"the process of starting with facts your prospect is already familiar with and is willing to accept, and leading him logically and comfortably through a gradual succession of more and more remote facts -- each of which he has been prepared in turn to accept"And there is probably no better example of this than his "Why Haven't TV Owners Been Told These Facts?" ad.
In this case, he was selling a book showing people how to fix their tv sets. Only problem was, most people (at the time) didn't believe they could fix their own tv set, no matter how "easy" someone (or some ad) said it was.
Especially back then -- when tv sets were pretty much a mystery as far as how they worked.
It would sort of be like seeing a headline today that says:
"Now! Save $100,000.00 By Performing Your Own Brain Surgery!"
Would you be capable of believing that?
Me neither.
However, if you were properly "prepared" for the above claim...before it was sprung on you...then maybe, just maybe, you would be able to believe it.
Especially if the ad started out kind of like this:
And so on and so forth.
An Open Letter To Anyone About To Have Brain Surgery:Did you know your brain functions a lot like the computer you are reading this message on? It's true. Just like your computer, which responds to your commands via an electrical pulse created each time you give it "orders", your brain responds to and sends "commands" to the rest of your body via a similar process of electrical impulses...
Okay, I know I'm "stretching" things here quite a bit with the brain surgery analogy. But I think the point holds: When you have a product with a really outrageous, and hard to believe claim...you have a much better chance of the prospect reading your ad if you begin with a statement quickly and readily agreed with and then, as Schwartz puts it --"leading him logically and comfortably through a gradual succession of more and more remote facts -- each of which he has been prepared in turn to accept"
If you want a true power education on how this is done, then I'd suggest studying Schwartz's "Why Haven't TV Owners Been Told These Facts?" ad in microscopic detail. I promise you -- it'll be one of the most fascinating studies in advertising you'll ever read
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