Dip into history to write more powerful leads

by Steve Slaunwhite

 

One of the toughest jobs in direct marketing is getting your target audience to read what you have written. After all, if your sales letter, direct mail package, email or web page doesn’t get read, it fails totally. No readers, no results.

 

That’s why writing an effective lead is so crucial. The lead — those all-important first few sentences — will either hook the reader, or produce a yawn.

 

There are several lead-writing techniques. You can draw attention to a problem, make a bold promise, ask a provocation question, quote a startling fact or statistic.

 

But there is another technique that is equally powerful, yet surprisingly underused. I call it: the history lead.

 

I originally learned this approach while studying the work of renown copywriter Pat Farley. Writing a sales letter to promote Sotheby’s Auction House, she created a fascinating parallel between attending an auction and the discovery of Tutankhamen’s tomb. Here is her lead:

 

When archaeologist Howard Carter first opened King Tut’s tomb in Egypt , he knocked only a small hole in the barrier and then peered through.

    Leaning over his shoulder was Lord Carnovan, his sponsor. After a while, Carnovan asked impatiently, “What do you see?”

    Another pause. Then Carter answered in a hushed voice, “I see things. Wonderful things.”

    Every year tens of thousands of “wonderful things” pass through the doors of Sotheby’s…

 

Isn’t that an irresistible opening? Doesn’t it make you want to read on?

 

Of course, the history lead isn’t always the best choice. But it can work well for an astonishing variety of direct-response campaigns.

 

Recently I wrote some sales copy featuring the J.F.J de Null dredger. (Note: A dredger is a ship that clears the sea bottom to make way for larger vessels.) Originally I tried the standard “just the facts” approach:

 

Constructed at the IHC shipyards in the Netherlands in 2002, the J.F.J. de Nul is the most advanced self-propelled cutter suction dredger ever built. Her 6,000kW cutter drive — 30% more powerful than those currently in use — is capable of dredging from a depth of  -6.5m to -35m.

 

Not bad. But it seemed a bit stale, even for a technical market. So I decided to dip into history to make the lead more enticing. Here is the result:

 

When Caesar conquered Egypt in 48 B.C., he used dredgers to clear the way for his ships into the Alexandra Harbour . No one knows for sure what these dredgers looked like or how they worked. We can speculate, however, that if the Roman engineers who built them could see into the future, they would be astonished by the size and power of the J.F.J. de Nul.

 

Better? I’ll let you be the judge.

 

Here’s another lead I wrote for a sales letter promoting a debt collection service.

 

Dear Entrepreneur,

    In ancient Greece , business owners would attempt to collect on overdue accounts by throwing stones at the customers. This forced a customer to choose between a daily bruising and paying up.

    Today, things are more civilized. But debt collection is no less frustrating. Collection agencies tend to be overly aggressive, destroying relationships. Lawyers are expensive, and many won't touch accounts less than $10,000.

 

Where suitable, I’ve used the history lead in everything from direct-response ads to sales letters to email, and it has almost always improved readership. So the next time you come across an interesting historical tidbit, keep it in your back pocket. You never know when you’ll need it to write a better lead.

 

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© 2004, Steve Slaunwhite. All right reserved.

 

 

 

 

 

Steve Slaunwhite  |  905-846-2620  |  info@steveslaunwhite.com