Thursday, December 27, 2007

Advertising and Why People Buy it


I read this quote the other day and it is oh so true to the interactive and creative advertising worlds.


"

If you can get this mental move down, the rest of your copywriting becomes easy by comparison

Aesop_glimLast week I was talking with my friend copywriter/designer Peter Aristedes in Chicago, and we discovered we both have a weakness for buying too many books. In fact, he took "unfair" advantage of me by telling me about an old out-of-print advertising book he had recently bought, and before the conversation was over, I had tracked it down on the Internet and it's on its way to me now.

Then a few days later, out of my bookshelf I picked my copy of a book originally written in 1945 (I have the 1961 edition) called How Advertising Is Written -- and Why by Aesop Glim (the pen name for the old Printer's Ink columnist George Laflin Miller).

I found a gem in there so good I have to share it with you:

Why does he buy it?

This is the most misleading question of all-- because we have the paradox that what you sell is almost never what your prospect buys.

...

People don't buy soap -- they buy cleanliness. People don't buy dentifices -- they buy beauty and freedom from toothache.

People don't buy automobiles -- they buy transportation, social prestige, the great outdoors, life, liberty, and the pursuit of the opposite sex.

People don't buy houses -- they buy homes.

I guess most of us have heard some version of this before, so we "know" it.

But, does that matter?

Because, "knowing" and "doing" are two different things.

I still see so many ads that are trying to sell what the business wants to sell, rather than what the customer wants to buy.

Unsuccessful ads, I might add.

Do you know why your prospect buys?

If you don't, a good place to start is by asking him -- or her.

David Garfinkel
Publisher, World Copywriting Newsletter

P.S. I just did a quick search and as of this moment there are about six used copy of the book I mentioned available on Amazon. You could do worse than to join Peter and me in our unwieldy habit. "



Just remember these little rules:


headline-hook-offer-call^to^action


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