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Hypey Copy That
Converts and How to Write It
By Barry A. Densa, freelance marketing & sales
copywriter
I love hypey copy.
Hypey copy is like a fine wine. It has great legs, a
fine body and a rich nose.
Hype excites the emotions, stimulates the buying
glands and ultimately converts better than dull,
drab, "only the facts ma'am" marcom-style copy.
Marketers and consumers who bemoan the ugliness, the
crassness, and the used-car-salesman look and feel
of hypey copy are all uneducated and uninformed
dolts.
Of course, all of the above, though true, is a form
of hypey copy... of the unequivocally bad kind.
How to differentiate bad from good hype
Hype has many guises or nuances. Unfortunately,
today, hype has become an indiscriminate
catch-all-phrase for any type of copy that anyone
objects to, for whatever reason.
Well, if beauty is in the eye of the beholder, so
too is hype.
And so, for ease of understanding and with a bow to
those who either adore or loathe hype--I will divide
hype into two broad categories:
Hype that always converts and hype that rarely will
We've all been exposed to copy that exclaims in
absolutely superlative fashion the benefits of an
advertised product.
For example, we're constantly bombarded by hypey
modifiers screaming: best, biggest, fastest,
easiest, greatest, amazing, unique, revolutionary...
and so forth.
And then there's the army of entertaining and
flamboyant similes and metaphors: "so powerful it'll
suck the chrome off a trailer hitch," and "faster
than a streaker running down-field at the Super
Bowl."
And, finally, the ever obligatory and tired: "your
income will skyrocket" or "you'll feel like a
teenager again."
Of course, these examples stand out as
hype--primarily because they're easily recognized as
less than believable, factual or authoritative. And,
therefore, they are quickly discounted and ignored
by most consumers.
But yet, there's nothing intrinsically wrong with
employing such words and phrases to extol the
virtues of a product.
If indeed they're accurate descriptions.
Where we run into problems though--and wherein hype
gets a black eye, is when hype stands by
itself--naked and exposed to ever-vigilant consumer
skepticism.
How to turn bad hype into good hype
If you were to write within an ad, either in the
headline, body copy or as a subhead, the following:
All your wrinkles will miraculously disappear
overnight!
Do you think such a claim will be believed or, more
importantly, that the ad containing it will convert?
Personally, I doubt it.
Even if the remainder of the ad were written
impeccably--and by impeccably, I mean, you
immediately provide undeniable, authoritative proof,
confirming that wrinkles will indeed disappear
overnight--that claim will still be the rusty nail
that blows out all the ad's tires.
Of course it might gain your ad a moment's fleeting
attention--but the ad itself won't convert, because
the remainder of the ad, much less its call to
action, probably won't be read.
But now you protest and say: I provided proof--it's
true, absolutely true--so why wouldn't it be
believed--why wouldn't it convert?
Well, proof and credibility are of course essential
to any claim in any ad--without it you clearly have
written hype of the bad kind.
But even with proof--if the proof is not "placed"
wisely--it'll be ignored--as will be the ad.
The consumer is not an idiot--she's your wife
...to quote David Ogilvy.
Consumers learn quickly--they have to. By one
account, the average American is deluged with over
3,000 advertisements, in one form or another, every
single day.
And, it's probably fair to say, most of these ads
are poorly presented, either in concept, design or
execution.
Hence, the unavoidable consequence: skepticism and
disbelief abounds in the marketplace.
So... while in the past, making a claim and
immediately following it up with proof may have been
a wise, prudent and necessary tack to take--times
have now changed.
And marketers must adapt.
No longer do you, as a marketer, have the luxury, or
more to the point--the time to prove your
claim--once you make it.
Avoid the ad-killing claim
...by making it instead an unavoidable conclusion.
While the following is not an inviolate rule--it's
certainly worth testing...
Before making any concise and memorable claim to
unparalleled excellence—unequivocally prove it
first.
Assemble and present your credentialing elements,
your evidence--your entire body of incontrovertible
proof--in clear and linear fashion.
Allow your proof to lay the groundwork for what is
to come. Create strong and overwhelming direction
and momentum.
Yet, at the same time, maintain a tone of elegantly
understated simplicity.
In other words...
Ambush your customer
...So that when you finally do present your
hype--your claim to have the biggest, baddest, best
product on the planet--it won't be mistaken for or
accused of being hype (of the bad kind)...
...But rather it will be seen as a descriptive and
accurate statement of the obvious (hype of the good
kind). If executed skillfully, your hype will also
have the added benefit of becoming a sustainable and
actionable conclusion.
And that's the best hype of all--when your customer
agrees with--acts upon--and even advocates on behalf
of--what otherwise would have been a wild and
unbelievable claim.
Now tell me? Isn't that one of the biggest, baddest,
best marketing tips you've ever read, at least in
the last two minutes?
---Source: Barry A. Densa is one of
America’s top marketing and sales copywriters. Barry
is also a regular contributor to major online
industry magazines. You can sign up for his own
hugely popular free ezine,
Marketing Wit and Wisdom and read selected
samples of his promotions and articles at
www.WritingWithPersonality.com.
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