7 Steps To Killer Ad Copy
(Including 25-Question "Client Questionnaire")
By Russ Phelps
INTRODUCTION
Welcome to this email course "7 Steps To Killer Ad Copy". My name
is Russ Phelps, and I'm your "Tour Guide" through the world of
killer copy writing. Before we begin, a few words about what to
expect.
First, you won't get any fluff, airy theory, or re-hash of old
concepts that don't work any more. There's already too much of
that floating around these days.
Second, what you will get is the truth about what I've learned
from my actual experience of writing thousands of marketing pieces
for more than 600 clients since 1978. I'll take you inside the
actual 7-step process I personally use to write killer copy. This
process actually works, as proven by the results from my confidential
client files, and my own experience with my personal projects.
STEP #1) Do Your Homework
Almost nobody does enough homework before they write a word of
ad copy, make a marketing plan, or start selling. And that's the
main reason why most ad copy and marketing tactics are anemic,
weak and ineffective. Frankly, about 80% of the ad copy I see
is:
full of puffery instead of power
loaded with generalities instead of specifics
full of sound and fury, signifying nothing
Here's what I mean by "doing your homework". Before I write a
word of copy for a client, I have them fill out a 25-question
Client Questionnaire. In its original form, it runs to 5 pages!
Below is a list of those 25 questions you can also use to get
your thinking focused. Feel free to print out these questions
in your own form, and use it for your own projects.
Make sure you do the research necessary to get the answers to
these questions before you write the copy.
Now here are the 25 questions:
1) CLIENT (Company name)
Address:
Phone number:
Fax number:
Email address:
Website(s) URL(s):
2) DESCRIPTION of product/service. (In 50 words or less, what
are we offering?)
3) PURPOSE of product/service. (What does it do? How does it
work? How is it used?)
4) PRICE. (How much does it cost?)
5) What is the OFFER? (Special introductory savings? Premium?
Limited-time offer? Buy one, get one free? Free information?
Guarantees? Etc.?)
6) What are the FEATURES of the product? (All facts and specifications.)
7) What are the main BENEFITS? (What will it do for me? What
specific problem(s) does it solve? What need(s) does it fulfill?
How will it make or save me money? Save time, work or worry?
Make my life easier or better?
8) OTHER SELLING POINTS? What will it give me that I can't
get anywhere else? How and why is it new, better or different
than what's already available? What is unique or exclusive about
it?
9) What is our ASSIGNMENT? Direct mail package, sales letter,
display ad, brochure, press release, insert, catalog, self-mailer,
postcard, information kit, TV spot, radio spot, web site, complete
campaign?
10) What is the OBJECTIVE of the project? To generate leads
or inquiries, make a direct sale, answer inquiries or leads,
make an announcement, build image, etc.?
11) What is the BUDGET?
12) What is the SCHEDULE? When do you want it? Any deadlines
or project schedules we should be aware of?
13) Who is the MAIN PROSPECT? In business, what is his title/responsibility?
What are his biggest goals, concerns, fears, hopes and dreams,
attitudes, possible objections? How will he use your product
to get ahead or keep from falling behind? For consumers, what
main interests/desires/fears/hopes and dreams does it appeal
to?
14) Who (if any) are your SECONDARY PROSPECTS? Are there enough
prospects in this secondary niche to create specially targeted
copy versions that appeal directly to them?
15) What MAILING LISTS/MEDIA have you used in the past? What
worked and what did not? What is the actual sales performance
by source?
16) What TESTS do you wish to conduct? What copy, price, offer,
mailing list, media, etc.?
17) What selling points MUST be included?
18) What TABOOS do you have? What must never be said or promised?
19) Who are your COMPETITORS? How to you compare on product,
service, price, terms, features and benefits, etc.? Where are
you strongest and weakest by comparison?
20) Any IN-HOUSE COMPETITION that might affect positioning,
copy approaches, etc.
21) Any operational RESTRICTIONS? (e.g., no 9" X 12" envelopes,
4-color, etc?)
22) What is the METHOD OF PAYMENT? Cash with order; bill-me
later; purchase order required; Credit cards VISA, MasterCard,
American Express, Diners Club, Discover?
23) How do you receive ORDERS? What percentage of your sales
comes in by phone? Internet? Mail? On-site retail? Through distributors?
Etc?
24) What GUARANTEE do you offer? (100% money-back any time?
30-day free trial? Refund of unused portion upon return? Other?)
25) What is your COMPANY PROFILE? Company history, personality
or bio of the owner, founder, main spokesperson; position of
prominence in the marketplace; special achievements; public/community
image; industry awards or kudos; or anything else that might
enhance sales or goodwill?
PLEASE BE SURE TO INCLUDE THE FOLLOWING:
1. Product sample if possible.
2. Any testimonials or endorsement letters from happy users;
media coverage; publicity; celebrity endorsements; industry/peer
reviews.
3. Any complaints letters from unhappy customers, etc.
4. Copies of your past advertising/marketing efforts.
5. Copies of competitors' advertising/marketing efforts.
6. Any other research or background material you can supply.
7. Recommended background reading and names of key resource
people I should talk with.
Pretty thorough beginning, ain't it?
WARNING: If you try to weasel out of getting the answers to these
questions, you might be a "marketing accident waiting to happen."
Sure, some of these questions might not relate exactly to your
project. If so, fine -- omit them or modify them to fit your situation.
However, make sure you are not kidding yourself, or trying to
cut corners. If you are, it will come back to haunt you!
HERE'S THE GOOD NEWS: If you do this homework, you are 50% of
the way to having killer ad copy that can make you lots of money
for years to come - maybe even set you up for life! So, then,
I ask you: Is it worth it? Of course it is!
How does this work in actual practice?
Here's an example from my own client files:
In 1993, I started working with Laughlin Associates, Inc. of
Carson City, Nevada. They have a wide product line (books, tapes,
seminars, newsletter, consulting services). But their target customer
is very well defined; they cater to business people and investors
who are concerned about reducing taxes, protecting their assets,
and maintaining financial privacy.
My first assignment was to create a direct mail piece to sell
their flagship product, a 500+ page book titled "The Corporation
Manual." Before I wrote a word of copy, here was the "homework"
I did:
1) Got the completed Client Questionnaire from the client.
2) Interviewed three key people at the client company and took
careful, detailed notes on every aspect of their business.
3) Got copies of every ad, mailing piece, brochure, press release,
etc. they had ever used, with data on how they used it, what
the results were, etc.
4) Got copies from them of every competitor ad they had collected.
5) Contacted six of their competitors, acted like a prospect,
collected all of their marketing literature, talked with their
sales people, and took copious notes on how they acted, what
sales approaches they used, what I learned, etc.
6) Bought and read the four best books I could find on the
same subject as The Corporation Manual.
7) Called and interviewed five of the client's key customers.
After that, I took the next step, which I will reveal to you
in Part Two of this course, "7 Steps To Killer Ad Copy"
By the way, you may ask, what was the result of my ad copy for
Laughlin Associates? Well, I'll let them speak for themselves:
"We tested you against seven other copy writers and our own in-house
control (which we had used for more than five years). Your mailing
piece beat second place by more than 3 to 1 in sales! Since then,
the only one who has been able to beat your control is YOU, with
your steady stream of new copy ideas and marketing innovations.
Not only that, the series of 17 back-end sales letters you wrote
has been converting leads to paying customers in droves -- and
the direct mail pieces you wrote promoting our seminars have been
filling the room consistently. We've been successful in business
since 1972, but you increased our customer base by more than 50%
in just three years! You're a genius! Keep it up!"
Lewis Laughlin, CEO, Laughlin Associates, Inc, Carson City, Nevada
Phone: (775) 883-8484 WEB:
STEP #2) Make An Offer They Can't Refuse
In the previous lesson, I taught you how to "Do Your Homework."
Now, let's focus on making an irresistible offer to your prospect.
The Offer is, simply put, your statement of what you offer to
the buyer in exchange for what you want from them in most cases,
their money.
In making your offer, you have to make them want what you have
so much more than the money they have to pay you to get it, that
they will quickly do what you ask them to do in order to "seal
the deal" and buy from you. Simple as that.
In the 25-question Client Questionnaire I gave you in Lesson
#1, your answers to questions #2, 4, 5, 22 and 24 will give you
some of the raw material you need to create your offer.
But, before we do that, think about, then answer, these two questions:
1) What's the biggest promise you can make, that you KNOW you
can fulfill?
2) What's the MOST you can offer for the price you are asking,
without hurting yourself?
It's vital that you answer these two questions, because, as a
seller:
1) You might try to get away with making a smaller promise
than you could. Maybe you're afraid, and you want to play it
safe. Or maybe you are giving in to your greed, and trying to
get more than you deserve in the deal.
02) You might be trying to get as much as you can from the buyer,
while holding back what you could be giving in return. You're
not really "going the extra mile."
If so, don't worry. You're just being human. (We are amusing
creatures, aren't we?)
Now that you know that about yourself, also please realize that
if you act on these impulses, you will lose sales and profits!
So get over it, OK? Here's how:
1) Make the biggest promise you can, that you KNOW you can
fulfill
2) Give as much as you can for the price you are asking, without
hurting yourself. In other words, give until just before you
say "Ouch I'll LOSE money if I do that!"
There are exceptions to number 2 above; for example, "loss
leaders."
These are offers you make to "buy business", in which you intentionally
take a loss on the front-end in order to get a customer that will
make you profits on the back-end. For example, record and book
clubs give you tons of product for peanuts when you join. They
happily lose money on the first order, because they know they
will make money from your back-end purchases. Another example
is giving away something for FREE in order to introduce yourself
to a prospect.
If that's true of you, fine. Create your offer accordingly. But
most business people I know would like to make money on the front-end,
back-end, in-between and forever. You can too! But I'm getting
ahead of myself.
Let's back up a bit.
Here are the 4 key components of the offer:
1) Product & Bonuses
2) Price
3) Terms
4) Guarantee
Each of these four key components have many elements that you
must test in order to find the most profitable offer for your
product or service.
Now lets' look at each key component in turn, and I'll give
you some suggestions you can test to jump-start your thinking.
01) Product & Bonuses:
Basic Product or Service
FREE gift for inquiring, trial order, or basic purchase.
FREE bonus, multiple bonuses for basic order
FREE bonus, more bonuses based on size of order
Surprise FREE bonus for bigger purchase
02) Price:
Discount introductory offer
Discount for paying cash
Refund or rebate after trial
Early-bird discount price goes up the longer they wait
Quantity discount
03) Terms:Cash or charge in advance
Bill-me later
Charge my card in 30 days unless return for refund
Cash, check, credit card, barter
Time limit this entire offer expires within 10 days
Time limit for bonuses order within ten days and get this extra
free bonus
4) Guarantee:
Promise refund for any reason at any time
Unlimited, unconditional lifetime guarantee
Time limit for refund 30-day, 6-month, one-year, lifetime
Keep the bonuses just for trying even if you request refund
Double or triple your money-back if not satisfied
Performance guarantee money back if you don't make at least
$____
within one year using our system
Now create your "Offer Architecture." This means you make a series
of offers that create a relationship with the prospect, then build
the relationship through making a series of offers to upgrade
them to a long-term buyer of your product/service.
Here's an example of Offer Architecture you might want to
emulate:
1) FREE offer
2) Introductory offer for your "flagship" product
3) Upsell to your next back-end product
4) Offer your complete product line, catalog, etc.
5) Offer back-end support services such as consulting
6) Create joint ventures so that you offer the products/services
of other companies who serve the same market you do.
7) Create joint ventures/affiliate programs whereby you offer
your products/services to other companies' customers in order
to further build your customer base.
Orchestrate your Offer Architecture so that it proceeds in a
series of logical steps as outlined above.
In doing this, you are creating a money machine in the form of
a customer base to whom you continually make offers throughout
their lifetime.
As a baseline goal, you may want to create 10,000 prospects/buyers
in your database. For example, you have 10,000 people who responded
to your FREE offer; 3,000 bought your basic product; 2,000 bought
your upsell; and 1,000 buy your various back-end offers, including
joint venture offers.
Do the math for your business. You may find that if you get 10,000
prospects, and orchestrate your Offer Architecture properly, you
are well on your way to creating a fortune. Hooray!
STEP #3) Sell The Benefits
Sell the benefits.
Feature the features.
Simple as that.
Unfortunately, most people try to sell the features. They bore
the reader, miss the point, and lose sales as a result. Don't
do that!
This is a Feature: briefly put, it's a fact about your product
size, shape, color, specifications, performance, durability, maintenance
required, etc. as well as what it does and does not include in
its basic package, if applicable.
This is a Benefit: it's the favorable result(s) the buyer gets,
enjoys or derives from buying and using your product! This includes
both tangible and intangible benefits.
For example, some benefits are: making or saving money, feeling
happier, more powerful, more joyful, sexier, healthier, smarter
or wiser, more attractive or energetic, safer, more secure, more
personable or likeable, more respected or rewarded, etc.
So here's your homework:
Satisfy the two prime motivators that drive all people. The
Two Prime Motivators:
1) Get more of what you want (greed)
2) Avoid losing What You Have (fear)
People Want More:
Profit: money, property, possessions
Passion: sex, love, joy, happiness
Power: mastery, spiritual attainment, magic, mystery, wonder
People Want To Avoid:
Loss of Profit: lose money, lose property, lose possessions
Loss of Passion: lose sex life, lose love, lose joy, lose happiness
Loss of Power: lose mastery and ability, lose spiritual status,
lose magic
You must promise that they will:
Get more of what they want,
And/or avoid losing what they have,
And/or avoid losing the opportunity and/or promise of getting
more in the future
The key is to get the reader to focus the prime motivators onto
your offer, and to become convinced that buying from you is the
next thing they must do before anything else in order to move
ahead in life.
People are motivated by emotion, and justify it by logic.
So you sell them the benefits, and justify it logically by explaining
how the features will give them the benefits they crave.
STEP #4: Hit 'Em With a Headline
You may have heard that 80% of the success of any ad is dependent
on the headline. This may be true. No matter what, if the headline
doesn't hit 'em between the eyes, and arouse enough interest to
keep them reading, you will not sell them.
Simple as that.
Tests have shown that one headline will outpull another by up
to 18 times! Would you like to get 18 times as much sales revenue
than you are now getting with your weak headlines? Then read on.
Here are some of the most powerful types of headlines you can
use:
1) Benefit Headline
Communicate your strongest benefit(s). For example:
"Here's How To Avoid Probate -- Pass
On Your Estate Quickly To Your Heirs - And Keep The Government
From Taking 70% Of Your Estate When You Die!"
"Here's How You Can Triple Your Reading
Speed In Ten Days Or Less Without Losing Comprehension Or Recall"
"Here's How To Cut Your Taxes To The
Bone, Protect All Your Assets With An Iron Fortress, And Maintain
Complete Financial Privacy And Anonymity"
2) Offer Headline
Simply State Your Offer in the headline. For example:
"Enjoy A Delicious $99 Steak Dinner For
Two For Only $1 If You Reserve It Before Friday, March 13"
"You'll Get This New Eye-Opening Internet
Marketing Course Worth $495 For Only $97 Plus Five FREE Bonuses
Worth $1497. But You Must Act Within The Next Ten Days!"
"Take 30% Off Our New Stock of Designer-Label
Men's Suits! But Hurry! Sale Ends Monday, April 7!"
3) Testimonial Headline
Take a customer testimonial that sells your best benefit(s)
and feature it in quotes in the headline. For example:
"Your Ad Copy Tripled Our Response!"
(from one of my clients)
"I Saved $35,676 In Federal And State
Taxes Last Year, Thanks To Bob Smith's Advice! It Was The Best
$1500 I Ever Spent!"
"I Was Lucky If I Could Please My Wife
In Bed Twice A Month. After Using Your Prostate Health Formula,
Now We Have Great Sex At Least Three Times A Week!"
4) Problem/Solution Headline
Take your target reader's biggest problem that you can solve,
and build a headline around it that offers your solution. For
example:
"Termite Problems? Here's The Quickest,
Cheapest Way To Get Rid Of Termites Once And For All!"
"Tired Of Slow Internet Connections?
Get Lightning-Fast DSL For Only $29.95 Per Month!"
"Jock Itch? Cruex."
5) Guarantee Headline
Make your guarantee right up front in the headline. For
example:
"Get Rid Of Back Pain Forever In Six Weeks Or Less Guaranteed!"
"If You Earn Over $100,000 A Year, I'll Show You How To Pay
Zero Taxes Next Year Or Else I'll Pay Your Tax Bill Myself!"
"New Natural Remedy Cures Insomnia Or Your Money Back"
Now here's your homework:
Write at least one headline for yourself using each one of these
models.
Then, test each one to see what pulls the best response.
Then, keep testing new headlines to keep increasing response.
Think of how much more profit you will add to your bottom line
with only a 20% increase in response.
How about double the response?
It's worth the work! Now go to it!
STEP #5: Weave The Web
By now, you have done your homework. You have crafted an offer
the buyer can't refuse. You have made a list of your key features
and benefits. You have written at least five headlines for your
ad, sales letter, web page, or other marketing piece.
And now, you're ready to write a first draft of your piece.
In this part of our 7-Step course, I'll show you how to weave
the web that captures the reader, and gets them to buy from you.
Here is a basic outline of how to structure your ad:
1) Headline
2) Subhead(s) that elaborate on the headline
3) Opening or first paragraph that elaborates on the headline
and/or subhead(s).
4) Benefit Feature Testimonial cycle. Here you state a benefit,
tell the feature that delivers the benefit, and include a buyer
testimonial that proves they enjoyed that benefit.
For example:
"This widget will double or triple your assembly-line speed
[BENEFIT], because of the state-of-the-art proprietary chip
developed by our engineers [FEATURE]. In fact, Bob Adams of
TechHound Systems says, "Our production capacity is up
by 217% since we installed your widgets in our plant and my
controller tells me that it increased our bottom-line profit
last quarter by 32%! Best investment we made in the last five
years!'[TESTIMONIAL] "
5) More benefit "bullets"
6) Re-statement of your offer
7) Reasons why you can make this offer
8) Credibility and proof
9) Scarcity offer won't be "on the table" for long, becauseÖ
10) Call to action - ask for the order NOW
11) P.S. Here you can restate the offer, add on another bonus
for ordering within the next ten days, warn the reader of what
they will miss if they don't order NOW, use another killer testimonial,
etc. Many readers scan the letter and see the PS before they
read the entire letter, so make your PS count!
12) Order form or other response device. Elements to include
here are: re-statement of your headline, offer, guarantee, call
to action, payment information, all ordering options, your contact
info, etc. A good order form will tell the reader everything
they need to know to buy from you even if they never read the
rest of the ad!
And there you have it! There are many other variations and options
you can use in an ad, but this basic outline will work in many
of the cases you will confront in your advertising efforts.
STEP #6 - Copy Checklist
In the previous lesson, I showed you how to Weave The Web of
copy so you can produce a first draft of your ad. Now here's a
Copy Checklist I use to make sure I haven't missed anything that
should go into the final ad.
1) Have you done all your homework in Step #1?
2) Have you created the best offer you can afford to make?
3) Have you listed all Features and Benefits?
4) Have you collected testimonials that are specific, believable,
and related to your key features and benefits?
5) Have you written a collection of headlines and subheads?
06) Have you listed all the credible reasons why a buyer should
buy from you NOW?
7) Have you listed all the reasons why you are a better choice
than your competitors?
8) Have you chosen what elements to TEST - price, offer, media,
guarantee?
9) Have you chosen the format? Sales letter, space ad, web
page, email, postcard, insert, TV, radio, press release, etc.?
10) Do you have a clear mental picture of the buyer? Do you
really know what makes them tick?
11) Are you set up to receive orders in the way(s) the buyer
wants to buy from you?
12) Have you overcome all the weak points, if any, in your
offer, and introduced and overcome any objections in the copy?
13) Have you had someone read your copy OUT LOUD to hear how
it flows in the buyer's mind when they read it? And have you
smoothed out any rough spots, so it flows like a greased slide
from opening to close?
14) Is your call to action as strong as it can be?
15) Have you used all the appeals to Greed and Fear that are
appropriate?
16) Have you introduced scarcity and urgency?
17) Have you created a "self-contained" Order Form or Response
Device with all the elements mentioned in Lesson #5? Could the
buyer get all the key info here even if they never read the
whole ad?
18) Is your copy full of enthusiasm, passion and promise?
19) Does the worst skeptic you know really believe your ad?
20) Are you sincerely proud of what you are doing?
If you have passed the test in this checklist, then go back
and re-write your final draft. Then run the ad and get ready
to count the money!
STEP #7 - Keep Your Creative Juices Flowing
Many people feel they are just not creative. It's true, some
people are more talented and creative than others, and some have
their creative muscles in better shape than others. But, let's
face facts. Writing ad copy is not writing a Shakespeare sonnet,
painting the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, or composing a Bach
fugue.
It's darn hard work, with a practical application to help you
make more money.
And sometimes it's a challenge to keep the creative juices flowing.
Here's what I do personally, and what some other "Idea Generators"
do, to stay sharp and creative. Take what works for you, and go
with it.
1) Collect and study ads in your field, and many others. Create
a "swipe file" of ads, sales letters, bookmarks of URLs of key
web sites, etc.
2) Read books and publications in your field, as well as general
publications, and even a few kooky ones. I like the tabloids,
women's and men's magazines, financial news, health publications,
self-improvement and how-to stuff, expose and scandal pubs,
and culture-sensitive magazines like Vanity Fair, Cosmopolitan,
Rolling Stone, etc.
3) Cruise the Internet. Start with a keyword search on a cool
search engine like Google, AskJeeves, GoTo.com, etc. Input key
words related to your field, and start cruising and bookmarking
sites. Do this regularly, as there are new sites coming on line
every day.
4) Visit and participate in discussion forums and newsgroups
in your areas of interest, and a few that you have NO interest
in. It's amazing how one idea or approach in an odd field can
be applied or modified to solve a challenge you face in your
own life and business.
5) Think outside the box, then bring those ideas into your
existing box in order to enlarge it. Keep growing your box,
and you'll grow too.
6) Take a hike - literally, as in spending time in nature.
Nature is one of my greatest teachers. Not sure how to explain
it, but if you spend enough time in nature, I don't have to
explain it to you. It clears my head, renews me, and gives me
fresh juice.
7) Maintain a Sense of Wonder. That's where you kind of wander
around all day going "Wow, look at that! What's going on over
there? What's that? How does that work? Why did that happen?
Why are they doing that? What is the meaning of this? What is
emerging or unfolding regarding this or that?" And so on. Get
involved with life by asking focused questions.
8) Stay crazy. Most copy writers I know are at least a little
eccentric (including me), and some of them are downright crazy
compared to most people who have "real jobs" or wear suits all
day. That's good. I guess it goes with being creative, but don't
quote me on that or I'll go crazy.
9) Laugh, sing and fool around a lot. Humor, music and play
somehow get the creative juices flowing, and help disarm the
left brain logic to let good ideas bubble up from the unconscious.
10) Get physical. Besides hiking, get fresh air, exercise,
dance, make love, move your body. It keeps your brain fresh,
fed with oxygen, and flowing with "happy chemicals."
11) Cultivate a spiritual practice such as meditation, prayer,
yoga, chanting, visiting the world's sacred sites and "power
spots", studying sacred texts, feeding the poor, becoming a
Big Brother, or serving humanity in some form. It will expand
your perspective, and just might transform your life.
12) If nothing else, cultivate the practice of what I call
"Active Compassion," which is simply finding what others need
the most and giving it to them. This is a direct reflection
of what smart marketers do, which is "find a need and fill it."
13) Immerse yourself in popular culture. Keep up on news, events,
controversies, scandals, issues, people's problems, hopes and
dreams, etc. It makes you better able to love and serve the
market you are selling to.
14) Get out of your ivory tower if you find yourself stuck
in one for too long. Mix with people. All kinds of people. Ask
them open-ended questions. Act like a journalist from time to
time. Ask: Who? What? When? Where? Why? How?
15) Spend at least one day a week NOT writing copy or thinking
about business. It helps you stay fresh and avoid burnout.
16) Travel. Experience the "Otherness of Others". You will
expand as a person, and your creative capacities will expand
at the same time.
17) Once in a while, break a habit or a routine, and/or substitute
a new one. Adopt a whole new way of doing something you normally
do. Ultimately, be willing to change anything and everything
about your life if you find it serves your "Higher Life Purpose."
18) Keep your heart open, even if it hurts sometimes. If you
close down in order to avoid pain, you'll stop the flow of joy
as well. And your creative well will dry up, too. Let the joy
AND the pain in and out as quickly as possible. Don't hold on
to anything for too long. Experience yourself as a Creative
Vessel, through which flow all the forces of this thing we call
"Life." As a result, your life will become a mighty river that
never stops flowing.
Well, my friend, I hope you have found "7 Steps To Killer Ad
Copy" helpful.
Good luck, have fun, and make lots of money!
And send me an email once in a while to let me know how you're
doing, OK?
Russ Phelps is a master copy writer and marketing consultant,
with more than 600 clients nationwide since 1978 - including Fortune
500 companies and many
smaller businesses and entrepreneurs. He has created thousands
of marketing
campaigns for direct mail, print, publicity, Internet, TV, radio,
back-end
marketing and ancillary marketing. Contact him at ()
or call (858) 831-1668
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