age of 27 is a well-documented event. But, theorists argue that Hendrix's death staged. and he reemerged as Morgan Freeman. They highlight Freeman's rise to prominence in the early 1970s. coinciding with Hendrix's supposed death. Freeman's first significant acting role came in 1971 on the children's television show "The Electric Company," a mere year after Hendrix's passing.
Physical Resemblances
Facial Structure and Features
One of the most compelling arguments for the hypothesis that Morgan Freeman is Jimi Hendrix lies in the physical resemblance between the two men. Analyzing photographs, proponents point out similarities in facial structure. particularly the cheekbones and jawline. Both men have a distinctive gap between their front teeth. which is rare and often highlighted as a critical point of similarity.
Voice and Mannerisms
Supporters of the theory also draw attention to the similarities in their voices. Jimi Hendrix known for his smooth, distinctive speaking voice. which, according to some, resembles Morgan Freeman's iconic, deep, and soothing voice. Additionally, both men share certain mannerisms. such as their calm demeanor and eloquent speech patterns.
Artistic Parallels
Musical and Acting Talents
Jimi Hendrix was regarded as one of t
SERV is the ideal spot for savory food, refreshing beverages, and exciting entertainment. Each visit promises an unforgettable experience with daily promotions, live music, and engaging games such as pickleball. Offering five distinct food concepts inspired by popular street food, as well as coffee and dessert options, there's something to satisfy every taste. For more information visit our website: https://servfun.com/
You know you're an adult when every check-up gets you down. View What Going to the Doctor is Like as an Adult and more funny posts on salty vixen stories & more-saltyvixenstories.com
13. Trends for the second half
of the second decade of
the 21st century:
1. Increasing informality
2. Increasingly emphatic
persuasion
3. Inclusion of validation
4. Promise of fast action
19. When you see this color
screen, it‘s for a
Quick hands-on.
Please participate.
What happens here
stays here.
20. Sorry, you won‘t hear them
during this diatribe:
• Paradigm
• Proactive
• Win-win
• Game plan
• 24/7
• Fast track
• Customer-centric
• At the end of the
day
• Core competency
• Think outside the
box
• Knowledge-based
• On the same page
22. Take a look at the
two most famous
advertisements of
all time … both
are direct
response:
23. Written in
1926…
still much
imitated today:
•They grinned
when the waiter
spoke to me in
French
•They laughed
when I told them
how I beat stress
•They laughed
when I said I‘d
lose weight
Hundreds of
others
28. Why is this email less effective
than it might be?
29. An absolute rule of
force-
communication:
One specific
example brings more
response than ten
generalizations.
30. Avoid these words in
force-communication
messages:
• quality
• service
• value
• needs (as
noun)
• ―Remember,‖
• What‘s more
• Your partner
in…
• When it
comes to…
31. Please, please:
Never again write ―blah‖
phrases such as…
• Act now.
• See your Toyota dealer
today.
• Southwest Airlines
means business.
35. Combining personalization
with a question forces a
reaction:
I hope we’ll get
together again soon.
doesn‘t begin to compete in
potency against
Will we get together
again soon?
36. Inclusion reduces the
possibility of rejection.
Example – replacing
I’d like us to get
together again soon.
with
We’ll get together
again soon.
(Would this as a question be
stronger? or weaker?)
37. Can you relate
those simple
examples to an
analysis of your
salesmanship in
direct response
copy?
40. You know why we should
NEVER slide through
word-choices without
considering whether even
slightly different wording
might have greater
fractional impact:
RESPONSE.
42. What is a more emotional
word or phrase than:
• commence
• utilize
• omit
• receive
• we would like to
• large
• you incur no
risk
• circular
• donate
• purchase
• fortunate
• requested
• I write
concerning
• we shall
• error
• perhaps
• however
• humorous
43. What is the difference
between:
• autumn and fall
• at last and
finally
• sexy and sensual
• nude and naked
• made and
manufactured
• manufactured by
and built by
• right now and at
once
• reply and respond
• insincere and not
sincere
• eager and anxious
• audience and
viewers
• died and passed
away
44. Note the difference in
thrust, impact, and (vital for
us) selling power:
―One in five Americans will
experience identity theft.‖
versus
―One in five people will be
hit with identity theft.‖
45. Shift to active voice and
watch as muscle skyrockets:
―One in five Americans will
be hit with identity theft.‖
versus
―Identity theft will smash
into the lives of one in five
Americans.‖
46. What is the difference
between
lifetime
guarantee
and
guaranteed for
twenty years
?
47. What is the difference
between
guaranteed for
twenty years
and
guaranteed for
20 years
?
48. Spelling out a word adds
dignity, formality, and importance.
It also may add distance between
writer and reader. So choose based
on the circumstance:
Mt. Olympus Mount Olympus
Ft. Lauderdale Fort Lauderdale
St. Jude Saint Jude
Dr. Smith Doctor Smith
Mr. Brown Mister Brown
No. 1 Number one
49. Match words to the
specific demographic
you‘re wooing:
inexpensive
cheap
50. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
Incorrect
Wrong
51. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―The senator declined to
comment.‖
―The senator declined to
answer.‖
52. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―The senator declined to
answer.‖
―The senator refused to
answer.‖
53. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―The thing is…‖
―Get this.‖
54. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―For the experienced
tourist.‖
―For the sophisticated
traveler.‖
55. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―We killed the
competition.‖
―We destroyed the
competition.‖
56. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―We killed the
competition.‖
―We murdered the
competition.‖
57. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―It doesn‘t work.‖
―It just ain‘t working.‖
58. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―She‘s a vice-president of
the agency.‖
―She‘s vice-president of
the agency.‖
59. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―Can you help us?‖
―Will you help us?‖
Do you recognize the huge
difference between ―Can
you‖ and ―Will you‖?
60. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―If you order now, you‘ll
get…‖
―Order now and you‘ll
get…‖
61. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―You pay much less.‖
―Others pay much more.‖
62. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
Trousers
Pants
63. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
Tighten your tummy.
Get rid of that gut.
64. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―We‘ll even pay the
shipping costs.‖
―We‘ll pay the shipping
costs.‖
65. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―We‘ll pay the shipping
costs.‖
―Free shipping.‖
66. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―They‘ll keep your feet
toasty warm.‖
―They‘ll keep your toes
toasty warm.‖
67. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―He kissed her on the
lips.‖
―He kissed her on the
mouth.‖
68. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―Attention, seniors: We
are conducting a clinical
trial for…‖
―Attention, seniors: A
research organization is
conducting a clinical trial
for…‖
69. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―We lost the game.‖
―We blew the game.‖
88. Quick hands-on:
Suggest a more
salesworthy replacement
for:
―You can complete
your Application Form
in less than one
minute.‖
89. Did you replace the word
―Application‖ to read…
―You can complete
your Acceptance Form
in less than one
minute‖?
Now, make it a tad more
convivial by replacing
one other word.
90. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―You can complete your
Acceptance Form
in less than one minute.‖
―You can complete your
Acceptance Form
in less than a minute.‖
91. BUT NEVER DRAW A
COSMIC CONCLUSION.
In many situations
you may prefer ―one‖ to ―a‖
because
―one‖ is definite
and
―a‖ is indefinite.
92. Superiority of the
definite over the
indefinite:
•―The gem in each earring
is a full carat.‖
• ―The gem in each
earring is one full carat.‖
93. The ―Emotion over Intellect‖
Rule:
When emotion and intellect
come into conflict, emotion
always wins.
The significance of this rule:
An emotion-based sales
argument will outsell an
intellect-based sales argument.
94. The three bases of
success in direct
response writing
1.Verisimilitude
2.Clarity
3.Benefit
101. The Law of Tenses:
Present tense outsells
future tense because the
present is now, and your
prospect wants benefits
now.
102. Present tense is more
relevant than either
future tense or past
tense. Use past tense to
establish a historical
base. Use present tense
to establish position.
103. "If you think that..." is a
more potent opening
than "If you thought
that..." because present
tense implies an
immediate change of
current attitude; past
tense suggests that
whatever follows will be a
revision of history.
104. Tying future to present tells the
reader:
"This will be for all eternity."
Compare the meanings of these
two approaches:
This is the seventh notification
we've sent you. It's the last one.
or...
This is the seventh notification
we've sent you. It will be the last
one.
106. When
is superior to If
for suggesting
something will happen.
If
is superior to When
for suggesting
something will not
happen.
107. The Generic Determination
Rule:
The generic determines reaction
more than the numbers.
More Less
Half a quart One pint
Half a kilo 500 grams
One hour 60 minutes
One day 24 hours
One month 30 days
One mile 5,280 feet
Half a pound 8 ounces
108. Hands-on practice:
Rewrite this statement
for greater power:
We’ll ship your order the
next day, and it’s
guaranteed for 30 days.
109. The Chronology Rule:
When chronology is within the
experiential background of the
message recipient, number of
years is a more powerful selling
weapon than dates.
So in the year 2013:
"A history of success since 2003" is
weaker than...
"A solid 10-year history of success."
Why?
113. ―The Asterisk Exception‖:
A reader automatically
anticipates a negative
result from an asterisk in
either heading or text.
If you are announcing a
positive, DO NOT use an
asterisk.
114. The five types of
comparatives:
• We‘re better than they are.
• Unlike so-called competitors
who…
• We‘re the greatest.
• We were marvelous
before, and now we‘re even
better.
• Intended to sell for x-amount
115. Hands-on practice:
Write a comparative
claim other than “We’re
better than they are” for
the organization you
represent.
116. Information optimizing…
Parity Advertising:
The statement seems to imply
superiority but actually only
claims parity... "No bank pays
higher interest"; Nobody sells
for less"; "We'll meet any
discount price."
118. Information optimizing…
Opening a question with a
positive statement directs the
answer:
―This is what you want, isn‘t
it?‖
is more likely to generate a
positive reaction than
―Is this what you want?‖
120. The three components of
successful force-
communication:
1. Basic psychology
2. Vocabulary suppression
3. Salesmanship equivalent
to that of a vacuum
cleaner salesman in a
department store
121. Two ads, same advertiser.
Which has both clarity and impact?
122. One of these pulled more than
twice the response of the
other. Which one? Why?
123. Is this
the
optimal
way to
contact
cold lists
via
email?
(Mice-type
is below
here. On
original,
you would
scroll
down to
see)
About Macromark:Macromark, Inc. is a leading, highly reputable and
progressive acquisition, retention and monetization media company. Relying
on its experienced sales organization, aggressive marketing efforts and
cutting edge IT support, Macromark will acquire new customers for you at
the lowest possible cost and will maximize the revenue potential of your
most valuable asset, your customer file. The company also provides key e-
commerce, print media, insert media and database marketing services.
Today, Macromark is recognized as one of the industry's fastest-growing
direct marketing companies with over 300 consumer and business-to-
business clients, in the US, Canada and Internationally.
Please go to this link to see all of this company's Business
Announcements
-or-
go to this link to add this company to your rolodex!
Brought to you by MacArthur Services - Business Announcements
MacArthur Services, 693 Cherry Avenue, Lake Forest IL, 60045 (847) 457-
3122, info@macarthurservices.com
Please mention this announcement when making inquiries!
Add a co-worker to receive Business Announcements
Update your info
O p t o u t : of future Business Announcements
124. This legend is in mice-
type below the Gift Card
references:
• About Macromark:Macromark, Inc. is a leading, highly
reputable and progressive acquisition, retention and
monetization media company. Relying on its experienced
sales organization, aggressive marketing efforts and cutting
edge IT support, Macromark will acquire new customers for
you at the lowest possible cost and will maximize the
revenue potential of your most valuable asset, your customer
file. The company also provides key e-commerce, print
media, insert media and database marketing services. Today,
Macromark is recognized as one of the industry's fastest-
growing direct marketing companies with over 300 consumer
and business-to-business clients, in the US, Canada and
Internationally.
164. The Clarity
Commandment:
When you choose words and
phrases for
force-communication,
clarity is paramount.
Don‘t let any other component
of the communications mix
interfere with it.
175. Word sequence can have a
profound effect on clarity
• Half roasted chicken
• Roasted half chicken
• Roasted chicken half
• Roast chicken half
• Half a roast chicken
• (and hyphens may help
clarify:
Chicken-half, roasted)
181. A tip:
For clarity,
When listing two parallel
items, and one has a
qualifier, list the one without
the qualifier first. Example:
helps you diet and quit
smoking ...
NOT
helps you quit smoking and
diet
189. Hands-on practice:
For a product with which
you‘re associated, create
the headline for a space
ad using one of the Five
Great Motivators.
Then create a second
headline using another of
those Motivators.
190. The Consistency
Command:
Components of an
advertisement, a mailing, or
an email message should
reinforce and validate one
another, or
reader/viewer/listener
response to all components
will be reduced.
191. The Rule of
Negative Subtlety:
The effectiveness of a
direct response message
whose purpose is to sell
something
decreases in direct ratio
to an increase in
subtlety.
192. First Sub-rule of
Negative Subtlety:
A sales argument loses
impact in direct ratio
to an increase in
subtlety.
193. A nasty development
in the
―R-rated‖
non-culture of
communication:
“In your face”
advertising
204. The web has reborn a venerable
marketing approach: ―per-inquiry‖
205. Absolute rules for p.i.
marketing:
• Offer is for product, not service
• Response goes to medium or list
source
• Offer must be easy to understand
• Fulfillment is from medium or list
source
• All involved parties share names
• Remittance from recipient to
offerer is fast and accurate
208. Don‘t assume your
mobile target has
the same mind-set
and attention-span
as
the same
individualsitting at
his/her computer.
209. Is mobile the medium of the
immediate future?
BIG benefits:
•Highly targeted.
•Can reach targets anywhere
they are.
•Results are measurable.
•Can be interactive.
211. Why use mobile? Because you
can…
-- Send timely offers right to the user‘s
mobile device, provided the mobile user
is an opt-in subscriber.
-- Create segments by demographic and
purchase data.
-- Deploy graphic mobile coupons that
can be redeemed at a store.
-- Use sometimes effective QR codes to
link to events and promotions.
-- Integrate with databases that are used
by email, direct marketing, and other
methods.
212. Why question the use of mobile?
Because it doesn’t…
-- Reach a high percentage of potential
responders.
-- Get a message out no matter where or
when the prospect may be ready to receive.
-- Have the flexibility of other media.
-- Cover anywhere near the totality of your
selling message.
-- As yet compete on a cost-per-positive-
contact basis with email, direct marketing,
and other methods.
214. Consider and discuss:
Are social media
competitive
in the world of e-
commerce?
What are the ―yea‖
possibilities?
What are the ―nay‖
possibilities?
216. If you plan to use
Facebook or MySpace or
Twitter as a marketing
tool…
please, please, please:
Test.
(Best test: as both vendor
and as potential
consumer.)
217. The email marketplace of
2013/2014 is far more
brutal than it was even a
few years ago. Why?
• Invasion of ―new media‖
• Abuse by so many emailers
• Wild competitive growth
• Wild competitive claims
218. Two advisories from an ―Expert,‖ in Inc.:
1. ―Unless you are having some sort of
outrageous sale that people just can‘t resist,
descriptive, transaction oriented subject lines
don't usually perform very well. What does
perform well? Creative, catchy, eye-catching
subject lines. So feel free to be creative, witty,
and funny.‖
2. ―All of your emails should have a primary call
to action, which is above the fold and very ob-
vious. However, don't have the email end there.
Some customers want to scroll to learn more or
see other content. So give them what they
want. Add a row of ‗best sellers,‘ new products,
testimonials, or other useful information.‖
Opinions about these advisories?
219. Each bid costs a dollar. Misleading
offers such as this damage the
credibility of email as a medium.
220. A few subject lines that may work
but are of questionable ethics:
•After Friday, forget our deal.
•Someone is using your photo here.
•Your new LG washer/dryer is here.
• Re: Possibility?
•Do you really want to cancel?
•Sorry, I‘m going to have to cancel
•Can‘t win them all. I give up.
•Junk mail? Hell, no. [or, Heck, no.]
•Thought I was dead? You‘re wrong.
•Two more days and the deal is off.
•It‘s PayPal, not Western Union.
221. How would you make these
subject lines more powerful?
•Carlos walked away from 29K in debt
•AHS the right choice in home warranties
- Free Quote!
•Fidelity Life Association's Rapid
Decision Term Life
•Here are more reasons to SHOP WITH
US!
•Take home essential style with GQ and
Details
222. Weak subject line may prevent recipient from
ever seeing the motivational headline:
237. Newsletter
advantages:
• Mild customer
loyalty
• Frequency has
logic
• Many variations
(jokes, surveys)
Newsletter
disadvantages:
• Weak selling
weapon
• Selling is
subordinated
• Boredom factor
238. If you decide to use a
newsletter to build your
list or to be the ―carrier‖
for your sales message,
YOU MUST
be certain that the first
item is exciting for the
recipient.
239. Is the first item in your
newsletter
an advertising message?
Uh-oh.
240. Is the first item in your
―Joke of the Day‖
the joke itself
and not
an advertising message?
Uh-oh.
243. Because
12 to 18 million
people
(used to be
30 million)
will see this
on their screen:
244.
245. Did you know…
•Adding the recipient‘s
name to the ―Subject‖
line usually increases
response.
•There is no point in
sending ―teaser‖ email.
246. Which is better? This one?____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Subj:Boost Sales! Date: 2:43:47 AM Pacific Daylight Time
From: loandream@aol.com
To: hglewis1@aol.comSent from the Internet (Details)
Let's face it. It's the 4th quarter. The holidays are just around the
corner. Now is the time to gear up for the busiest and most
profitable time of the year! We all need to:
* boost sales
* increase profits
* expand our markets
* max our budgets (use it or lose it!)
* watch the bottom line
The BOTTOM LINE: dollar for dollar, pound for pound, there's
nothing more powerful and effective than targeted email
advertising (proof of this in an independent study - see link below!)
247. Or this, same day‘s
email:________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________
Subj:Please call me Date: 2:44:52 AM Pacific Daylight Time
From: loandream@aol.com
To: hglewis1@aol.comSent from the Internet (Details)
Here's some new info for you. Please call me right away.
Regards,
Rich
Let's face it. It's the 4th quarter. The holidays are just around the
corner. Now is the time to gear up for the busiest and most profitable time of
the year! We all need to:
* boost sales
* increase profits
* expand our markets
* max our budgets (use it or lose it!)
* watch the bottom line
The BOTTOM LINE: dollar for dollar, pound for pound, there's nothing more
249. In actual tests…
text outpulled a produced
email
when the message was
URGENCY.
Produced message
outpulled text
when the message was
ARTISTRY.
250. An interesting test:
Which of these subject
lines pulled best?
John, here is the information
you have been waiting for.
or…
Here is the information you
have been waiting for, John.
251. No one could have
anticipated the
difference. One brought
13% more response.
Which one?
Here is the information
you have been waiting
for, John.
252. Which of these pulled
more response?
• You Can Save Up To
70%!
• You can save up to
70%!
254. Initial caps are a
dead giveaway not
only that this is
advertising, but
advertising from a
distance.
Rapport? Forget it.
255. Which of these pulled
more response?
• I‘m going to save you
70%!
• I‘m going to save you
70%.
256. Which of these pulled
better?
• Information you should
have about home
improvement schemes
• Beware of home
improvement schemes.
• Home improvement
offer? Look out.
260. Don‘t get diarrhea of the
fingertips.
D o n ’t g e t d ia r r h e a
o f t h e f in g e r t ip s .
==================================================
Subject: Alter significantly the denudation of Panglossian Corporate
communications.
Dear Docent-Colleague,
A malefactoring challenge entrepreneurial enterprises face today is multiple-layer
communication with a diverse and diffuse geographically dispersed staff. Indefatigable
meretriciousness can generate negativism from the most mundane pronouncement.
Employing Microsoft’s Digital Media, this retiform Division invites you to gain
knowledge and understanding of the professional and nonprofessional benefits of
streaming media technologies during complimentary attendance at a webcast:
To register, see website for details.
This message is singularly intended for the corporate executive to whom it has been
addressed. Additional invitations may be available upon request. Include corporate
title, areas of authority, and e-mail address.
270. Which of these would bring
greater response?
• You’ll be interested in the
hundreds of “Specials” on sale
this week at greatly reduced
prices.
or…
• The Bushnell 650 telescope you
thought would cost $375 is yours
right now (HURRY!) for $69. And
that’s just the beginning.
271. The only difference is the box at upper
left. You don‘t have to be a practicing
psychologist to know which one
outpulled the other.
273. Dear $Firstname$,
I was just reviewing our client list when suddenly a vision flashed into
my minds eye!
I nearly dropped my cup of tea it was so powerful and concentrated. We understand you're going
through some difficult times and want very badly to find or keep your true love.
We also know that you may be struggling financially and need MONEY desperately. Well, your time
may soon come! However, I must warn you that to get what we most want in life we sometimes
need to find courage and walk a hazardous path.
$Firstname$, at these times we need to walk through fire and take chances!
Are you up to the challenge?
$Firstname$, Are you ready to take the risks you need to transform your life?
We must read your Tarot cards to clarify this intense vision! That's why I'm giving you a FREE Tarot
reading! Call now!
Begin to take some chances for your dreams! $Firstname$, call toll-free 1-800-526-4317
immediately! In your future, $Firstname$, you may be confronted with a decision that could very
well lead to wealth, health and happiness. You may be rich! One caller claims to have won money
with her psychics' advice!You could you be next!
Love & hope,
Miss Cleo
277. Did you know…
• Tying your news to actual news
increases email response.
• Asking a relevant question is
unusually potent in email.
• Rules of letter-writing (short
paragraphs, spacing) apply.
• Matching demographics to
message can be super-valuable.
278. Did you know…
• If your offer is stated clearly before
scrolling down you will increase
response.
• An ALL CAPS message does not pull as
well as standard caps and lower case
(avoid initial caps, please).
• ―FREE!!! FREE!!! FREE!!!‖ is a
transparent pitch. One ―Free‖ has
verisimilitude. And please: One
punctuation mark is plenty.
• If you address your target by first
name, be very sociable.
280. No, I won‘t. (Opinion, please:
How should this have been done?)
281. OK for
followers,
but when
the recipient
of an email
says, ―Huh?‖
the sender
has damaged
the
effectiveness
of an
otherwise
salesworthy
proposition.
283. Email is the only medium in
which the approach
―It‘s important to me
so it‘s important to you‖
is a valid marketing ploy…
but only if properly used.
Why?
Because email is the ultimate
one-to-one, arm-around-the-
shoulder medium. Rapport is
the key to response and to
fewer opt-outs.
284. So
in an email message,
―I‖
is infinitely superior
to
―We.‖
285. The reader doesn‘t know who ―I‖ might
be … but is automatically less negative
298. Did you know…
Sending a direct mail
(―snail mail‖) message to
opt-outs will pull
considerably better than
the same mailing to
demographically parallel
individuals?
(What is the significance
of that curious fact?)
299. Survey by ―McPherson Associates‖:
– Friday emails are the most
opened.
– Friday volume is relatively low.
– 14.3 percent of emails are sent
on Friday versus 24.5 percent on
Tuesday.
– Sunday has low open
rates, highest click-through rate. --
(Survey may or may not be valid
for you.)
300. If you follow up
email
with telemarketing,
call within
two days
after sending
the email.
(Best bet: Be ready to
re-send,
on the spot.)
301. Consider and discuss:
Are social media
competitive
in the world of e-
commerce?
What are the ―yea‖
possibilities?
What are the ―nay‖
possibilities?
307. Recent study of message
longevity:
Twitter: 2.8 hours
Facebook: 3.2 hours
YouTube: 7.4 hours
―In short, after three hours, links
shared on the two major social
networks — Twitter and Facebook —
are headed to obscurity. YouTube
links last a bit longer.‖.
309. Can you believe this?
Points seriously made in a
bylined article in a marketing
publication:
―To make Twitter work as part of
your marketing plan, consider
these five tips:
∙Identify your program goals before
you start.
∙Figure out an inbound strategy.
∙Identify the tools you‘ll need.
∙Commit resources.
∙Plan to integrate.‖
311. If you plan to use
Facebook or MySpace or
Twitter as a marketing
tool…
please, please, please:
Test.
(Best test: as both vendor
and as potential
consumer.)
324. No surprise … it‘s the usual
―Complete sponsor offers‖
325. According to BtoB Magazine:
―64 percent of marketers
are allocating some portion
of their social media budget
to paid advertising on
social sites this year.‖
(What else would be in a
―social media budget‖?)
326. ―Social‖ are new media.
The rules are still
forming. Always analyze
your results, and you‘ll
generate a constant flow
of rules you can use…
profitably.
329. Two factors override all
others:
1.The Clarity
Commandment.
2. Stop the surfer-visitor
in his/her tracks.
330.
331. The First Rule
of Internet Copy
Copy length usually is not a factor.
Substantial copy length, within a
single copy block, is a negative factor.
(This suggests –
―Want that? Do this.‖ NOT…
―Do you want that? Then do this.‖)
332. The Second Rule
of Internet Copy
With every headline, every
sentence, ask yourself:
If I were reading this instead of
writing it, would my interest-level
stay high?
334. The Fourth Rule
of Internet Copy
Subject to the First Rule, copy
length can expand in ratio to the
amount of promise it makes.
335. The Fifth Rule
of Internet Copy
•Announcements cannot compete with
salesmanship.
•Technical expertise cannot compete
with salesmanship.
•Gadgetry cannot compete with
salesmanship.
336. Strong ways to
assure yourself of
RE-visits:
• Frequent changes of your
offer
• Bonuses for repeat visits
and/or repeat orders
• Sprightly text
• Contests
343. Why should a marketer
offer
FREE SHIPPING
for orders resulting from
email solicitation…
but not for the same item
ordered from the printed
catalog?
344. You know the answer:
ALL
commercial
email is competitive
with all other
commercial email.
350. GOOD IDEAS:
• Change your offer often. Daily
isn‘t too often. (Why?)
• Don‘t use the company logo as
the key to the home page. (Why?)
• Immediately offer a terrific deal.
(Why immediately?)
• No direct exit from a ―deep‖
screen. (Why?)
351. POOR IDEAS:
• Having someone lured by email land
on the home page instead of the offer
that attracted him or her.(Why?)
• As an opener: ―A message from our
Chairman.‖(Why?)
• Philosophy rather than a hard
offer.(Why?)
• ―Employee of the Month.‖ (Why – but
how about ―Customer of the
Month‖?)
352. The need for external
media promotion
for your site increases in
ratio to four factors:
1. Direct competition
2. The total number of Web sites
3. The volume of site advertising in
media
4. Your valid claims of uniqueness
353.
354. Part Five:
Let‘s use some of
the rules of force-
communication
to write
sales letters.
355. The purpose of the
carrier envelope
(other than keeping its
contents from spilling
out onto the street):
TO GET ITSELF OPENED.
384. Hands-on practice:
Consider this typical circumstance:
You're a premium cable channel. You
plan to show 50 movies between now
and Thanksgiving Day. You're sending a
promotional mailing to cable
subscribers, pointing out —
1. Next Saturday your channel is free (so
cable subscribers get a "sampler").
2. If they sign up now, cable subscribers
pay no connection fee.
What legend, if any, do you put on the
envelope?
392. Tired of ―Dear Friend‖?
Try one of these:
• Good morning!
• Hi.
• Dear Colleague,
• Dear Tennis Nut,
• Dear Fellow Tennis Nut,
• This will be a good day, [NAME]!
• If you‘re like I am, [NAME]…
(When should you use
only the first name?)
393. Tired of ―Dear Friend‖?
Try one of these:
• Private memo to [NAME]
• I‘m writing in
haste, [NAME], because…
• [NAME], did you ever imagine…
• News bulletin for [NAME]:
• [NAME], a small favor, please?
(When should you use
only the first name?)
395. What is wrong with this
first sentence?
Over one trillion dollars is spent
by manufacturing companies
each year on
materials, equipment, and
services.
401. The first responsibility of
the overline:
To grab and shake the
reader's attention.
The second responsibility
of the overline:
To make the reader eager
to continue reading.
402. You can see how this overline
supplies both responsibilities:
403. Readership tests tell us:
The overline, when
present, is the
MOST READ
part of the letter.
(What is the next
MOST READ
part of the letter?
the postscript.)
404. The p.s. should reinforce
one of the key selling
motivators
or mention an extra
benefit ---
one which doesn't require
explanation.
405. If you enclose two letters
in your mailing,
don't put a p.s. on both of
them.
406. Which p.s. pulled better?
P.S. I think you‘ll agree that this is an
exceptional opportunity, and I urge
you to respond quickly if you intend
to take advantage of it. I know you
don‘t want to miss out.
or…
P.S. This exceptional opportunity
expires at midnight Sunday,
October 13. So call my toll-free
number – 1-888-765-2437.
I know you don‘t want to miss out.
407. An absolute truism of
force-communication:
Specifics
outpull
generalizations.
409. If you include
marginal notes…
• Handwrite the marginal notes.
• Match calligraphy of the
handwritten signature (and
overline).
• Blue, if possible.
• No more than five words.
• One per page is plenty. Maximum
two.
412. Repeating the
―Emotion over Intellect‖
Rule:
When emotion and
intellect come into
conflict, emotion always
wins.
(So an emotion-based sales
argument will outsell an
intellect-based sales argument.)
413. An emotional appeal will
outpull an intellectual
appeal.
Since exhortation is more
emotional than either
explanation or
validation, the letter is a
more powerful selling
weapon than the
brochure.
414. How would you make these
sentences more emotional?
• I need your aid.
• My story is at an end.
• Can you donate $25?
• We regret the error concerning your
account.
• A reply from you would be
appreciated.
• If you are dissatisfied, simply return
it.
• Enclosed please find the pertinent
information.
415. What is the difference
between…
• $100
• $100.
• $100.00
• $100!
• $100.00!
• One hundred dollars
• A hundred bucks
416. For offers with a highly
―emotional‖ flavor, if you
include a response device
which emphasizes
responding by mail you
may actually damage
response.
419. The Consistency Command:
Components of an
advertisement. a mailing, or
an email message must
reinforce and validate one
another, or
reader/viewer/listener
response to all components
will be reduced.
420. The mailing sells variable data printing.
But the mailer doesn‘t use it.
421. The superiority of examples
over statistics:
Statistics = cold-blooded, no
involvement.
Examples = warm-
blooded, involvement.
422. First pass:
If treated early, 75% of those
children who have this deadly
disease can be saved.
Second pass:
Innocent children die from this
disease. With early treatment,
three out of four will live.
Third pass:
This deadly disease is killing
innocent children. With early
treatment we can save three
precious lives, of four we're now
losing.
423. Fourth pass:
We lost Jimmy today. His
parents knew his precious days
were numbered. But
Mary, Karen, and Billy all will
live. We were able to start their
treatment early enough to save
them.
Which text is most likely to
generate response? Why?
424. Plural references say to
the reader:
―You're one of the mob.‖
Singular references say to
the reader:
―Only you.‖
Which one will do a
better selling job?
425. Use singular to suggest
exclusivity:
―You‘ll save on anything
you see in these pages.‖
Use a collective noun to
suggest universality:
―You‘ll save on everything
you see in these pages.‖
426. The Celebrity
Endorsement Rule:
In business-to-business
copy, user endorsements are
usually stronger than celebrity
endorsements. In consumer
copy, endorsement by a
celebrity unrelated to the type
of product or service you sell
probably is a waste of money.
431. For print, mail, or email
to seniors:
1. No type smaller than 10-point.
2. Response must be easy.
3. Include a coupon with ample room to
make entries, or an easy ―Click here.‖
4. Suggest a discount or bargain.
5. Appear to appeal to logic.
6. Don't make a long story short.
432. Hands-on practice:
Write a headline and first
sentence for a space ad
selling ―Joint Support
Formula,‖ 100 capsules
for $4.99, to the general
public.
Then…
Write a headline and first
sentence selling the same
items in a magazine
circulated to seniors.
437. The
―Teaser-Waster‖ Rule:
Teaser mailings and space ads,
which don't tell the reader
what the mailer has for sale,
are less productive than mailings
which include facts on which
the target-individual can formulate
a buying decision.
464. The ―Avoid Five‖ Rule:
In more formal copy, avoid using
multiples of five when suggesting
time or cost of distance –
Replace
―about five minutes.‖
―Oh, figure spending ten bucks.‖
with
―some 4-1/2 minutes.‖
―Anticipate a cost of about
eleven dollars.‖
465. The reader interprets
the five/ten estimates
as guesses, because
they are the common
approximation.
But…
466. Those approximations can
be valuable when projecting
a casual mood.
You‘re the professional.
You decide.
(Make your decision
deliberately, based on what
mood you‘re projecting and
to whom.)
471. Do you see how the word
―among‖ deniesexclusivity?
472. The wording on a TV spot
for a product called
―FiberChoice‖:
Four grams of fiber
in each dose.
Which word would you have
changed?
And what word would you
have used to replace it?
473. YOU are in command of the
reaction to your words:
―You pay much less.‖
―Others pay much more.‖
489. A dozen implicitly weak
words and phrases:
• administration
• approximately
• define
• earn
• facilitate
• features
• formulate
• indeed
• needs (as
noun)
• product
• respond
• work
490. A dozen words and
phrases with power
• free
• free gift
• limited
time
• right now
• surprise
• hot
• first time offered
• not sold in stores
• good only until
[DATE]
• Don‘t miss out
• I‘ll look for your
order
• Try it at our risk
496. The copywriter‘s most
professional tool …
Are you maximizing it?
(Are you aware of it? If
you are, are you aware of
how easy it is?)
Word
expansion
497. A few examples of word
expansion:
The original copy –
Save 10% weekdays.
499. A little more expansion –
Save 10% Monday
through Friday.
500. And a bit more expansion –
Save 10% every day Monday
through Friday.
501. Keep expanding until you‘ve
maximized.
Brain–power doesn‘t cost
anything.
Save 10% every single day
Monday through Friday.
502. We haven‘t yet achieved
nirvana. The meistersinger
word expander looks beyond
the obvious:
Save a big 10% Monday.
Save a big 10% Tuesday.
Save a big 10% Wednesday.
Save a big 10% Thursday.
Save a big 10% Friday.
COME IN AND SAVE!
503. NOTE:
Does ―10%‖ justify the word
―big‖?
A peripheral benefit of word
expansion:
Repetition makes the claim
contagious.
504. While we‘re on this point
– ―Save 10%‖
is more dynamic than
―10% off.‖
• It‘s a clear imperative.
• It‘s emotion-based rather
than comprehension-based.
505. Another easy example of
word expansion:
Original –
“Available in
gray, suntan, blue, an
d charcoal.”
506. Expanded, copy adds a
minuscule injection of
power –
“Available in these
most wanted colors –
gray, suntan, blue, an
d charcoal.”
507. With more word
expansion, we add
another mini- injection of
power –
“Available in every one
of these most wanted
colors –
gray, suntan, blue, and
charcoal.”
508. What is the word in all
those examples that saps
out power?
Available
511. One more apparently
trivial example of
word expansion:
Original –
“Word expansion is the
easiest and the most
logical way to add word-
power.”
512. Adding one word expands
impact just a fraction…
and fractions are what
the professional looks for
and exploits –
“Word expansion is both
the easiest and the most
logical way to add word-
power.”
518. The longer subject line pulled
considerably more response. (All
other elements were identical.)
What elements are significant here,
other than actual word-length?
519. These were identical except for small legend at
bottom right – ―Tuition & Openings‖ versus
―Schedule a Tour.‖
520. What is of interest to a prospect-parent?
Probably because of the subject, ―Tuition and
Openings‖ far outpulled ―Schedule a Tour.‖
521. A ―clean‖ test – which one
brought more response?
Start your free 30-day trial
or
Start my free 30-day trial
?
527. Quick and obvious tip:
Questions are automatically
reader-involving. And…
a question automatically is
less threatening and more
rapport-suggestive than a
thunderbolt hurled from
Mount Olympus.