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ISP-Advertising: Pleasure or Pain? Most human beings will do more to avoid pain than to gain pleasure. When creating advertising plans, programs, and campaigns, most ISPs ignore this principle.
It's true; most ISP advertising follows the conventional pathstressing the benefits of why someone should buy their service. This textbook approach is all very well, but it passes up a whole audience of willing buyers who just haven't had the right buttons of theirs touched yet.
Most folks would say that they would work harder to protect their $100,000, because there is significantly more pain associated with the idea of losing $100,000 than the pleasure of the idea of having an extra $100,000 in the bank. Most of your customers fit this profile. So what am I saying here? I'm not suggesting that you dump all of your positive, benefit-oriented ISP advertising campaigns, but merely that you add into your mix some headlines or programs that are fear-driven, that show how your ISP alleviates the pain of the Internet experience. To get a feel for this principle in action, look at the following examples. Here are five nice, positive ad headlines, followed by five that are altered to weave a dark side into the message. How do you think the differences will affect ability to convert interested prospects into paying customers? Pleasure-Benefit-Positioned Headlines
Fear/Pain-Benefit-Positioned Headlines
Still skeptical? Take any of these and test them both ways. See which headlines or benefit propositions leads to a higher prospect-to-customer conversion ratio. Some experiences ad-folk hold that as much as 95 percent of an ad's effectiveness is in the headline, even when the body copy is the same. Go ahead; give it a try. You have very little to lose . . . or do you? What will it cost you to not implement this advice? ;-) Christopher Knight
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