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![]() Hi Martin,
> Personally, I don't see any distinction. A > great benefit is also a lovely surprise. > Linda had a great example (which didn't make > it into the final interview) and I will ask > her to post it here. But it clearly > illustrates that surprise and benefits are > not separate issues. > If the benefit doesn't come as a surprise, > then perhaps the wrong benefit has been > chosen. Thanks, that's a good perspective.... > Sometimes the headline is purely used to > shock or jar the reader into paying > attention. But even then, a strong benefit > must follow up pretty quickly in the > subhead. Yes, I can think of ads like this. Joe Sugarman had an ad with the headline Pickle Power The copy was humorous, talking about their new (not-quite-ready) product, battery powered electronic pickles! The REAL product, in fact, was the rechargeable, one-size-fits-all batteries - which, in the ad copy were used to power the pickles! Of course, anyone reading the copy The approach to copywriting that you > describe is what I call 'cascade writing.' > Every line is like a tributary flowing into > a river that by the end cascades into a > torrent of positive emotion. Anything else > just doesn't get the business. Do you have any resources (eg. books, or articles I can look up, etc.) you could recommend to read about this? I'd like to read more about this from a different perspective.... Thanks again Martin, and to Linda too.... By the way, we keep a copy of Linda's story, The Grey Knit Vest right here at Sowpub.... :) - Dien Rice |
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