How
a Hidden Psychological "Trigger" Makes Prospects Practically
Line Up and Beg to do Business with You
by Yanik Silver
Do you remember the
stupid beer commercial a few years back with the tagline "Why Ask Why?"
Well, completely unknown
to the ad agency -- they had almost stumbled onto a breakthrough marketing
concept.
Telling people the
reason why you are doing something is one of the most powerful influencers
of human behavior.
Robert Cialdini, Ph.D.
in his book "Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion" talks about an experiment
by Harvard social psychologist, Ellen Langer, that concluded people like
to have a reason for what they do.
Her experiment consisted
of people waiting in line to use a library copy machine and then having
experimenters ask to get ahead in line.
The first excuse used
was "Excuse me, I have five pages. May I use the Xerox machine because
I'm in a rush?"
This request coupled
with a reason was successful 94% of the time.
However when the experimenter
made a request only: "Excuse me, I have five pages. May I use the Xerox
machine?" this request was only granted 60% of the time.
A significant drop.
Okay now for the shocker.
It may seem like the
difference between those two requests was the additional information of
"because I'm in a rush", but that's just not the case.
Because in a third
experimenter, the experimenter asks "Excuse me, I have five pages. May
I use the Xerox machine because I have to make some copies?"
There's no reason
mentioned or new information presented, just the words "because".
This time a full 93%
of the people said yes simply due to the word 'BECAUSE'!
And it didn't even
matter that there was no reason given.
Just the word because
triggered a magic response. Using this psychological 'trigger' can massively
increase your Marketing success.
Here's an example:
John E. Powers, one of the top copywriters in the 1900's, wrote this ad
for a Pittsburgh department store in severe financial trouble: "We are
bankrupt. We owe $125,000 more than we can pay, and this announcement
will bring our creditors down on our necks. But if you come and *buy*
tomorrow, we shall have the money to meet them. If not, we shall go to
the wall."
Instead of yelling
'SALE' like so many other stores would, there's a legitimate reason given
why people should spend their money at this store.
And this ad was said
to be responsible for saving the store.
Another ad written
by Powers, for a different merchant, proclaimed "We have a lot of rotten
raincoats we want to get rid of."
This sold out the
entire inventory of raincoats by the next morning.
Max Sackheim, famous
for the long-running ad "Do You Make These Mistakes In English" and originator
of the book-of-the-month concept, says this: "Whenever you make a claim
or special offer in your advertising, come up with an honest reason why,
and then state it sincerely. You'll sell many more products this way."
And this powerful
strategy works just as well today.
Using this secret
weapon for a medical equipment company, I helped them produce a massive
1,073% return on investment simply using "reason-why" copy.
The premise was how
can we sell a product for the incredibly low price of only $477? (Regularly
this product sells for about $695 - $895.)
Then the ad went on
to explain that the reason why the price was so low was because the manufacturer
wanted to gain market share and get nurses and doctors accustomed to using
their product.
It was a huge winner
and a big money-maker for the client.
So how can you apply
all of this to your business?
Easy. Let's say you
have a slow time of year and you want to increase your business during
this period.
Well, write a simple
letter to your customers making a special offer, only good during your
slow period.
Maybe you'll throw
in an extra free bonus, an extra service, or a special discount simply
because it is your "slow time" and you need to pay your staff anyway.
Let people in "behind
the scenes" at your company...
* Are you overstocked
on merchandise because for some reason customers only want the deluxe
widget - but you ordered tons of the basic one?
* Did you have a flood
and you need to liquidate (pardon the pun) your inventory?
* Do you need to raise
cash so you can pay for your nosejob?
Whatever the reason.
Tell them the truth.
For some reason everyone
wants to be mysterious about their business.
If you're lowering
the price nobody thinks you're doing it just because you're "such a nice
guy".
So let people in the
reason why.
I know this probably
goes against every grain of business sense, but I promise if you give
people a good, believable reason why they'll respond with open wallets.
= = = = = = =
©2000
Surefire Marketing, Inc.
Stephen
recommends:
33
Days to Online Profits
Instant
Sales Letters
back
to list of articles
|