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which title is more compelling?...
1) "The 10 [knowledge I'm teaching] Every [people/niche/demographic I'm targeting] Should Know"
-- OR -- 2) "10 [knowledge I'm teaching] Every [people/niche/demographic I'm targeting] Should Know" Note: the difference is the "The" at the beginning (or lack of "The"). I think it's more powerful/authoritative WITH the "The." -- What say you? Thanks. -- TW |
Re: which title is more compelling?...
Now who said this: "Opinions are the cheapest commodities on earth" ... ? I think it was Earl Nightingale talking about Napoleon Hill ...
Why not just split test it and let the customers decide ? After all - the choice of a customer that voted with his money is as clear as a bell. It is easy - and free- to set up in Google Website Optimizer ... google.com/websiteoptimizer Send traffic to the offer and see which one wins ... You could also use a survey tool to ask the people on your mailing list, but the results from people buying will be of more value. Or if this is a physical test, just print up brochures/books with the different titles and see which one moves off the shelf fastest. Now for the opinion part ... lol ... I remember reading somewhere about the addition of the "the" adding more authority - but I do not remember if it was just an opinion or the result of a test ... Melvin Powers at mpowers.com has a lot of titles with and without - and those are books sold by direct marketing. Another thought - a lot of the winning headlines in Victor Schwab's book started with "How to ..." . So that could be an approach. Or how about instead of making a statement, turning it into a question ? On the lines of "Do you know these 10 .... whatever things" ? This is definitely something to test for response in the marketplace, I think. Good luck with it, Conrad |
Re: which title is more compelling?...
#1... sounds more authoritative.
later.. Pappy |
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