STOP posting asking for critiques and do this instead....

72 replies
There are post after post in here asking for "critiques" and honestly, its a waste of your time, the time of ppl reading it ...and these awesome writers here.

jesus.... stop asking for critiques and F'n split test your damn stuff.

opinions don't mean jack SH!T.

Test your stuff FIRST, then come here asking for help.
#critiques #posting #stop
  • Profile picture of the author Bruce Wedding
    You can split test a turd and a vomit pile, Dave. The results will be the same. There are elements which are required in good copy. Each one not present weakens the copy. You don't need a test to confirm. If crits were a waste of time, the greatest copywriters would not critique their copy cubs.

    To effectively split test requires intimate knowledge of copywriting.

    PS: you will find out if a turd is better than a vomit pile but so what?
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    • Profile picture of the author Tina Golden
      I don't know how much the requesters get out of it, nor the copywriters, but I can say that as a bystander, I get a LOT out of it. I pick up some great insights from reading what the real copywriters have to say, particularly the ones who explain why they are saying it.

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      • Profile picture of the author Ross James
        Originally Posted by TMG Enterprises View Post

        I don't know how much the requesters get out of it, nor the copywriters, but I can say that as a bystander, I get a LOT out of it. I pick up some great insights from reading what the real copywriters have to say, particularly the ones who explain why they are saying it.

        Tina
        Yeah I feel the same way, for instance the most recent crit I observed was of Kevin Rogers and it was probably the best i've seen on here, in my time anyways.

        Ross
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    • Profile picture of the author Alan Petersen
      If those awesome writers don't want to waste their time they don't have to read the post or the headline/copy so I don't see how it's a waste of their time?

      You can tell it's a critique usually right from the subject title of the thread so it's easy to just not click and waste your time.

      Although I haven't requested a critique, I can see the value in it. Not being a copywriter, I appreciate getting the in-put of copywriters before going out and testing it, etc. As Bruce pointed out, it could save the person a lot of headaches/frustration. Nothing wrong in asking for help.
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    • Profile picture of the author sethczerepak
      Originally Posted by Bruce Wedding View Post

      You can split test a turd and a vomit pile, Dave. The results will be the same. There are elements which are required in good copy. Each one not present weakens the copy. You don't need a test to confirm. If crits were a waste of time, the greatest copywriters would not critique their copy cubs.

      To effectively split test requires intimate knowledge of copywriting.

      PS: you will find out if a turd is better than a vomit pile but so what?
      Thanks Bruce, I just got my first good laugh of the day. Nice.

      This is so true, and you can even polish the turd to a nice shine, but it's still a turd.

      However, I think I know what the original poster is getting at...

      ...stop being lazy and asking us to tell you how to write copy...learn for yourself. There are so many free resources out there. Get a hold of them (see my sig), study them and apply them.

      You can't hire someone else to do your push ups for you.

      Start doing your own damn push ups...do them till you vomit if you have to. Stop trying to polish a turd...and stop trying to make us into unpaid consultants. If you want the help of a good copywriter, pay one dammit. If you want to "save money" by doing it yourself, then go all out and get good at it.

      PS: If it's between the vomit and the turd, I'd take the turd. My dog has proven to me that the vomit is a LOT harder to clean up.
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      • Profile picture of the author Collette
        Originally Posted by davemiz View Post

        lol.... multivariant testing has been around for a while... nothing new people.

        It's mindboggling to hear some of this stuff. If this is your business, if this is how you provide for your family, shouldn't you know as much as possible?

        Not knowing that sorta stuff is like playing poker but not knowing the rules.

        but hey, i'm a marketing geek.
        Lots of folks here either just starting out, trying to learn, or doing IM as a P/T thing after their day jobs. Some of these people are wannabe pro copywriters; others are trying to learn enough to put up a half-way decent letter for their first product or affiliate page.

        They're NOT making a full-time living from it, and to them, a LOT of what is talked about here is "new". And they're not all "marketing geeks" (*although, if they're charging $$ for their copywriting services, they damn well should be marketing geeks)

        Just look at the # of people cruising this forum, vs the # of people who post. Major discrepancy.

        There's a reason for that.

        Originally Posted by Ken_Caudill View Post

        I'd be surprised if anyone on this forum did not know what multi-variate testing is..
        Your bar for surprise is set low, my friend. Get ready for shock and awe.

        Originally Posted by sethczerepak View Post

        ...stop being lazy and asking us to tell you how to write copy...learn for yourself. There are so many free resources out there. Get a hold of them (see my sig), study them and apply them.

        You can't hire someone else to do your push ups for you.

        Start doing your own damn push ups...do them till you vomit if you have to. Stop trying to polish a turd...and stop trying to make us into unpaid consultants. If you want the help of a good copywriter, pay one dammit. If you want to "save money" by doing it yourself, then go all out and get good at it.

        ...
        Oh, SO heartily endorsed. Except: You can hire someone to do your push ups for you. You just have to be prepared to pay their asking price.
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  • Profile picture of the author Collette
    While a part of me heartily agrees with you, Dave, another part of me views the stuff you refer to (and we all know which ones they are) as a sort of public service.

    If the writers tested their stuff before asking for a critique, they'd mostly lose a sh$tload of cash. On the other hand, if they care to listen, finding out the copy will sink like a concrete brick in quicksand can save them time and money.

    Sadly, most seem to only want to hear advice along the lines of, "Use a blue background", or "Make your headline bigger", when the truth is, "Your copy blows huge, stinkin' chunkies. Take it out back and put it out of it's misery. Now."

    Usually, I just hope someone reading will gain some benefit, even when the critique poster obviously doesn't get it.
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    • Profile picture of the author Kevin Rogers
      The crits, while the requesters can cause frustration by merely seeking free headlines -- or just disappearing altogether, are also a great way for new copywriters to test their knowledge.

      I owe a huge debt to all those marketers who allowed me to crit them when I was starting out... and the writers who put me in check when I was talkin' out of my arse. Like any well run charity, the right parties get the most from it.
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  • Profile picture of the author The Copy Nazi
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    Can yous guys help me with my site please? I'm trying to take on Google. Search The Internet | http://www.nmcelite.com/ | www.nmcelite.com

    Am I heading in the right direction? Should I change the font? What about the background color?

    p.s. don't forget to click on the sheila at the bottom right of the page. That's a work of art right there. Kevin Rogers wrote it I think. 'fess up Kev - that's got your signature all over it.

    Yeah that guy's making $40k a month. On Adsense. Apparently his name is Nick Montano so just ignore the "Abids" in the header. He was obviously confused that day.

    "Yes Nick aka Abid - let me in to your fraudulent scheme!"

    Update: I Googled "Abids Adsense Treasure" and found a thread on a Google Adsense Forum. Apparently Mister Abid from India was flogging the template for $20. Scammed a whole bunch of people and did a runner to The Phillipines.
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  • Profile picture of the author Flareman
    I think thats the whole point of having a forum - to exchange ideas, share information, get support and help. We give and take sometimes. And to be honest, I think the comments and suggestions from all the copywriters here have good business spin off effect as well. Its a good platform to demonstrate how good the copywriter is by offering his suggestions, analyses and ideas.

    Personally, a big part of how I decided on my copywriter was based on his contributions and analyses of the critique requests here. And through that, I know I made a good decision.
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  • Profile picture of the author myeanne
    Well for me, asking opinion of others is just a normal thing.

    There are some people who think they did what's best but they also wanted to hear what can other person say about it.
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  • Profile picture of the author davemiz
    how do you know what will work and what wont?

    you dont.

    and dont give me 'cuz i'm a copywriter'.... no copywriter on the planet can tell me for a fact what will work and what wont... until they test the offer with the traffic source.

    anyone who says otherwise is full of it.

    critiques are opinions.... and last time i checked, opinions don't mean jack... you need to split test... data is the only thing that matters.

    and you never know what will work or what doesnt.

    people asking for opinions obviously don't 'get it'.

    what works for 1 person will 100% not always work for someone else, there are too many other factors in play.

    Funny... the most successful marketers i know never ask for critiques, they just split test everything possible and see what works.
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    • Profile picture of the author Kay King
      Sadly, most seem to only want to hear advice along the lines of, "Use a blue background", or "Make your headline bigger", when the truth is, "Your copy blows huge, stinkin' chunkies. Take it out back and put it out of it's misery. Now."
      Just think - if all those people didn't ask for help....some people wouldn't have a place to point out how they are too important to answer the ingrates.
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    • Profile picture of the author Daniel Scott
      Originally Posted by davemiz View Post

      how do you know what will work and what wont?

      you dont.

      and dont give me 'cuz i'm a copywriter'.... no copywriter on the planet can tell me for a fact what will work and what wont... until they test the offer with the traffic source.

      anyone who says otherwise is full of it.

      critiques are opinions.... and last time i checked, opinions don't mean jack... you need to split test... data is the only thing that matters.

      and you never know what will work or what doesnt.

      people asking for opinions obviously don't 'get it'.

      what works for 1 person will 100% not always work for someone else, there are too many other factors in play.

      Funny... the most successful marketers i know never ask for critiques, they just split test everything possible and see what works.
      If all it took was testing, I'd be out of a job.

      No doubt, testing is super-important... no arguments there.

      But by the same token, most good copywriters have a fair idea of what will or won't work. It's why people pay us to write copy.

      -Daniel
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    • Profile picture of the author Alexa Smith
      Banned
      Originally Posted by davemiz View Post

      Funny... the most successful marketers i know never ask for critiques, they just split test everything possible and see what works.
      Why is that "funny"? Don't you appreciate that there are many people here who aren't yet "the most successful marketers", Dave?

      Isn't that part of what a forum like this is here for?

      Some people need some help deciding what to split test, you know? (Well, obviously you don't know) ... :rolleyes:
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  • Profile picture of the author davemiz
    kay.... haha... of course... you get some 'copywriters' with a massively overblown egos (not naming names but a few are in warriors)... they wrote something that their client blew up.... and they wanna think its all cuz of them.... funny.

    Daniel, yes, thats what it takes... testing.

    here's the devils advocate for ya.... if you (or any copywriter) is that good, why would you work for someone else and make them money? why wouldn't you do your own thing since you're supposed to be able to write stuff that makes money.

    its like the stock broker who has all these great picks but never puts his own money into them.... that should tell ya something about him.

    Ppl want you to believe you need all this other bs.... its utter nonsense.

    i know *several* ppl who are making 7 figures a month.... who have never been to an IM event, forum, bought any products, hired any copywriters... or any of this bs.

    All they do is test their offer, ads and traffic sources.

    thats all there is to it.

    sounds simple, but NOT easy.
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    • Profile picture of the author Ross James
      Originally Posted by davemiz View Post


      i know *several* ppl who are making 7 figures a month.... who have never been to an IM event, forum, bought any products, hired any copywriters... or any of this bs.
      This is interesting, I'd really like to hear more about these people you speak of...did someone put a gun to their head and say never go online, hire a copywriter or buy a product? ****, that's impressive, I think there is a lot to gain on these forums...well...carry on... don't mean to jack the hate thread.

      -Ross
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    • Profile picture of the author Nick Brighton
      Originally Posted by Kay King View Post

      Just think - if all those people didn't ask for help....some people wouldn't have a place to point out how they are too important to answer the ingrates.
      Hahahaha. Or too busy!
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  • Profile picture of the author Bruce Wedding
    OK Dave, your unrivalled debating skills convinced me. How can we top, "I know a Guy..."?

    Of course last week, you bragged about knowing Madison Ave copywriters making multiple six-figures. I wonder if they know you think their profession is a fraud.

    Anyway, we better let Makepeace, Carlton, Bencivenga, Halbert, and Fortin know their copywriting products are crap. They need to start selling test courses because there is no value in copywriting. And lets pull Schwartz, Ogilvy, Sugarman and Whitman's books off the shelves lest everyone think they're useful for anything but toilet paper.
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  • Profile picture of the author Oxbloom
    Here's what I'd like to see you do to prove your point, Dave.

    Take the top selling e-business affiliate product on clickbank. I have no idea what it is, and don't want to promote it by accident.

    I have for you, below, two sales pitches.

    *****

    (Pitch #1)

    Hey buttbreath, buy this product. Now. I need the cash.

    *insert affiliate link*




    (Pitch #2)

    X

    *insert affiliate link*


    ******

    That second one, the letter X is the whole pitch. Sorry...didn't know enough copywritin' to do any better. But that's okay, because the whole game is just testing, right? No need for any high-fallutin' professional writer BS.

    So take those as your starting point, and split test them. Pick the winner, and then tweak one element at a time, and split test those. Maybe bold the "X" the second go around. Maybe change it to a Q. (Not both, of course, or you're fouling the integrity of the test.)

    Using this rigorous and scientific testing methodology, let me know how long it takes you to get to something that converts as well as the sales pitch the clickbank product is currently rolling out. If you can do it in this lifetime, I'll buy you a house.

    Or, alternatively, you might consider that maybe there's value to considering your starting point pretty carefully before you worry about testing, or your testing becomes nothing but a colossal waste of time, energy, and money.

    Testing is an important part of the game, but it's hardly the only one, and it's hardly the starting point.
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  • Profile picture of the author BrianMcLeod
    Funniest thing about this thread is... I think every actually AGREES.

    Of course Dave's right - opining (even edumacated) is still guessing...

    ...until the numbers come in.

    And of course, others are right when they say copywriters are paid
    to be "right" more than they're "wrong".

    And that running two bombs against each other is a zero sum game.

    I think we may be talking past each other a little and basically in
    agreement about both sides of the conversation.

    Who'd argue that **** design is better than good design?

    Who'd argue that **** copy is better than good copy?

    Nobody... well, wait. This IS the WF, so strike that...
    SOMEBODY will argue with it.

    : )

    B
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  • Profile picture of the author davemiz
    lol.... nice one brian.... yes, everything is important.

    i swear i feel like i'm talking to a chick.

    i went here:

    Miami Ad School | Top Advertising Schools - Study Advertising in USA/Europe - Best Portfolio schools

    google it bruce. I dont need to brag who i know or whatnot... just stating facts bro.

    and don't hate.

    Yes, some of my friends would smoke many online writers... thats why they get paid big money and work on big brands campaigns.

    As for the "twisting"...

    You are saying the products are rubbish, not me buddy, those words *never* came outta my mouth.... this is a copywriting forum, i kinda expected ppl to know how to read. :-)

    Fortins been a friend for years.... and has done his own stuff ever since i've known him. (he did a product with simon from get response YEARS ago).

    And he will be one of the first to tell you that testing is absolutely CRITICAL with online marketing.

    clayton sells his own stuff. and last i checked he gets a cut of the action. (smart dude, he knows his stuff).

    do you NEED copywriting courses to be successful?

    No.

    there's a very highly paid writer for agora who's read ONE writing book. (ryan fletcher?)

    guess he sucks too?

    And you can't sit there and compare writers who work for an ad agency, on salary to the writers i was referring to.... you're comparing apples to oranges.... nice try.

    -------

    lol... oxbloom, i've got better things to do with my time bro.

    but i guarantee you with enough testing i would smoke the other page. you'd have to be a moron not to be able to.

    you're assuming you know what will work and what wont.

    how do you know if a headline is going to double conversions or not? or any other element?

    I just did a test and changed 1 word in my headline and bumped up conversions 15% on a HEAVILY tested page.

    i'll leave you with this.... at ebens atltitude event.... he asked "who here is making 6 figures a year..."

    almost everyone stood.

    he then asked... "who here is making 6 figures and testing" .... a few sat down.

    he kept going....

    the people in the room who were making the most money (7 figures a month, there were a handful) all of them were doing the most testing (as in testing daily).
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    • Profile picture of the author Oxbloom
      Originally Posted by davemiz View Post

      lol... oxbloom, i've got better things to do with my time bro.

      but i guarantee you with enough testing i would smoke the other page. you'd have to be a moron not to be able to.

      you're assuming you know what will work and what wont.

      how do you know if a headline is going to double conversions or not? or any other element?

      I just did a test and changed 1 word in my headline and bumped up conversions 15% on a HEAVILY tested page.
      Of course you've got better things to do with your time, because the challenge I gave you would be impossible. With "enough testing", naturally, you would eventually have a letter that smokes the original.

      But that's very much like saying that with enough raindrops, eventually Mt. Everest will be the size of a pebble.

      It would be the work of infinite lifetimes, unless you know WHAT to test, and have some idea what to test AGAINST.

      You say I'm making unfounded assumptions, but I'm not. You're the one making 100% of the unfounded assumptions in this thread.

      And the big reason for it, is that you're being completely disingenuous.

      You already HAVE some idea what might work, and what might not. That's how you choose things TO test.

      If you decide to split test your headlines, do you choose a new headline that has some relevance to your market, or do you choose an entirely random string of letters and numbers with no meaning whatsoever?

      If you decide to split test your background, do you choose a new color, or do you choose an image of child pornography?

      Naturally, the answers in both cases seem obvious. And you HAVE to rule out the obviously wrong, because otherwise, there are literally infinite variables to check, only a tiny fraction of which are even remotely sensible.

      But then, that's the point. So many people come in here looking for suggestions with pitches that ARE clearly and obviously wrong. And some of us like to set them on a more helpful path.

      You ask me how I know what kind of headline is likely to perform best? Because I'm standing on the shoulders of giants. People who already HAVE split tested to hell and back. So I can rule out all KINDS of things before I get started, that will save me (and those I help) a lot of time, a lot of money, and a lot of headache.

      You do the same, or you'd be broke.

      The reason a lot of people come in here and ask for critiques, is that they HAVEN'T done the background work. They AREN'T standing on the shoulders of giants. And as a result, they may as well be spewing out random strings of letters and numbers.

      And if they come here and get a critique, or a headline suggestion, or anything even remotely helpful, then they suddenly have something to test against...at which point they almost invariably discover that their test results have improved, and they can move forward from there.

      When you keep jumping in with condescending "LOLz" and "you just don't get its", you're doing a lot more harm than good.

      In terms of helping people out on here, you're a one trick pony. And your trick isn't particularly helpful.

      I sincerely believe you mean well. And I sincerely believe that you simply refuse to acknowledge the weight that experience and understanding of the methods of persuasion plays in helping you decide what to split test time after time.

      I sincerely believe all this because I see no reason to doubt your income claims.

      But if, as you seem intent on saying, you use no information at all and simply start with utterly random gibberings every time you want to sell something...and then choose other random gibberings each time to test against...then your response rate will never rise above zero with any offer, ever.

      In which case, you're working with only one tool in your toolbox, and your income claims would be completely bogus.

      No skin off my nose either way, but I hate to see you giving out so much bad information (or at least, dangerously incomplete information) to people here who are legitimately seeking help. Especially when my senses tell me you probably know better.
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  • Profile picture of the author Ross James
    Hi Alexa,

    Dave has his grumpy days in between talking about google optimizer and split-testing to oblivion.

    He picked on me once for how little money I make online. It's ok I never let my EGO hold me back, it's more fun watching other people's grow. That's what is really "Funny".

    I'm glad at least he is finding humor in this thread.

    Lol
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  • Profile picture of the author davemiz
    lol.... ross.... you're still good in my book... beers on me @ the next event :-)

    Alexa, lol... flawed statement.... you dont need to find out what to test. Thats makes no sense... you gotta test EVERYTHING.

    Someone who thinks like that, doesn't get it.

    THAT is the point I've been trying to make.

    do you think ppl just pop outta the womb and are great marketers? no, they've kept testing over and over and over... testing everything.

    thats how they've become "the most successful marketers" (key word, become).

    are you sure ken? every time i test, i keep making more...
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    • Profile picture of the author Ross James
      Originally Posted by davemiz View Post

      lol.... ross.... you're still good in my book... beers on me @ the next event :-)
      Hey well you know, then I could really annoy the crap outta ya. That's OK isn't that what events are for?



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  • Profile picture of the author davemiz
    haha... funny... its all good... learning and making new friends is always cool :-)
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  • Profile picture of the author Scott Murdaugh
    Alexa, lol... flawed statement.... you dont need to find out what to test. Thats makes no sense... you gotta test EVERYTHING.

    Someone who thinks like that, doesn't get it.
    I'll stay out of this drama...

    I just want to point out that Alexa is definitely someone who "get's it"... She's as sharp as they come.

    -Scott

    P.S. There IS a lot of value in a good critique. No time for arguing, but I respectfully disagree with your OP.
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  • Profile picture of the author davemiz
    ken, i'm doing multivar tests with hundreds of options at a time.... why is that surprising?

    yeah a LOT of stuff doesnt work but a few do... pretty much every single round.

    Theres a reason you've seen my squeeze pages ripped off everywhere online.

    scott i respect your comments, not 'attacking' her or anyone.... i'm sure she gets it.... but based on her comments i dont agree. you dont need to be told what things to test... you're supposed to test everything.

    direct response ppl know this.
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    • Profile picture of the author Collette
      Originally Posted by davemiz View Post

      ken, i'm doing multivar tests with hundreds of options at a time....

      Right there... you lost half the people reading that comment. They have no idea what you mean by "multivar".

      Gotta have a baseline of knowledge to have a prayer of succeeding.
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      • Profile picture of the author Mike Baker
        Originally Posted by Ken_Caudill View Post

        I'd be surprised if anyone on this forum did not know what multi-variate testing is..
        Well then you will be very surprised!
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  • Profile picture of the author The Copy Nazi
    Banned
    "Test everything" Dave? Nope. Waste of time. Bruce is right on the money here when he says
    To effectively split test requires intimate knowledge of copywriting
    But I'd add to it - "an intimate knowledge of copywriting AND marketing". And some sections of the page are obviously in need of testing more so than others. The headline is probably the most important part - even if the rest of the page is a dog. If the headline "resonates" - rings the readers bells, then they're more likely to be forgiving of a lousy layout/small font/glaring background - all the rest of it. Testing the other stuff comes later. Comes under "tweaking" - getting an extra bit of juice out of the page.

    Oxbloom's post above is also on the money.

    So yeah Dude - you appear to know your stuff but I don't agree with "Test your stuff first then come here asking for help". In fact I'd argue that it should be the other way round.
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    • Profile picture of the author MikeHumphreys
      It's interesting to me to read the range of responses in this thread.

      I can pretty much agree with each point that has been made.

      Yes, testing is very important. Probably 90% of online marketers I've met don't do it which is still an improvement over the brick and mortar folks. Probably 95-98% of them don't test their marketing at all which is a big reason why you see so much bad ads and marketing in the offline world.

      Copywriting is just as important. You can split test two bad headlines against each other until the cows come home. Chances are, you'll still see little or no improvement.

      If you have some copywriting chops and can write a very good headline and put it against those bad headlines, then yeah... you should be able to "predict" it will win.

      Testing takes time.

      Depending on the niche, type of testing, and amount of traffic you can drive... it could take you weeks or months to get testing results that are statisically confident.

      This is especially true if the squeeze page or salesletter is pulling almost no reponse rate.

      Fixing the holes in a salesletter can be a lot faster to do.

      Even better, fixing the holes BEFORE you test can mean you will have a better baseline to bump your conversion rates from.

      Anyways, that's my opinion so take it as such.

      Take care,

      Mike
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      • Profile picture of the author Jag82
        Originally Posted by MikeHumphreys View Post

        It's interesting to me to read the range of responses in this thread.

        I can pretty agree with each point that has been made.

        Yes, testing is very important. Probably 90% of online marketers I've met don't do it which is still an improvement over the brick and mortar folks. Probably 95-98% of them don't test their marketing at all which is a big reason why you see so much bad ads and marketing in the offline world.

        Copywriting is just as important. You can split test two bad headlines against each other until the cows come home. Chances are, you'll still see little or no improvement.
        At last! A well-balanced response.

        Agree completely with you, Mike.

        A good ad starts with a good sales copy.

        Testing and optimizing it will take the response
        rate to a higher level.

        Just testing blindly on everything and anything
        with a bad copy...is only gonna waste unnecessary
        time, money and effort.

        - Jag
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        • Profile picture of the author Collette
          Originally Posted by Jag82 View Post

          ...
          A good ad starts with a good sales copy.
          A better ad starts with a good product. And how often have we seen seriously flawed product ideas presented in requests for critiques? I've lost count...

          Originally Posted by Jag82 View Post

          Just testing blindly on everything and anything
          with a bad copy...is only gonna waste unnecessary
          time, money and effort.

          - Jag
          Word. If people don't have enough knowledge to put together a half-way decent ad or sales copy, they are extremely unlikely to know how to test. I've see posts where people come on and say, "I tested and changed the header graphic, the headline and my photo. Oh - and I added testimonials. That really made a difference!"

          In fact, they have no idea WHAT made the difference, because they're just throwing sh*t against the wall and hoping something sticks. And the majority of people who post asking for critiques wouldn't even begn to know how to set up a basic A/B, much less a proper testing series. Hell, I bet most people still don't have basic analytics on their pages.

          Testing crap isn't going to give you anything but the same stinkin' results. And testing crap through PPC will send you to the poorhouse at the speed of a mouse click.
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    • Profile picture of the author Bruce Wedding
      Originally Posted by Metronicity View Post

      The headline is probably the most important part.
      I'd put the headline at number 2. Unless it does what I say is number one - change the appeal.

      The appeal is the most important thing to test. It has the greatest possibility to have a large effect.
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      • Profile picture of the author ewenmack
        Originally Posted by Bruce Wedding View Post

        The appeal is the most important thing to test. It has the greatest possibility to have a large effect.
        John Caples would be pleased his teachings are remembered.

        Best,
        Ewen
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  • Profile picture of the author Ross James
    Yeah, it sounded like a wordpress plugin to me lol. not that i'm doubting that it's killer stuff, i'm just unaware.

    Ross
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    • Profile picture of the author The Copy Nazi
      Banned
      Originally Posted by Ross James View Post

      Yeah, it sounded like a wordpress plugin to me lol. not that i'm doubting that it's killer stuff, i'm just unaware.

      Ross
      Dave's just trying to show you that he's up on the jargon. He's talking about "multivariate testing" - just a fancy way of saying "test all the components of a webpage/site". Multivariate testing - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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  • Profile picture of the author davemiz
    lol.... multivariant testing has been around for a while... nothing new people.

    It's mindboggling to hear some of this stuff. If this is your business, if this is how you provide for your family, shouldn't you know as much as possible?

    Not knowing that sorta stuff is like playing poker but not knowing the rules.

    but hey, i'm a marketing geek.

    funny... i just read another thread.... hey bruce wedding... lol forgot about posting this eh?

    Of course, there's a lesson right there. If people would take a break from chasing the latest GRQ crap and learn some marketing skills, they'd be a lot better off.

    And we'd stop getting all these critique requests for crap sales pages written by people who haven't bothered to read the excellent advice in the sticky notes here.

    I won't hold my breath.
    c'mon man... you can't rip on me and be posting this.... lol..... :-)
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    • Profile picture of the author RickDuris
      Hi Dave,

      Now that you've revealed "the secret sauce" to testing everything, would you do us all a small but very helpful favor?

      While I have been trained in the Taguchi Method, many I'm sure here do not know the mindset, strategy, or technology required when testing in this manner.

      I'm not asking for a seminar or thesis. Just a bit of insight in HOW you personally "test everything."

      Because you have to admit, testing everything does seem rather overwhelming.

      How do *YOU* do it, Dave? You don't have to be specific, but specifics would be helpful.

      I would be so curious because clearly you've achieved success in your testing efforts.

      - Rick Duris

      PS: This is a sincere request. I personally want to learn.

      PPS: Personally, I was trained a few years ago by David Bullock. I've used Verster, Split Test Accelerator and Omniture. I'm told Google's free website optimizer allows for multivariable testing but have not used it. I'm also aware Mike Humphreys has a similar testing tool which he is proud of and continues to enhance.
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    • Profile picture of the author The Copy Nazi
      Banned
      Originally Posted by davemiz View Post

      lol.... multivariant testing has been around for a while... nothing new people.... and if you are serious bout this stuff, shouldn't you know wtf is going on?

      not knowing that sorta stuff is like playing poker but not knowing the rules... which is just dumb.

      funny... i just read another thread.... hey bruce wedding... forgot about posting this eh?



      if you wanna rip on someone, you gotta know what else you're posting bro. :-)
      You're coming across as one of those people who just like to "bignote" themselves by not "sharing the knowledge" but desperately trying to show that they "have the knowledge" by sprouting a bunch of jargon - all the time forgetting that at one stage they knew Sweet Fanny Adams.

      Which really...is just coming from a base of insecurity and is not helping anyone.

      I could start mouthing off radio terms and more than likely you wouldn't have a clue what I was talking about. So what? But if I started dropping specific terms I would explain what they meant - rather than trying to "baffle you with bullsh*t".

      So cut the crap will you. Its getting tiresome. And childish. We're all here to learn from each other - not to thump our chests.
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    • Profile picture of the author Bruce Wedding
      Originally Posted by davemiz View Post

      funny... i just read another thread.... hey bruce wedding... lol forgot about posting this eh?
      ...
      c'mon man... you can't rip on me and be posting this.... lol..... :-)
      Dave, I'm the guy that wrote the massive thread about why I seldom do critiques. The thing is, you and I agree for the most part. I understand that testing is the only way to improve a GOOD sales letter. Where we seem to disagree is the starting point. I think you start with good copy, written by a person schooled in the art. You seem to think it doesn't matter.

      But speaking of hypocrisy

      Aren't these your sites?
      Response Boosting Design Tricks - Make Your Website Sell by Dave Mizrachi
      Make My Website Sell || Response boosting design tricks you can immediately impliment, with ease, to make your website sell more.

      How can you possibly claim to increase conversions when you have no idea what works until you test?
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      • Profile picture of the author The Copy Nazi
        Banned
        Originally Posted by Bruce Wedding View Post

        Dave, I'm the guy that wrote the massive thread about why I seldom do critiques. The thing is, you and I agree for the most part. I understand that testing is the only way to improve a GOOD sales letter. Where we seem to disagree is the starting point. I think you start with good copy, written by a person schooled in the art. You seem to think it doesn't matter.

        But speaking of hypocrisy

        Aren't these your sites?
        Response Boosting Design Tricks - Make Your Website Sell by Dave Mizrachi
        Make My Website Sell || Response boosting design tricks you can immediately impliment, with ease, to make your website sell more.

        How can you possibly claim to increase conversions when you have no idea what works until you test?
        From one of the sites -
        On the 15th March 2006, we held a special "no holds barred" 2 hour teleseminar in which Dave and special mystery guest and expert copy righter Michel Fortin spilled their guts.
        And the head on the second one -
        "Discover How to Dramatically Send Your Sales
        and Conversion Rates Soaring Through the Roof (WITHOUT Writing a Single Sentance!)"
        That page is riddled with spelling and grammar mistakes. Here's another -
        “Design That Compliments
        The Sales Process”



        One word: spellcheck.
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  • Profile picture of the author davemiz
    hey rick, yeah... no worries.... the taguchi stuff was pretty wild when it came out back in the day.... i use website optimizer multivariant and a/b. (simple to use and its free)

    I'll give you a squeeze page for example....

    i start by testing design first using a/b.

    I'll test 20-30 different design styles pretty much with the same copy to see which design is getting best conversions.

    i wont ask for opinions... i'll design every type of page i can think of and see what happens. As i learned from kennedy, reese and eben... make decisions based on DATA, not opinions.

    then, when i find the winner.... then i start the multivariant.

    I'll start testing 20-50 headlines, as many as i can think of, and every other variable on the page. (copy, the form text, the form itself, the form button, any graphics).

    FYI (side note) When I was in advertising school they'd make the copywriters write 100-200 headlines per ad.

    Rick, i design the pages knowing that i will be testing, so i'm designing with the end in mind which is important when you're designing for response because you dont wanna design something thats a pain in the rear end to setup testing for. (something a lotta newbies do).

    then i'll crank up the traffic and see what happens.

    Sometimes it takes forever for the test to finish. I'm running one right now and its been running since... nov 17th, 2010. The winner right now is showing a 103% improvement on a *heavily* tested page.

    And the changes are so stupid you'd laugh if i told you what they were.

    but its taking forever.

    there's no way on earth you could put in that much stuff and not see any improvement.

    Not to brag, but there's a reason my squeeze pages are ripped off everywhere.... i did the 2 arrow one for PLF 2.0, for kerns mass control... amish's magic bullet.... and all the "WARNING" ones you've seen god knows how many people rip from me.

    hope that helps.
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    • Profile picture of the author RickDuris
      Originally Posted by davemiz View Post

      hey rick, yeah... no worries.... the taguchi stuff was pretty wild when it came out back in the day.... i use website optimizer multivariant and a/b. (simple to use and its free)

      I'll give you a squeeze page for example....

      i start by testing design first using a/b.

      I'll test 20-30 different design styles pretty much with the same copy to see which design is getting best conversions.

      i wont ask for opinions... i'll design every type of page i can think of and see what happens. As i learned from kennedy, reese and eben... make decisions based on DATA, not opinions.

      then, when i find the winner.... then i start the multivariant.

      I'll start testing 20-50 headlines, as many as i can think of, and every other variable on the page. (copy, the form text, the form itself, the form button, any graphics).

      FYI (side note) When I was in advertising school they'd make the copywriters write 100-200 headlines per ad.

      Rick, i design the pages knowing that i will be testing, so i'm designing with the end in mind which is important when you're designing for response because you dont wanna design something thats a pain in the rear end to setup testing for. (something a lotta newbies do).

      then i'll crank up the traffic and see what happens.

      Sometimes it takes forever for the test to finish. I'm running one right now and its been running since... nov 17th, 2010. The winner right now is showing a 103% improvement on a *heavily* tested page.

      And the changes are so stupid you'd laugh if i told you what they were.

      but its taking forever.

      there's no way on earth you could put in that much stuff and not see any improvement.

      Not to brag, but there's a reason my squeeze pages are ripped off everywhere.... i did the 2 arrow one for PLF 2.0, for kerns mass control... amish's magic bullet.... and all the "WARNING" ones you've seen god knows how many people rip from me.

      hope that helps.
      Thank you. This was very helpful. I am going to study this.

      (Occassionally, my Partners will share with me insights from their efforts via email. I call them "keepers". Your post is a "keeper.")

      Allow me to ask you a few questions:

      1. In your testing overall, would you say that the graphics design has more or less of an impact on conversion than the copy?

      (The jury is still out for me, but I would appreciate your opinion. By your post it seems the graphics design elements are your front line of testing.)

      2. The way I was trained was we should test wide variations initially. And I've been doing that strategically. It sounds like you just throw stuff against the wall and see if any of it sticks. Do you have a strategy for knowing what to test--meaning variations within a specific variable? At least initially?

      3. Here's the big question: Sometimes I am a part of product launches, (as opposed to evergreen promotions. Obviously evergreen promotions can be continually optimized.)

      But for one-time product launches how are you testing before the actual product launch?

      In my experience, I am practically required to "hit it out of the park" without testing, copy-wise. Nobody wants several different versions of the video/script, nobody has the time for daily analysis and nobody wants to pay for 20 different versions of the overall graphics design. Nobody cares about optimally sequencing the autoresponder series.

      Can you share your experience? If you can't, I'll understand.

      Thanks in advance,

      - Rick Duris

      PS: With the folks I work with, maybe I've got a different set of circumstances, but they do not have the patience for testing. They're already thinking of the next product launch.

      For instance, I've heard of folks doing "internal launches." Launching to their own lists first, is that one of the places you get your data from?
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  • Profile picture of the author Scott Ames
    Shouldn't be either/or... Test for sure, ask for help: Yes... do whatever it takes.
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    Success consists of going from failure to failure without loss of enthusiasm. -Winston Churchill

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  • Profile picture of the author davemiz
    WOW.... I'm insecure... I can't spell.... keep going dude...

    Mal, sounds like you're a little jealous... envious or...(the most likely) you've got a man crush on me... i can't quite put my finger on which one....

    Sorry... I hate to tell you this... but I'm not into dudes.... so you're S.O.L. buddy.

    Read my response to rick, i broke down the whole testing "formula".... unlike some people, he was super cool and didn't come off like a dbag. It's enjoyable having an intelligent conversation without the personal attacks.

    oh, and there is no "knowledge" that I'm hiding... rick asked, i think i gave him a pretty detailed answer.... its called testing... LOL.... aren't you're supposed to be a copywriter?

    shouldn't you already know this?

    --- ANNNND.... back to reality ---

    Rick, it totally depends man..... I've designed slick stuff thats done well, and some basic stuff, but i think from testing, yes it does have a huge impact....

    if it didn't no company would spend money on designing anything.

    i think the market has a HUGE say... but then you see stuff like ebens doubleyourdating, the guy did millions a year with it (still does) and he built it with BARE simple pages with super gangster copy.

    (i'm 99% sure they didn't test layouts or design or even the copy but the copy is gangster - kudo's to craig cleamons and eben for writing it).

    when i say design it could be the formatting of the copy.... headline etc.

    btw... sometimes you don't need a ton of traffic... sometimes the winner happens right away.., you never really know.

    For product launches, I'll do my own internal launch to my own list to get metrics before asking my jv's/affiliates to mail for me.... i think thats only fair, no?

    I'd hate to be someones guinea pig.

    why ask them to push something you won't even push yourself?

    There's nothing worse than having all your jv's mail for you and they don't make money... i mean, its the fastest way to lose jvs.

    (happened in one of my niche markets, his offer didn't convert at all... zero sales for me and several other jvs, now i'm very reluctant to mail for him.)

    If you're hitting it outta the park, imagine what would happen when you test + good copy.... you probably could do even better.

    Now the autoresponder sequence... i'm still workin on that one lol... THAT is difficult, getting them all to flow well and work... i have like 150+ emails in my front end....

    --------

    Hey Bruce... the point i had for quoting you was you were essentially saying the same thing i was... stop asking for critiques in here. (i'm coming at it from a different angle than you did). i think maybe i wasn't clear on that... my bad.

    if ppl just stopped asking and started taking their ideas and just tested them, they'd never ask for another critique or post stuff in here.... they'd post better stuff and the forum would be rockin.

    Btw.... yes that is a site I own... totally forgot about it. the site is from 2005-2006 From a 1 time teleseminar i did with fortin on designing for response. All the stuff we talked about was stuff that was tested and the program i know helped out a lot of people.

    haven't done anything with any of that stuff since 2005-2006. I'm too busy with my niche businesses.

    i still get ppl coming up to me at seminars 5 years later saying how much they learned from it.

    I'll put that course up against *any* other course that teachs you how to design for response.... even though its from back in 2005-2006.


    Seth - AMEN.... THANK YOU.... WOO HOO!
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    • Profile picture of the author The Copy Nazi
      Banned
      Originally Posted by davemiz View Post

      Mal, sounds like you're a little jealous... envious or...(the most likely) you've got a man crush on me... i can't quite put my finger on which one....

      Sorry... I hate to tell you this... but I'm not into dudes.... so you're S.O.L. buddy.
      Really moronic. I shake my head.
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  • Profile picture of the author Ashley Gable
    I think you are mistaking "critical" for "the only thing that matters".

    You aren't going to find anyone on here who says testing isn't important. It is. But as Bruce Wedding said in the very first reply - if you split test junk against junk, what do you really find out?

    Nothing. You just find out what headline sucks less.

    If you cant write a good headline the first time then there is no reason that your second one will be any better. Unless you learn how to write headlines, in which case you are back at being a copywriter, learning to be a copywriter, or asking for critiques
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  • Profile picture of the author RickDuris
    Hi Dave,

    What you say rings true. Thank you.

    Yours is not my experience, but that's why I was reaching out and asking.

    Thank you again,

    - Rick Duris
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  • Profile picture of the author Hopp
    Some of the best threads I have read on this forum have been critiques. Testing is vital, but one of the main functions of a forum is to learn from other peoples experiences and opinions.
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  • Profile picture of the author davemiz
    Speaking of moronic.... this coming from someone with nazi as their name.

    If i was you, i'd worry about writing better copy, not worrying about me, how "insecure" I am, how i can't spell and how moronic i am...

    just a bit of friendly advice pal.

    And who on earth was the schmuck that told you the nazi thing was in good taste?

    Is the nazi thing supposed to be clever?

    it's either.

    And you want people to take you serious?

    C'mon man...

    Some of us have lost family members by them. There's no better way to show a lack of respect for the holocaust and the millions people that were murdered.

    but considering the source, it doesn't surprise me one bit.

    Go work on that copy...
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    • Profile picture of the author The Copy Nazi
      Banned
      Originally Posted by davemiz View Post

      Speaking of moronic.... this coming from someone with nazi as their name.

      If i was you, i'd worry about writing better copy, not worrying about me, how "insecure" I am, how i can't spell and how moronic i am...

      just a bit of friendly advice pal.

      Is the nazi thing supposed to be clever?

      it's not. Its pretty disgusting.

      Some of us have lost family members by them. There's no better way to show a lack of respect for jews, the holocaust and the millions people that were murdered.

      but considering the source and the personal attacks, it doesn't surprise me one bit.
      Yeah - I'll tell that to Jerry Seinfeld (a Jew) next time I see him - "Jerry - you can't say Soup Nazi* - some people are humorless *******s and won't get it - let alone the contemporary meaning of "nazi" - "derogatory term for a person who is fanatically dedicated to, or seeks to control, some activity, practice, etc."

      *
      "The Soup Nazi" is the title of the 116th episode of the NBC sitcom Seinfeld, which was the 6th episode of the 7th season. It first aired in the United States on November 2, 1995.
      The Soup Nazi is also the nickname of the titular character played by Larry Thomas. The term "Nazi" is used as an exaggeration of the excessively strict regimentation he constantly demands of his patrons.


      On TV.com, users rated this the best episode of Seinfeld.


      cheers Pal,


      The Copy Nazi


      "No copy for you!"
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      • Profile picture of the author Jag82
        Originally Posted by The Copy Nazi View Post

        Yeah - I'll tell that to Jerry Seinfeld (a Jew) next time I see him - "Jerry - you can't say Soup Nazi* - some people are humorless *******s and won't get it - let alone the contemporary meaning of "nazi" - "derogatory term for a person who is fanatically dedicated to, or seeks to control, some activity, practice, etc."

        *
        "The Soup Nazi" is the title of the 116th episode of the NBC sitcom Seinfeld, which was the 6th episode of the 7th season. It first aired in the United States on November 2, 1995.
        The Soup Nazi is also the nickname of the titular character played by Larry Thomas. The term "Nazi" is used as an exaggeration of the excessively strict regimentation he constantly demands of his patrons.
        Mal,

        I understand your rationale behind your branding.

        But most people will not know the reference.

        The first impression they get is that of is Nazi Germany
        and the horrors that come with it.

        If you hadn't educated me on it, I would
        have thought your nick was done in very bad taste.

        It's just the natural perception of people.

        And I will think that many of your prospects
        might not have caught Seinfeld.

        Your "Copy Nazi" branding will probably cast you in a
        negative light and give you much unnecessary grief.

        This issue is not for me to say though,
        since it's your right to choose how you
        want others to perceive you.

        Just my $0.02
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        • Profile picture of the author Pusateri
          Originally Posted by Jag82 View Post

          Mal,

          I understand your rationale behind your branding.

          But most people will not know the reference.

          The first impression they get is that of is Nazi Germany
          and the horrors that come with it.

          If you hadn't educated me on it, I would
          have thought your nick was done in very bad taste.

          It's just the natural perception of people.

          And I will think that many of your prospects
          might not have caught Seinfeld.

          Your "Copy Nazi" branding will probably cast you in a
          negative light and give you much unnecessary grief.

          This issue is not for me to say though,
          since it's your right to choose how you
          want others to perceive you.

          Just my $0.02
          On the contrary, it does exactly what branding is supposed to do. Those who get it and are attracted to it are the best matches for what Mal offers. Those who find it offensive don't belong in Mal World.
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          • Profile picture of the author The Copy Nazi
            Banned
            Originally Posted by Pusateri View Post

            On the contrary, it does exactly what branding is supposed to do. Those who get it and are attracted to it are the best matches for what Mal offers. Those who find it offensive don't belong in Mal World.
            Now there's a guy who gets it - in Spades. I tip my hat to you Sir.
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        • Profile picture of the author The Copy Nazi
          Banned
          Originally Posted by Jag82 View Post


          This issue is not for me to say though,
          since it's your right to choose how you
          want others to perceive you.
          Yep. Exactly right. So why bother even commenting?

          BTW you say "most people will not know the reference". Where the hell they been then? Hiding under a rock? "Seinfeld" used to pull around 20 Million viewers an episode. "The Soup Nazi" being one of the stand-out favorites. The actor who plays SN was nominated for an Emmy.

          The last episode of Seinfeld pulled 76 Million sets of eyeballs.

          Finally -
          A critical favorite, commercial blockbuster and cultural phenomenon, the show led the Nielsen ratings in its sixth and ninth seasons and finished among the top two (along with NBC's ER) every year from 1994 to 1998. In 2002, TV Guide named Seinfeld as the greatest television program of all time.
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      • Profile picture of the author OnlineMasterMind
        [DELETED]
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        • Profile picture of the author The Copy Nazi
          Banned
          Originally Posted by OnlineMasterMind View Post

          1. You have to keep defending, explaining and re-explaining the name. Do you think that should be protocol for a professional copywriter? lol

          2. Seinfeld is a COMEDY show... and it was one character in one show - NOT the name of the show. Big difference.

          If you used the term one time in an example or case study - like the show did - I don't think anyone would care.

          3. The REALITY is that many people do find it offensive.

          Not offensive, like using "no bs marketing" or a lot profanity or being highly abrasive... but offensive in a much more profound way.

          Do I think these are your intentions? No. At least I would hope not. But to even consider making that your permanent name displays a lack of understanding, compassion and sensitivity on your part, to say the least.
          1/ Protocol? WTF? LOL back at you. But I must admit it's getting a bit tiresome - there are a lot of thickheads out there. 2/ Huh? How I "use the term" as you put it, has nothing to do with you or anyone else. I'll use it/appropriate as I see fit. I don't need yours or anyone elses permission to borrow and mash a name from popular culture. Go watch some "Family Guy" or "Simpsons" or dozens of other shows and you'll see it happening all the time. 3/ The REALITY is that people find lots of things offensive. I find your post offensive if it comes to that. I could care less if some dunderheads are offended. Could care less. They're not the kind of people I want in my sand-pit anyway. Neither are you if it comes to that.

          "a lack of understanding, compassion and sensitivity on your part" yeah yeah yeah. Terrible hooman bean aren't I. How dare I have a bit of fun with I.M. and using that dreadful four letter word. So shocking. What was I thinking?

          In short Dude - it-is-none-of-your-business Mister "OnlineMasterMind" - which incidentally I find very offensive. How dare you call yourself that when you're obviously not a mastermind. That's false advertising right there.

          The Copy Nazi walks off mumbling under his breath..."God...some people...haven't they got anything better to do?...but no...they gotta drop their inane comments all over the place...I dunno...why do I bother..."do you think that should be protocol for a professional copywriter," he says - as if it's any of his damned business..."OnlineMasterMind" - now there's a name for you...probably some 12 year old twerp LOL

          Update: oh I see you're trying to tell Frank Kern how to run his business too - http://www.warriorforum.com/main-int...e-too-far.html

          LOL aren't you a MasterMind. That offer sold out [snaps fingers] - like that. But there you are telling him how he's going about it all wrong.
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          • Profile picture of the author Pusateri
            Is anybody truly offended by the Copy Nazi label? How can we know unless we test?

            Here's the test for those who claim offense: when you read it the first time, did it really disturb that old reptilian brain? Did it spark a tiny flame of violence in your soul?

            No? Then you weren't really offended. You just thought you should be. That's not a jab. We all do it at times.

            Offend is the opposite of defend. It means to strike at. There are some offending posts in this thread, but the name Copy Nazi was never meant to strike at anyone.

            "I know it's meant to be funny, but it's insensitive to the historical blah blah blah..."

            What about the friggin' Romans? They subjugated Judea, pulled down the second temple, kicked the Diaspora into high gear AND they killed Jeezus! Does anybody get worked up over Little Caesar's Pizza or toga parties?

            Copy Nazi just plain works brandingwise. The fact that it elicits strong responses, possitive and negative, is proof.

            I'm not so sure about these, but I guess they need to be tested.

            Hideki Watanabe - The Rising Sun of Copywriting

            Genghis Khopy Khan

            Killer Kopy Klan

            Copyligula

            Osama Bin Writtin'

            The Joseph 'Bullet Point' Stalin Copywriting Pogram
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            • Profile picture of the author l23bc
              Originally Posted by Pusateri View Post

              Is anybody truly offended by the Copy Nazi
              Osama Bin Writtin'-----Like it!!

              Thanks for the comment i could not stop smiling at that and to be honest i might use that as a domain name lol! unless i get a cease and desist by fbi and osama himself
              Signature

              No Link here or Nothing to Promote Just a Old Happy Warrior User reading Topics

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            • Profile picture of the author OnlineMasterMind
              [DELETED]
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              • Profile picture of the author Adam Roy
                Originally Posted by OnlineMasterMind View Post

                Surely there should be a swastika in the new logo, right?
                Are you kidding? Must you and your comments be so judgmental and nasty?

                The word swastika came from the Sanskrit word svastika, meaning any lucky or auspicious object, and in particular a mark made on persons and things to denote good luck. It is composed of su- meaning "good, well" and asti "to be" svasti thus means "well-being." The suffix -ka either forms a diminutive or intensifies the verbal meaning, and svastika might thus be translated literally as "that which is associated with well-being," corresponding to "lucky charm" or "thing that is auspicious."[1] The word in this sense is first used in the Harivamsa.[2] As noted by Monier-Williams in his Sanskrit-English dictionary, according to Alexander Cunningham, its shape represents a monogram formed by interlacing of the letters of the auspicious words su-astí (svasti) written in Ashokan characters.[3]
                Good luck to you. May the Nazi god bless you with a lucky swastika and increase your search engine rankings.
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              • Profile picture of the author Pusateri
                Originally Posted by OnlineMasterMind View Post

                Surely there should be a swastika in the new logo, right?
                You know the answer to that.

                Look, railing against it as bad branding only proves the contrary.

                The primary response bad branding engenders is no response at all.
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  • Profile picture of the author Ross James
    This thread is still going about the whole "copy nazi" thing. Who cares? It's a name and I don't know too many copywriters that are out to hurt anyone, I'm certain Mal isn't, last time I checked he was making every other guy rich, *******.
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  • Profile picture of the author The Copy Nazi
    Banned
    @ Ken

    The Copy Jew
    "why pay retail?"
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  • Profile picture of the author Adam Roy
    Hmm... The 'copy nazi', quite catchy isn't it?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_(god) <<<<


    Benford's law of controversy, as expressed by science-fiction author Gregory Benford in 1980, states: Passion is inversely proportional to the amount of real (true) information available.[1][2] In other words, the fewer facts are known to and agreed on by the participants, the more controversy there is, and the more is known the less controversy there is
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