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The Anatomy of Hype
By Marcia Yudkin
On a copywriting board I frequent, someone expressed bafflement that several
respected marketers criticized the tone of a sales page he wrote. "Why did they
apologize to their subscribers while linking to my pitch? This approach sells,"
he said.
Hype was the problem. If you use the following tactics, many educated
shoppers cringe and go elsewhere:
Marketers who favour a style full of hype argue that the numbers prove these
techniques succeed, whatever the audience. When they tone down the pitch, sales
drop. When they toss decorum to the winds and reinsert that hammering excitement
and the fervid embellishments, sales return to previous levels. Case closed,
they say.
Assuming their numbers are valid, this argument does have a point, but one of
limited relevance to many situations. Hype may sell, but it may also undercut
other business goals, in these ways:
- Reputation: In whose eyes do you want credibility? Use this tone
and you can expect snickering rather than respect from established
journalists, academics, Fortune 500 companies, most people with postgraduate
degrees and colleagues who use any of those groups as their benchmark of
respectability.
- Partnerships and opportunities: If you're aiming at joint ventures
with banks, universities, community organizations, trade associations and the
like, hype counts very heavily against you. You may also endanger your chances
of getting a contract from a major publisher if that's among your goals.
- Trust: Are you aiming at a one-time sale or a long-term customer?
Hype works better in the former situation, especially where a buyer believes
they can obtain a refund if the purchase doesn't live up to the promises.
- Staying out of legal trouble: Some of the techniques listed above either flirt with deception or cross the line to lies. The other day I read
through a Federal Trade Commission judgment against an Internet marketer for
deceptive marketing and believe me, this is wrath you do not want to bring
down upon yourself! Make sure you have a nitpicky lawyer to vet your copy if
you favour a hyped style.
Please note that it's possible to use a hard-hitting, dramatic direct
marketing style with descriptive bullet points, calls to action and so on in
connection with entirely truthful and completely respectable copy.
Hype does sell. But that's far from settling the issue of whether or not you
should use it.
©2005 Marcia Yudkin
Article reprinted with special permission.
Marcia Yudkin is the author of '6 Steps to Free Publicity',
'Persuading on Paper', 'Web Site Marketing Makeover' and eight other books on business communication. Sign up for her free weekly newsletter on creative marketing at www.yudkin.com/marksynd.htm
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