John Bejakovic – Copy Riddles
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(This course is available and delivery within one day!)Of course, in your sales copy, you don’t want to give away the whole recipe. In fact, you donβt even want to give away the key ingredient (flaxseed in this case), if thatβs all your prospect really needs to solve his problem.Β
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John Bejakovic – Copy Riddles
Archive: https://web.archive.org/web/20220112105547/https:/copyriddles.com/
A secret, but not so subtle, copywriting trick to create magical mechanisms
Here’s a copywriting tip you probably have never heard of. I’ll then tell you how to find dozens more of these tricks whenever you like.
Let me start it off with a little riddle.
How can three men, one who has been mostly dead all the day, storm a castle gate guarded with 60 soldiers?
Inconceivable, right? Even if one of these men happens to be a giant and the other a master swordsman, the enemies are too numerous. Success isΒ Inconceivable.
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What if you also include a wheelbarrow in your assets? What if you have a magical, glowing fire?-protective, “holocaust cloak”?
The impossible suddenly becomes possible. Because this is what you can do:
Just load one of the three men β preferably, the giant β into the wheelbarrow. Wrap the holocaust cover around him. Then, roll the wheelbarrow toward the gate. Just as fear and doubt start creeping into the hearts of castle defenders, set the holocaust cover on fire.
Presto. Presto.
This is a scene from The Princess Bride (1987). I am sharing it because it is a great illustration for a critical but often misunderstood copywriting technique.
TheΒ Mechanism.
The mechanism is called the βhowβ That makes your solution work.
Without an intriguing, believable mechanism, your prospect crosses his arms, shakes his head at the claims youβre making, andΒ says, βInconceivable.β
You can smile confidently at your prospect with the right mechanism and say, “No, no. It’s really quite easy. All you need is a wheelbarrow and this magic cloak… and I’ll show you how to get both, for free!”
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Thatβs when your prospectβs eyes get wide… he uncrosses his arms and leans in… and he nods to signal that you should go on with your message. Thatβs the power of a good mechanism.
How can you find a magical, fascinating, yet believable system? Here’s how I do it. The following bullet will help you to do it:
This bullet was written by A-list copywriter David Deutsch.
For reference, Davidβs copy has sold over a billion dollarsβ worth of products. He has written for the biggest direct response publishers, suchΒ as Agora and Boardroom, and heβs had as many as six winning controls at the same time, each paying him big money in big chunks, in the form of monthly royalties.
The bullet above appeared in Davidβs sales letter for one of Boardroomβs million-Healing Remedies and health books that cost less than a dollar And guess what β I tracked down a copy of that book. Here’s page 8.
Aha! So now Davidβs magical mechanism trick becomes obvious. The coffee grinder wasnβt the whole story. It was only one ingredient in a complex recipe that required many steps and ingredients.
In your sales copy, don’t give away the whole recipe. In fact, you donβt even want to give away the key ingredient (flaxseed in this case), if thatβs all your prospect really needs to solve his problem.
What you want is specificity, intrigue, and a sense of humor. Look for theΒ incidental ingredient. The coffee grinder that grinds the flax seed… the saran wrap to keep the eczema cream in place… and the wheelbarrow which allows three men (one of whom was mostly dead all day) access to a castle heavily defended.
And by the way, this incidental ingredient technique isnβt just great for selling cellulite-Be-gone recipes via sales letters. For example, hereβs a subject line from a recent email by millionaire email marketer Ben Settle:
Benβs emails are famous for sexy subject lines, and you can see why. The subject line above is irritatingly intriguing, especially if youβre a freelancer hungry for client work.
So whatβs Benβs pocket watch secret? It’s in the body of the email.
You should pay attention to this:
In Benβs body copy, thereβs no mention of a pocket watch. But Ben hit upon that pocket watch by doing the same as David did above β zooming in on the solution… and then zooming in some more. So far in that the reader starts wondering. “A pocket watch? Why specifically a pocket watch? Gotta find out.”
βYeah ok,β I hear what you are saying. βThis technique is cool, even though itβs kind of sneaky. But I canβt just zoom in all the time.β
Youβre absolutely right. Your readers will get smarter if this trick is used in every headline, bullet, or subject line.Β “Oh, it’s the teaspoon trick.” “Not the banana peel secret AGAIN.” “There he goes, trying to get me to buy by zooming in on a hairbrush.”
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