Headlines
The difference between advertising and personal salesmanship lies largely
in personal contact. The salesman is there to demand attention. He cannot
be ignored. The advertisement can be ignored.
But the salesman wastes much of his time on prospects whom he can
never hope to interest. He cannot pick them out. The advertisement
is read only by interested people who, by their own volition, study
what we have to say.
The purpose of a headline is to pick out people you can interest.
You wish to talk to someone in a crowd. So the first thing you say
is, "Hey there, Bill Jones" to get the right persons attention.
So it is in an advertisement. What you have will interest certain
people only, and for certain reasons. You care only for those people.
Then create a headline which will hail those people only.
Perhaps a blind headline or some clever conceit will attract many
times as many. But they may consist of mostly impossible subjects
for what you have to offer. And the people you are after may never
realize that the ad refers to something they may want.
Headlines on ads are like headlines on news items. Nobody reads a
whole newspaper. One is interested in financial news, one in political,
one in society, one in cookery, one in sports, etc. There are whole
pages in any newspaper which we may never scan at all. Yet other people
might turn directly to those pages.
We pick out what we wish to read by headlines, and we don't want
those headlines misleading. The writing of headlines is one of the
greatest journalistic arts. They either conceal or reveal an interest.
Suppose a newspaper article stated that a certain woman was the most
beautiful in the city. That article would be of intense interest to
that woman and her friends. But neither she nor her friends would
ever read it if the headline was "Egyptian Psychology."
So in advertising. It is commonly said that people do not read advertisements.
That is silly, of course. We who spend millions in advertising and
watch the returns marvel at the readers we get. Again and again we
see 20 percent of all the readers of a newspaper cut out a certain
coupon.
But people do not read ads for amusement. They don't read ads which,
at a glance, seem to offer nothing interesting. A double-page ad on
women's dresses will not gain a glance from a man. Nor will a shaving
cream ad from a woman.
Always bear these facts in mind. People are hurried. The average
person worth cultivating has too much to read. They skip three-fourths
of the reading matter which they pay to get. They are not going to
read your business talk unless you make it worth their while and let
the headline show it.
People will not be bored in print. They may listen politely at a
dinner table to boasts and personalities, life history, etc. But in
print they choose their own companions, their own subjects. They want
to be amused or benefited. They want economy, beauty, labor savings,
good things to eat and wear. There may be products which interest
them more than anything else in the magazine. But they will never
know it unless the headline or picture tells them.
The writer of this chapter spends far more time on headlines than
on writing. He often spends hours on a single headline. Often scores
of headlines are discarded before the right one is selected. For the
entire return from an ad depends on attracting the right sort of readers.
The best of salesmanship has no chance whatever unless we get a hearing.
The vast difference in headlines is shown by keyed returns which
this book advocates. The identical ad run with various headlines differs
tremendously in its returns. It is not uncommon for a change
in headlines to multiply returns from five or ten times over.
So we compare headlines until we know what sort of appeal pays best.
That differs in every line, of course.
The writer has before him keyed returns on nearly two thousand headlines
used on a single product. The story in these ads are nearly identical.
But the returns vary enormously, due to the headlines. So with every
keyed return in our record appears the headlines that we used. Thus
we learn what type of headline has the most widespread appeal. The
product has many uses. It fosters beauty. It prevents disease. It
aides daintiness and cleanliness. We learn to exactness which quality
most of our readers seek.
This does not mean we neglect the others. One sort of appeal may
bring half the returns of another, yet be important enough to be profitable.
We overlook no field that pays. But we know what proportion of
our ads should, in the headline, attract any certain class.
For this same reason we employ a vast variety of ads. If we are using
twenty magazines we may use twenty separate ads. This because circulation's
overlap, and because a considerable percentage of people are attracted
by each of several forms of approach. We wish to reach them all.
On a soap, for instance, the headline "Keep Clean" might attract
a very small percentage. It is to commonplace. So might the headline,
"No animal fat." People may not care much about that. The headline,
"It floats" might prove interesting. But a headline referring to beauty
or complexion might attract many times as many.
An automobile ad might refer in the headline to a good universal
joint. It might fall flat, because so few buyers think of universal
joints. The same ad with a headline, "The Sportiest of Sport Bodies,"
might out pull the other fifty to one.
This is enough to suggest the importance of headlines. Anyone who
keys ads will be amazed at the difference. The appeals we like
best will rarely prove best, because we do not know enough people
to average up their desires. So we learn on each line by experiment.
But back of all lie fixed principles. You are presenting an ad to
millions. Among them is a percentage, small or large, whom you hope
to interest. Go after that percentage and try to strike the chord
that responds. If you are advertising corsets, men and children don't
interest you. If you are advertising cigars, you have no use for non-smokers.
Razors won't attract women, rouge will not interest men.
Don't think that those millions will read your ads to find out if
your product interests. They will decide at a glance - by your headline
or your pictures. Address the people you seek, and them only.
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