Bullet 4

The Most Important Advertising Question

Ask this simple 5-word question, stand back
and watch your breakthroughs—and response—erupt.

Dear Marketing Top Gun:In this Bullet, you will learn a simple five-word sentence that gives you an almost unfair advantage in boosting your response, outselling your competition and triggering an ongoing stream of creative breakthroughs.

Asking this simple question is the easiest way I know to get yourself and your staff to think outside the box. It can literally make you wealthy and establish your reputation as a marketing visionary with a Midas touch.

This is true whether you’re an entrepreneur, infopreneur, copywriter, marketing manager, CEO—anyone with anything to do with marketing.

Shameless over promising? Not at all, as you’ll now see.

Here’s the question:

     What are we really selling?

Just five little words. But let’s explore their revolutionary power, first on a basic level, then advanced.

A Little-Known Secret of Master Closers

First, always remember that advertising is nothing more than salesmanship multiplied by a mass medium. This is why it can unleash such powerful leverage in making you rich and successful. It is a persuasive salesperson able to close thousands or even millions of sales at once. And then do it again tomorrow and the next day.

Knowing this, the happiest hunting ground I’ve ever found to uncover new ways to explode response is to learn the secrets of master salespeople and then apply them to direct response.

What follows is easily one of the most powerful.

Early in my career, a wizened old Copy Chief taught me that one of the shrewdest questions master closers always ponder is, “What are we really selling?

For example:

You are not selling grass seed. You are selling a greener lawn.

You are not selling boilers and BTUs. You are selling warmer, cozier winter nights at a 27% fuel savings.

You are not selling baseball tickets. You are selling memories of sunny afternoons that a father and his children will cherish forever.

Back in 1781, Samuel Johnson understood this well. When he was appointed to auction off the Henry Thrale brewery, he announced, “We are not here to sell a parcel of boilers and vats, but the potentiality of growing rich beyond the dreams of avarice.”

Perhaps lipstick king Charles Revson said it best: “In the factory we make cosmetics. In the store we sell hope.

You get the idea.

Whenever you are marketing anything, always ask, “What are we really selling?” Don’t stop until you’ve got a long list of answers and test an ad built around each of your best. The difference in response will often astonish you, open up whole new markets as well as lots more opportunities to raise the question again.

But We’re Just Getting Started.
Let’s Think Even Bigger…

If you want to grow rich in direct response and perhaps even establish a reputation as a marketing visionary with a Midas touch, just start asking this same question of not just a single product or service, but of your entire enterprise.

Some revolutionary examples:

A hundred years ago, the railroads dominated the American economy. If you had asked the railroad moguls of the day what business they were in, they would have replied, “The railroad business, of course.

But had they raised our 5-word question, “What are we really selling?“, they could have realized they were in the transportation business.

And that simple insight could have allowed them to dominate whole new transportation industries that would soon emerge—automobiles, airplanes and trucking, whose revenues would dwarf those of the railroads. But the railroad tycoons never saw these upstarts coming. They were blindfolded by the familiar. They were in the railroad business.

Another example:

For many decades, cigarettes were sold on the basis of “rich tobacco taste.”

Then some diabolically clever soul raised the question, “What are we really selling?

He reasoned that teenagers don’t start smoking to experience “rich tobacco taste.” Heck, most teenagers turn green with their first drags on a cigarette.

What are we really selling? Why do teenagers start using such an instantly noxious product? Obviously the answer is to look hip and rebellious among their peers. To imitate more glamorous, powerful, individualistic adults. To project a cooler self image.

A cooler self image—that’s what cigarette makers were really selling. And so was born The Marlboro Man, the strong, aloof cowboy on horseback, squinting into the sunset like Clint Eastwood, his own man, impervious to the demands of society—just like so many teenage boys crave to feel and look like.

Result: Marlboro sales skyrocketed and to this day, decades later, Marlboros remain the world’s top-selling cigarette.

Such is the power of this simple 5-word question.

Another example:

When a man named Ray Jacuzzi was getting nowhere trying to sell his whirlpools to physical therapists, he refused to give up.

Instead he asked, “What are we really selling?

Another possibility arose—hot tubs for homes—and that idea catapulted him to stratospheric success.

Another example:

By the 1950s, almost every family in America owned a big square white refrigerator. As long as it kept the milk cold and didn’t conk out completely, families were content to let it sit in the kitchen forever.

So how do we sell more refrigerators when everybody owns one?

What are we really selling?

Hey, we could start selling refrigerators as kitchen decor.

Let’s produce them in decorator colors and styles to suit every taste and fashion. This way, when people remodel their kitchens, they’ll want new refrigerators to match.

That insight quickly became (and largely remains) the driving force behind new refrigerator sales.

The automobile industry had come up with the same simple answer decades earlier. How could new rivals sell cars when Henry Ford dominated the business with his basic black cars? (Ford had boasted, “You can have a Ford in any color you want, as long as it’s black.”)

His rivals asked, “What are we really selling?” What happens if we change the answer from “transportation” to “style”?

Look, we can’t compete head-on with Ford selling basic “transportation.” He has that market locked. But we could start offering cars not just with Henry’s basic black color and one-size-fits-all features, but in lots of different colors and models, so that cars can now be an expression of personal style. Then we’d be selling something different and open up a whole new market.

That was the breakthrough—and the way cars are marketed to this day.

So think for a moment…

What are you really selling?

Are you sure? What else could it be? How might you repackage your product, or add to it, to trigger new demand or crack open a whole new market? Think big!

Starbucks sells more than coffee. Disney World sells more than rides.

Ask “What are we really selling?” often enough and I guarantee this—bold new answers will arise and with them, major opportunities to open new markets and explode your response.

In Your Next Bullet

Your next Bullet will be what I call a Silver Bullet, one so special, it will change your life in many positive ways as soon as you start using it. It will startle you with its effectiveness and simplicity. It will empower you to be far more successful, with less effort, in marketing or any other activity you choose.

In fact, this Silver Bullet is possibly the most reliable secret for getting whatever you want in life without strain. Yet you have never read it elsewhere, I promise. You will see.

Sincere wishes for a good life
and (always!) higher response,

sig

P.S. If you know any copywriters or marketers who would enjoy this Bullet, just send them an email with this link:http://marketingbullets.com/

P.P.S. Your e-mail address will never be shared. And if you ever wish to unsubscribe, just let me know and I will vanish from your life like a shadow in the night.

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