Wouldn’t it be easy if you could just close your eyes, pop over into someone’s mind, and seize control? Yeah. Too bad it’s not possible ... Or is it?
A 7-Step Guide to Mind Control: How to Quit Begging and Make People *Want* to Help You Skip to primary navigation Skip to content Skip to primary sidebarCopybloggerMenuArticles About Services Content Marketing Submenu Copywriting 101 Email Marketing Internet Marketing Search Engine Optimization Landing Pages Sales Pages Conversion Rate Optimization Certified Content Marketers Academy Type in your keyword and press enter to search Copyblogger.com:CloseSearch Copyblogger...A 7-Step Guide to Mind Control: How to Quit Begging and Make People Want to Help You written by Jonathan Morrow posted on August 25, 2011 TweetShareSharePin Well, why not? They are the problem, right? Here you are with a blog or a product or a charity you believe will change the world, and yet no matter how excited you are about the possibilities, no matter how much faith you have in yourself, you can’t help being worried: If you ask a popular blogger for a link, will you get a reply? If you ask a partner to email a product offer to their list, will they agree? If you ask a friend for a donation, will they write you a check? You don’t know. You can’t know. And it bothers you. Wouldn’t it be easier if you could just close your eyes, pop over into their mind, and seize control? Yeah. Too bad it’s not possible … Or is it? A Brief Introduction to Mind Control As it happens, mind control is possible. Sort of. No, you can’t turn your customers, partners, and in-laws into mindless zombies, but you can influence them. In fact, there’s a science to it. Back in the 1980s, a researcher by the name of Dr. Robert Cialdini wrote a book called Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion. He outlined different principles scientifically proven to influence people, as well as suggestions for how to do it. Since then, it’s become maybe the most important book in the field of marketing. If you haven’t read it, you should, as well as the sequel. Here’s the bad news: Mind control isn’t about magic powers, arcane arts, or even shaving your head and gallivanting around in a wheelchair (although, I’ve been tempted). The truth is it’s about something that makes a lot of people squeamish: marketing. The Truth about Marketing The core of marketing isn’t customer profiling or market segmentation or any of the other complicated nonsense taught in most business schools. It’s infinitely simpler than that, and it can be encapsulated in one word: Yes. You ask a blogger for a link, and they say, “Yes.” You ask a partner to promote your product, and they say, “Yes.” You ask a customer for a testimonial, and they say, “Yes.” If you get enough yeses, your blog/business/charity succeeds. If you don’t, it fails. It’s so simple, and yet so few of us really understand how to do it. The good news? You can learn. What follows is a marketer’s guide to mind control. Use these seven strategies wisely. 1. Do all the thinking for them The worst mistake you can make when asking anyone for anything is telling them to “Think it over.” Here’s why: people already have too much to think about. Between their jobs, their family, and their own hobbies and friends, their mind is already stuffed, like a suitcase bulging at the sides. Add one more sock, and the whole thing will explode. To avoid it, they “forget” about things that aren’t very important to them, or if they do think about you, they don’t think very hard. It’s not because they are lazy or stupid. They’re just busy, and you’re probably not very high up the priority list. And so the best strategy is to not ask them to think. Do it for them. Instead of expecting them to see how your blog post will benefit their audience, explain it, and offer examples of similar posts that have done well in the past Instead of asking them to host a webinar for you, setup the webinar, landing pages, and emails yourself, and send them as part of your pitch Instead of begging a customer to write a testimonial from scratch, send them a dozen different examples to use as a guide Be specific. Explain your reasoning. Offer proof. Tell them what to do next and why. If you do it right, it won’t feel like asking at all. It’ll be more like advising. And they’ll say yes. Not because of magical powers of persuasion, but because you’ve thought through everything, and it’s a no-brainer. 2. Start an avalanche Creating a successful marketing campaign is a lot like starting an avalanche. First, you climb up the mountain, and then you find the biggest boulder at the top, and then you sweat and grunt and strain to push the boulder over, and then you sit down and watch happily as the boulder goes crashing into other boulders, eventually bringing the whole side of the mountain down. The lesson? The first big yes is a pain in the butt to get, but if you get it from the right person, then getting all of the subsequent yeses is easy. For example: Getting a popular blogger to tweet your post is hard, but once they do, dozens or maybe even hundreds of people will retweet them Convincing a leader in your niche to promote your product is tough, but once they do, everyone else will want to promote it too Persuading a celebrity customer to give you a testimonial can be tough, but once you do, sales skyrocket, and getting further testimonials is easy Of course, a lot of marketers recommend taking the opposite approach. They tell you to start from the bottom and work your way up because it’s easier. But really, it’s just an illusion. Yes, pushing over a small rock is easier than pushing over a boulder, but the boulder is a lot more likely to cause an avalanche. So while it’s more work in the beginning to get top people to help you, it’s actually less work in the long run, and the results are far, far greater. 3. Ask for an inch, take a mile You’ve probably heard the expression, “Give them an inch, and they’ll take a mile,” right? It’s supposed to be derogatory. It’s supposed to be a warning against appeasement. It’s supposed to protect you against getting taken advantage of. But it’s also great marketing. Whenever you’re asking for anything, never start by asking for everything upfront. Instead, start small. Make it easy to get started. Reduce the risk if it flops. Let them see the results for themselves. And when it goes well, ask for more. And more. And more. You might think that’s unethical, but if everything is going well, why not push for more? It’s not manipulation. It’s common sense. For instance: If you want to write a guest post for a popular blog, start by pitching the idea in one or two paragraphs, and then send them an outline, and then write the full draft of the post If you want do a JV promotion with a leader in your field, start by asking them to email your launch content to only 10% of their list, and than 50% of their list, and then 100%, and then a direct mail campaign If you want your customers to give you case studies, start by asking for a 1-3 sentence blurb, and then ask for a half-page testimonial, and then talk about doing a two-hour webinar going in depth about their success It’s not psychological trickery or anything like that. It’s smart business. No one likes to risk everything upfront, and by offering progressive levels of commitment, your chances of getting them to say yes go through the roof. 4. Always have a real deadline The keyword is “real.” All of us have had salesmen tell us, “Well, you’d better get back to me fast, because I have three more prospects coming this afternoon, and I don’t know how long it’ll last.” It’s BS, of course. There are no clients, and there is no urgency. The salesman is just so desperate he’s willing to lie, not only costing him your trust, but probably the sale too. And it’s not just salesmen. How many times have other people handed you completely artificial deadlines, thinking it will motivate you to act? Our teachers do it, our bosses do it, our family does it, and without thinking about it, you’ve probably done it too. Stop. Not only is it ineffective, but it’s totally unnecessary. Real urgency is easy to create. With a little thought, you can build it into your marketing. For example: Instead of leaving a free report on your blog forever, tell everyone it will only be available for seven days, and then you’re going to start charging $7 for it. Not only will you get a lot more downloads, but other bloggers will be a lot more likely to promote it during the window Instead of letting JV partners dictate when they will promote your product, schedule a launch, announce it to your list, and then forward partners the announcement, inviting them to participate Instead of asking customers for testimonials whenever they get around to it, show them the timeline for an upcoming launch, including a specific date to send out testimonials. You need it by then, or you won’t be able to include it Will some of them bow out, saying they are too busy right now, and they’ll catch you next time? Sure, but it’s better than never getting started it all. And if you let other people dictate timelines, that’s exactly what will happen. 5. Give ten times more than you take You know you’re supposed to give before you get, right? But what you might not know is how much to give. A lot of marketers mistakenly assume it’s a 1:1 ratio. Before you ask for a link, you should give a link. Before you ask for promotion, you should give a promotion. Before you ask for a testimonial, you should do one thing that deserves a testimonial. But that’s wrong. Smart marketers use a 10:1 ratio, and not just in action, but in value: If you want 100 visitors, send them 1,000 If you want $1000 in product sales, sell $10,000 of their products first If you want one testimonial, do ten different heroic acts of customer service worthy of a testimonial This isn’t about “You scratch my back, I’ll scratch yours.” It’s about generosity so overwhelming they can’t say no. Yes, it’s a lot of work, but that’s the price of influence. 6. Stand for something greater than yourself Imagine there are two homeless guys standing on a street corner. The first guy has a normal, run-of-the-mill sign saying, “Spare a few dollars? God bless you.” The second guy, on the other hand, has a much more unusual sign: “Can’t afford to feed my family, and it’s tearing me apart. Please help, so I can stop feeling like such an awful Dad.” Which one would you be more likely to help? The second one, right? Forget giving him a few bucks. With a sign like that, you’d take him to the grocery store and buy him $200 worth of groceries. I know I would. That’s the power of standing for something bigger than yourself. It makes people care. And it applies to everything: Instead of writing yet another how-to post, take a stand on an important issue, arguing with both passion and unassailable logic Instead of starting yet another me-too consulting business, create a movement, working tirelessly to change the lives of your customers Instead of selling yet another step-by-step manual, sell a philosophy, filled with heroic examples to inspire your customers Those are the types of things people want to talk about. They feel grateful just for having the chance to help you spread the word. 7. Be completely and utterly shameless You want to know what separates a great marketer from a mediocre one? Shamelessness. I’m not referring to a lack of conscience, having a gregarious, extroverted personality, or any of the other ways we traditionally look at marketers. For the most part, those stereotypes are myths. No, by shamelessness, I mean this: An unshakable belief that what you are doing is good for the world and the willingness to do anything to bring it into being. When you believe in your content, you don’t publish it and forget it. You promote it day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year, working tirelessly to spread the message to everyone who needs to hear it, and refusing to rest until they do. When you believe in your product, you don’t balk at sales. You revel in it. Not because you’re greedy or desperate or egotistical, but because you know your product will help them, and so it’s your duty to get them to buy. Whatever it takes. When you believe in your charity, you don’t beg for donations. You demand them. You grab people by the shoulders and look them in the eyes and tell them what you’re doing is changing the world, and it’s time for them to step up and do their part. It’s not about money. It’s not about glory. It’s not even about legacy. It’s about falling in love. It’s about being enchanted. It’s about seeing a vision so beautiful you can’t help but fight to make it real. Do you have a vision like that? Something worth getting up every day and fighting for? If you do, you can accomplish damn near anything. And if you don’t, well … What’s the point? Join our Copywriting Interest ListGet updates on new copywriting resources, and be the first to know when our Persuasive Copywriting 101 class opens again. SubscribePowered By ConvertKit About the Author: Jon Morrow is Associate Editor of Copyblogger. If you’d like to learn what it really takes to become a popular blogger, check out his free videos on guest blogging. TweetShareSharePin TweetShareSharePin filed under: Blog Psychology, Blogging, Collaboration, Content Marketing, Conversion, Copywriting, Creativity, Email Marketing, Entrepreneurship, Freelance Writing, Headlines, Internet Marketing, Keyword-Research, Landing Pages, List Building, Online Product Launches, Personal Branding, Persuasion, Productivity, Selling, SEO Copywriting, Social Media Marketing, Traffic Jonathan MorrowJon Morrow is the CEO of Smart Blogger, a company dedicated to teaching you how to blog, get paid to write, and make money online doing what you love. Reader InteractionsPrimary Sidebar Notice: JavaScript is required for this content. Fields marked with an * are required Want to understand the future of content marketing? Get our free email series, The Killer and the Poet: Email * If you are a human seeing this field, please leave it empty. Content Marketing and SEO Services from Copyblogger Get More Traffic You might also like: 5 Elements That Build a Roster of Terrific Freelance Writing Clients7 Copywriting Strategies the Great Copywriters Wish You KnewEmail Autoresponders: Meet the Lazy Marketer’s Best FriendEmbrace Bad Writing to Master Great WritingHow to Write a Blog Post Introduction That Grabs and Holds AttentionSee All Popular Posts → Previous article: How to Build a First-Class Email List in 30 Days — from Scratch Next article: How to Turn Yourself Into a Damn Fine Writer Reader Comments (99) Joel Libava says August 22, 2011 at 8:40 am Jon, Fantastic post. You (as usual) have inspired me to keep things going at a level that I know I need to. The trick for me is this; Writing posts that are a nice mix of showing my true passion for helping would-be franchise owners increase their odds of real success, while at the same time teaching these people that they don’t have to always drink my industry’s Kool-Aid. Again, great job, Jon. The Franchise King® Gregory C. says August 22, 2011 at 8:53 pm One of the best bloggers ever, he had a guest post on Problogger than won me over, and now I can’t wait for the next John Morrow post! Jared H says August 22, 2011 at 9:32 am Jon, I’ve never felt compelled to comment on copyblogger before but this post is magnificent. It has moved me in a way that a post never has. I am filinf this post under my keeper file. Thank you, and keep up the great work. Caroline Bottomley says August 22, 2011 at 10:40 am I feel like that about it too Denise says August 22, 2011 at 10:54 am Took the words right off my keyboard. Seriously. First time commenting on Copyblogger. This post started off like it was going to be a list of tricks and ending up way more meaningful. Loved it. Rob F. says August 22, 2011 at 9:07 pm Same here, Denise. I listen to the podcast semi-regularly, then came here and read this right as I’m thinking about blogging and / or starting my own business. A banquet for thought in one post. Thanks, Jon. Jon Morrow says August 22, 2011 at 11:05 am I’m honored. Fernando says September 4, 2011 at 6:27 pm Jon, you’ve totally inspired me too…especially with the part abot thinking for your customers, and the part about standing for something…I feel like changing and inspiring an industry, and you’ve helped me make the final decision to go ahead and do it! D. Brewer Fukuhara says August 22, 2011 at 12:35 pm Ditto. – Well done, Sir. Menachem Lifshitz says August 22, 2011 at 9:43 am Awesome Post! Also, I wan to add that influencing the “influencers” is also a great marketing tactic. Jon Morrow says August 22, 2011 at 11:08 am I agree. To a large extent, influencing the influencers is what my guest blogging class is about. Alvaro Friedenzohn says August 22, 2011 at 10:08 am When I was at DU I ad to read ” the power to persuade” . Many Years later I have realized that without persuation you get nowhere. Good post, I think people needs motivation now too. Judy Schramm says August 22, 2011 at 10:25 am Jon, this is brilliant. Influence is my favorite marketing book of all time, but you’ve taken it to the next level with specific to-do’s that anyone can act on. Love it! Jon Morrow says August 22, 2011 at 11:10 am It’s my favorite too. A close second is Breakthrough Advertising by Eugene Schwartz. Lorna Gibson says August 22, 2011 at 10:40 am Hi Jon, Quick question – does JV stand for joint venture? Just for all us newbies Cheers, Lorna Martyn Chamberlin says August 22, 2011 at 10:41 am Yes it does. Lorna Gibson says August 23, 2011 at 4:26 pm Thanks Martyn! Caroline Bottomley says August 22, 2011 at 10:40 am Very, very, very excellent. Encapsulates a lot of the very good advice you generally give. Thanks Jocelyn Y. Wilson says August 22, 2011 at 10:45 am Great post! So many useful tips Dries Cronje says August 22, 2011 at 10:52 am Thanks Jon! Wow. Awesome writing as usual. I really appreciate the advice. It can be daunting to get a new venture off the ground, but this should make it easier. It is practical and usable. Like all your advice russ says August 22, 2011 at 10:53 am Thanks Jon Glad I stuck with reading this to the end. Lots of high quality content I can and will use. ps Robert Cialdini reference is superb and I speak from everyday experience using the principles Jessica Flory says August 22, 2011 at 10:57 am Wow. Incredible post! Jon, you have motivated me to action. I especially liked the last point. I tend to doubt my writing and become nervous about promoting it, but I believe that I have valuable advice to give and that I can change the world with my writing! Kathleen says August 22, 2011 at 11:01 am Wow Jon. What a fabulous post! I felt energized and strong just reading it. Thanks so much. I think I needed that today. Ricardo Bueno says August 22, 2011 at 11:09 am Jon: I dig point #1. To be honest, as consumer’s we need a little direction. Tell us what you want us to do next. Give us a gentle nudge. Don’t overwhelm is with options, and a slew of other things to think about. Make it simple, period. Jim Ross says August 22, 2011 at 11:29 am I read many blogs, I never comment, but this is a very important blog post. Just amazing information good for you dotJenna says August 22, 2011 at 11:29 am Amazing! Fabulous! Incredible article!!! Thank you. Must devour later… hehehe Will share fo sho with my meager 20K network. THANKS! Andrea Vahl says August 22, 2011 at 11:38 am Jon, you’re posts always slap me across the face and shake me by the shoulders. I loved #7 and I’m going to tape it up on my wall. Thank you Joseph Putnam says August 22, 2011 at 11:38 am I’m a big fan of point number one. In order to get customer testimonials, I send a link to a three question survey. The response rate is very high, and I think it helps that people don’t have to write a testimonial from scratch. I like to do all of the thinking for them by asking three specifi… truncated (21,258 more characters in archive)