Interview With Ted Nicholas
Interview With Ted Nicholas
Michael Dunlop I understand you got into your first business at just 21 years of age
and nearly 100 grand in debt. Your first business was a fudge shop, and I love the
story of how your shop became a success. Can you share with us some of this story
and what you learned from your first business?
Ted Nicholas: Oh, I’d be happy to. Well first of all, I always wanted to be in my own
business, as I’m sure a lot people listening to this interview have in their hearts. The
heart of an entrepreneur has to be there for a quite awhile before it actually takes
root, I would think.
That was certainly the case with me. I always wanted to be in my own business. I
grew up in a small family business. I learned how, among other things, to make
candy, because in my father’s restaurant, he also had a candy and ice cream shop. I
was always intrigued with the process of confectionery manufacturing and ice cream
manufacturing. So, I started my own business.
But I had just one obstacle that most entrepreneurs have. I didn’t have any money.
Basically, I had $800 in savings. In order to start the business, I needed about
$100,000.00 So, I basically put together a plan to develop $100,000.00 without
starting from scratch.
Basically what I did was convince a real estate owner of property that I could buy his
property for no money down. And I remember my payment was $308.74 a month on
a 20-year mortgage. So, I bought the property. And I bought equipment on the basis
that I would like to buy this equipment from confectionery manufacturers, and if I’m
successful, I’ll pay for it. If I’m not, I’ll return the used equipment. Well, you can
imagine what some of the people told me when I made that proposition.
But fortunately, one company by the name of WC Smith in Philadelphia went along
with me and put equipment in my place. Then with raw materials, I went through the
same sort of thing. By the day that I opened, I was actually $96, 000 in debt, and I
thought this is great. I have this shop. It was actually a “see candy made” sort of a
fudge shop called Peterson’s House of Fudge. But I had one problem, no customers
and no money for promotion to gain customers.
So, I didn’t know exactly what to do. But I was reading the paper one morning, and I
saw that there was a young woman who won a national skating – it happened to be
roller skating – and she was training in a rink about a mile or so away from my shop.
So I went to see her.
I thought there are just a couple of things that turn people on… See, I had this
roadside location where 25, 000 cars passed my property every day. The only
problem was nobody was stopping, and three people had previously gone bankrupt
in the location where I was. So, it wasn’t exactly a hot property.
But I wanted to figure out a way to get people stop, and I thought there are two things
that turn people on: women and cars. Because, most of the drivers driving by were
male drivers. A lot of times male drivers are more turned on by cars than they
are by women, but I thought a certain percentage would be excited if I had an
attractive woman outside my shop stirring a kettle of fudge.
So, I convinced this young woman that she’d start working for me that following
Saturday. I’d build a platform. We’d put a copper kettle outside. And she would stand
there in a rather brief outfit with a big chef’s cap, stirring this big kettle of fudge. And
when she did that, we had an absolute traffic jam, because the people wanted
to know what the heck’s going on this attractive woman stirring this fudge.
A local newspaper came out and did an article on my business. I told the newspaper
reporter that I wanted to create a whole chain of stores eventually; that was my
dream. The guy thought that was pretty funny, because there I was without any
money, with my first shop, with this girl stirring the fudge.
But one thing lead to another, and the business became enormously successful.
Several things so happened that affected the rest of my career. Because I noticed
that when I changed the sign – I had some signs like 15 miles away from my shop,
14 miles away, 12 miles away, and they would say basically: “Go to Peterson’s
House of Fudge”. And when I changed a few words on the sign more or less people
stopped, depending on what I had on the sign.
I thought that was fascinating, and then I put certain words like “free samples” on
the sign. I put on “see candy made” and certain key words like “perfect Sunday ride
destination for the family.” When I put on these words on the sign, my business just
started to thrive more and more and more. So, I became intrigued with the power of
words. I thought gee, words. I could just put words on signs, and I’d get people to
stop at my shop. What a marvelous thing.
And then a second thing happened. I created a catalog for all my candy products. I
had 77 flavors of fudge plus about 100 other products that I was marketing, selling
and manufacturing there. I would put this catalog inside the shopping bag when
people bought whatever they bought. Or even if they bought ice cream, I’d put in this
catalog. And I got a large response from the catalog. People would go home and
they would start ordering my confectionery products.
Well a couple of months later, I created a new catalog. Same products, different
copy, and I noticed that I had different results on each one of the products that I’d
described. So I thought: Why don’t people talk about this? Because if you change the
words, you’re going to change the response
because with the proper words, you can really create business.
So, another very instrumental thing to me at that time was I would write letters to the
editor. And when I got my letters in newspapers and magazines – local papers,
national papers, national magazines – when I got my letters and articles that I had
written published, I thought this is just so great. If I could ever figure out a way how to
make a living writing words, I’m going to do it. It would be such a pleasure for me to
do, and I kind of filed that. This was at age 21.
By the time I was 30, 29 actually, I had 30 shops of my own. I was invited to the
White House as one of the two outstanding small businessmen in America and
invited to meet the president at that time. I’d never even been to the White House
as a tourist. It was a great experience.
I thought the best-kept secret in America, and in the United Kingdom, and in Europe,
is that entrepreneurs have no money and they can’t raise any money. I thought if I
could make it cheaper, easier, and quicker for people to set up a company, I would
be doing a real service for people.
So, I set up this little business. Well basically, I took my book then to nine publishers,
they all turned me down. I said, look I have got this idea. I am going to revolutionize
incorporating in America. They thought, yeah, sure you are. They all turned me
down. Of course their lawyer, the legal departments in all these publishing
companies, they didn’t like the idea at all, of having a book with the tear-out forms
right in the book, to form a company. So I basically set up my publishing company in
the corner of my house, called Enterprise Publishing.
When I started that company, I wrote my first classified ad and ran it in the Wall
Street Journal. It cost me ninety dollars. I ran this ad. I sent out my first sales letter in
1973 and I got back in close to five hundred dollars worth of sales.
I thought, this is fantastic. Ninety dollar ad, five hundred dollars worth of sales, I will
just run that ad in every newspaper and magazine that I can in America and in
Europe as well, and I will make a fortune. Besides that, the people are sending me
cash with their orders.
In many cases they would send a twenty dollar bill with cash to buy the book, and I
am just going to create a great business. Within six months the postman was
bringing bags full of orders to my door. Remember I was still operating out of my
house, in this little suburban house that I lived in at the time.
I was getting in, at that time, I was spending about fifty thousand U.S. dollars a month
on ads. Mind you, I started with ninety dollars. I am now spending, six months later,
fifty thousand dollars in ads, but I was getting back in two hundred thousand dollars
in orders.
Well, this business just started growing and growing and growing, and pretty soon I
had people sending me their books and manuscripts in order to publish their books
and manuscripts. They figured, I must be the worlds largest publisher because I
am running, by that time, I was running full-page ads, whereas my competitive
publishers never ran an ad in their lives.
Most publishers are good at distributing books but they are very bad at marketing
books. So I devoted all my energy on marketing the book, because you can easily
get people to print the book, the problem is marketing the book and selling the book,
as it is with virtually any product.
Your problem is not creating the product. The problem is always marketing the
product. That is what I devoted my time since 1973 until now, in how to market my
products and products of my hundreds – I have got hundreds of people who are my
mentoring clients, on how they can market their products.
If you have got an Internet business, or for that matter, a non-Internet business, a
business that does business offline, or if you have a retail shop, your problem is not
opening the shop, your problem is not manufacturing the goods, you can always get
people to do that.
The problem is getting people into your shop and getting people to
buy your products, and that is what I became focused on, and a
specialist in. That is what I have been doing ever since. That is kind of
a longer answer then you were looking for, but a kind of a complete
answer as to how I began in the business.
Michael Dunlop: That was an incredible answer and exactly what I wanted to hear.
Anyone listening to this can apply something of what you said to their business. That
was great. So right now, and in your past, you have been a successful international
speaker, an author, marketing consultant, and one of the most successfully, highest
paid copywriters in the world. When you started out, who was your mentor and who
inspired you?
Ted Nicholas: That is a darn good question. I was looking for mentors because
everybody does better when they have a mentor. When I started I didn’t know
anybody. There wasn’t anybody that was teaching marketing, teaching copywriting,
that I knew about and that I had any respect for. Well perhaps, there were a couple of
university professors that I had gone to their seminars. To be very honest, I have
nothing against university professors, I love them when they are good.
Professors when they are teaching marketing, when they have never spent a dime
on their own on marketing their own products, and they are making statements that
are just erroneous. I remember I went to one and he was saying, “Never have a
question mark in a headline.”
I am thinking, I have made millions with headlines that have question marks,
and this poor audience, is listening to this professor tell them not to have a
headline with a question mark in it. So I didn’t know any mentor. The closest I
came to mentors is some really great books.
Books have been my friend ever since I started my adult life, really and my marketing
career, my business career. So I read books by John Caples, and by Robert
Collier, and by David Ogilvy, three names. Russ Arrives, and these people inspired
me so much because while the books are written perhaps forty or fifty years prior to
my career start, they had more information, more knowledge, then any of the current
books at that time that existed on the market. I became very intrigued.
So, my best mentors were really authors of books. In fact, every since then, I think
the two best ways to learn in life, of course, I have written 15 best selling books so
admittedly I have a bias that is part of my profession. But basically, I think the two
best ways to learn are in reading books and traveling. I like to do a lot of both
because it is a terrific way of arming yourself. So, that is as close as I came to
mentors.
Michael I know you have got some incredible stats throughout your business. Do you
want to share with us some of the stats on your achievements, Ted? For example,
What have you spent on testing marketing and how much have you made in
revenue?
Ted: Oh, well I have spent at least a hundred million dollars on tests, which is
probably a conservative figure. The only way I really could learn anything, and the
way that I did it, was through a lot of trial and error. This is what I tried to save my
readers and entrepreneurs now. Trial and error is a very good way to learn, but it is a
slow way and it is an expensive way.
What I do now with clients and with attendees at my seminars, and with readers, is
try as much as I can to shortcut the process so they don’t have to spend twenty-five,
thirty, thirty-five years learning, because if they did trial and error for twenty-five, or
thirty, thirty-five years, they could learn as much, possibly more, then I have learned.
I thought if I could shortcut the process, it would be great. So, I have done a lot of…
In fact you could say that out of, I have sold nearly seven billion dollars worth of
products and services with my own ads, for my own products and also for clients.
And virtually every time I run an ad, I’m also running a test. And so virtually I’m
testing and testing all the time, because I’m testing my most frequent…
The thing that I do more frequently is test headlines, because headlines are
responsible for arguably about 73% of the success of any ad, be it online or offline.
And most copywriters and most entrepreneurs will spend most of their time on the
body copy, and almost no time on a headline. And I did the reserve.
For example, if I’m running an ad campaign for a product, I’ll write 250 headlines
before I choose. Your headline has to be a killer, and when it is you have a chance
that people are going to read your copy. And then each word in the copy has to be
very persuasive, very good. So this is the way I look at it.
Michael Can you share with us some of the most successful headlines and explain
why they worked?
Ted: Oh, sure. Well, one thing that comes to mind immediately is one of my clients –
his name is Bill Fisher – came to me with a failed book. And in fact the title of the
book, I re-titled it, is now called, “How to Fight Cancer and Win.” Book titles, by the
way, are headlines for books.
The product name – anybody listening to me today, I want you to understand that
your product name is crucially important because that’s in effect like a headline for
your product. And your book title is crucially important, if you happen to be an
author or someone who is marketing booking and information, you’re title is
very important.
What a lot of copywriters don’t do, they don’t do their homework. I read the book very
carefully before I decided I was going to get involved in marketing the book. I read it
very carefully. And on page 117, I think it was, I found what turned out to be my
headline because on that page, it’s quoted as how she found the combination of
these two natural foods.
I thought, when I read that in the book, I thought, “That’s my headline, ” because then
I wrote this headline down on my 3×5 card. I use 3×5 cards as I’m going through the
book writing down benefits. The headline that I came up with was, “How to prevent
and even cure cancer with these two natural foods.” The sub-headline said
something like, “Seven time Nobel prize winning doctor shows.” Why did I have that
in the sub-headline? Because I have to build credibility, because you make a
statement like that in a headline…
Here’s another thing that I found out, another secret of marketing. A headline not
only has to be absolutely true, it has to seem absolutely true, because if you
just have a headline that is true but unbelievable, nobody will read the rest of
the copy because of what I call a BS detector. All of us read copy. If it sounds
false, you don’t continue reading it. And so I had that sub-headline to establish the
credibility of this seven-time Nobel doctor, who would not make a statement like that
without having a scientific basis for it.
That’s an example of a headline and how I came about getting the headline. Another
example is, “The Ultimate Tax Shelter” and this is from my book “How to Form your
Own Corporation Without a Lawyer for Under $75.” Interestingly, there’s not a word
in the book about how a corporation could be a tax shelter for you, but it’s what I call
a hidden benefit for a reader of the book because one of the reasons people set up
corporations for themselves is to legally reduce their taxes.
That headline is so powerful, just four words, that that’s been ripped off by more
people, because I’ve sent more cease and desist letters. See, when people rip off my
copy, I send a cease and desist letter. And 95% of the time, they stop using the copy.
And the 5% of the time they don’t, I simply sue them for taking my intellectual
property and trying to make money with my own ideas.
So basically, those are just a couple of examples. I could give you hundreds more,
but those are just a couple of examples. When you write a great headline, you can
run it forever. You can run it forever, because the same things that motivated people
the first time, 10 years later, 20 years later because the same principles apply.
Michael Do you have a formula or specific strategy you use for creating headlines
you can share with us?
One of the ones that I like best, whenever I can use it, is what I call the testimonial
headline. If you’re really good at what you’re doing, and your product – people love it
– you’re going to get a lot of letters, unsolicited about how people love your product,
love using your product, benefited from your product. And very often, those letters
that you get about your product are terrific fuel to create headlines with.
And so very often, when I get a letter from the mind and heart of a reader, or
somebody who has bought one of my products, or for that matter who has bought
one of the products of my clients that I write copy for…Very often my clients have
drawers full of letters, for example, and they don’t use them because they don’t
realize how powerful testimonials are.
So one of the great things is to use testimonials as the basis of your headline,
because you can create a headline written in such a way that it doesn’t sound like a
headline. For example, one of the letters that I got that I used: I created a multimillion
dollar campaign for a company that I write copy with. Actually, I own 20% of the
company. It’s a company called Green Power, headquartered in the Netherlands. It’s
a nutritional company.
And one of the readers sent a letter to the founder of the company, whose name
happens to be Dr. Reinhard Hittich. Here’s the letter basically. Again, I don’t have it
right in front of me, but here’s the gist of it. It said, “Dr. Hittich, my father and
grandfather both died of heart attacks before age 50. And I’m age 48, and I’m scared
to death of dieing of a heart attack myself. Can you help me?”
Well, when I saw that letter, I thought, “That’s a letter from the heart of the
reader.” Now, would an advertising agency, Michael, ever write a headline like
that? What do you think?
Michael: No.
Ted: Absolutely not. But I used that basically as the headline for this multi-page sales
letter, quoting this reader, which is one great way to create a headline. Just to give
you and particularly your audience of subscribers and listeners and viewers one of
the ways to do it.
The other thing that I use a lot of, in fact when I run out of headline ideas, I simply
start with the words “how to”. How to write better copy? How to write stronger
headlines? I mean, whatever the subject it is that you want to market, starting with
the words “how to” is always a very, very powerful way. So, it’s one of the ways that I
use to write headline.
Another tip that I’d like to give to the readers is I’ve noticed over the years that
fear of loss attracts a lot more people to reading the copy than hope of
reward. See when I first began, I thought hope of reward is much more positive,
much more powerful. And I’m attracted by hope of reward personally.
Another tip that I’d like to give to the readers is I’ve noticed over the
years that fear of loss attracts a lot more people to reading the copy
than hope of reward.
I’m also attracted by and intrigued by fear of loss because I don’t want to lose, but I
found I don’t want to lose money, time, assets and other things. But I’ve noticed over
the years when I have written headlines with hope of reward and fear of loss, the fear
of loss wants to out-pull.
For example, one headline that had sold millions of dollars worth of products,
information products says, “How to avoid losing your home, your cash, your cars, the
education fund for your children – how to avoid losing them in a lawsuit, how to avoid
losing those assets in a lawsuit?”
And using that headline helped me sell lots of products by making yourself judgment
proof. So, those are just a few quick tips on what you can do and how some of the
structures I use to write headlines and some of the basis that I use to write headlines.
Michael: Ted that was an incredible share. That’s something I will even apply more
to my businesses. That was great.
Ted: I’m sure you can Michael; you will get a lot of more interest in your services
using those tips.
You have lots of experience in direct mail, how does this differ or even if it
does differ from writing sales copy for your website?
Ted: It doesn’t differ, it’s more like than it is different, doesn’t differ very much. The
only thing I do differently on the website and on emails is I give the reader the
prospective chance to go to the order form earlier than I do in a sales letter, because
in a sales letter when you have a letter and if someone’s opened the envelope, it’s
kind of easier to guide the prospect to the end of the letter, through the copy than it is
when you have the copy and the electronic version of the copy.
So in the early stage of the letter, I say something like “If you are ready to go to the
order form click here.” So that it enables the impatient reader to go to the order
form earlier than it does in something that’s sent through the mail. But the basic
concept of the headlines, the intriguing copy, the story, the personality that you have
to have in your copy, you have to have a good persona in the copy.
I just finished a critique from one of my mentoring members just a couple of hours
ago and the letter sounds like – mind you, the mentoring member is paying me a
small amount of money per month. We have a mentoring program that we have a
special at only $47 per month. People can get my personal attention up to one
time a month to critique their letters and so on.
And it creates its value probably on the Internet. And the guy writes this letter and he
sounds in the letter like he is giving a college lecture and I said basically in my reply
to him, my member, I said “Dear, are you ready for some tough love? Because what I
gave a lot of is tough love, because I love my member, I want to help them as much
as I can. And of course all the members are ready for tough love, that’s what they
want from me.
So, I basically tell them about how he can create his own persona that is much
different, in other words I want him to sound more like he is having a conversation at
the bar over a beer or over a mixed drink if he likes than he is giving a college
lecture. See a lot of people when they write copy, they say to themselves “I’m going
to sit down and write copy. I have to sound like a college…”
They don’t say it is exactly, but I have to sound very learned, so they sound like
college professors and people don’t like to be talked at like a college professor will
often do. They want to be talked with; they want somebody who understands
them, who knows what keeps them awake at night, who talks the same
language, who is very informal.
So, I teach my mentees the concept of being as casual and informal using short
words, using easy to understand copy. And this is what people really respond to and
being a lot more emotional with their copy than they normally are. Now, as I’m sure
you are aware, it takes a lot more courage to be emotional in copy than it does to be
intellectual in copy.
In other words, I teach right brain copywriting which works. Left brain copy-writing
gets you an “A” in English, but an “F” in marketing. I teach right brain copy which
might get you a “D” in English, but an “A” in marketing. Because people are not
responding to the grammar, they are responding to the emotional content of the
copy. So, does that answer your question?
Ted: Well, first of all, life is too short to get involved in anything that you don’t love
and have passion for. They are your number one because you are going to find soon
that those long hours that you – I don’t believe in workaholism, but if you are starting
a business and selling products, there are going to be times when you are going to
work long days and long hours.
And if you don’t have that passion for that business to fuel your energy, you are
going to run out of energy and it’s going to show in your copy, in your marketing and
your whole approach to the business. So, you need to have passion for the product,
plus when you have passion for the product or service, you are going to be more
inclined to want to study, want to learn, want to keep educating yourself about that.
For example, I do a lot of work in the nutritional area. I get up in the morning; I
take 72 vitamins and minerals every morning. I lift weights three days a week. I
play tournament tennis. I keep myself in shape. Why? A) Because I know that it
is good for me, but B) Because I love it, I love to be in shape, I love to do all
that.
So, that when I’m writing copy about nutrition and exercise, that’s where I’m starting
from. I have the passion for it. I love it. And I’m willing to read these dull and boring
research results about nutritional products and vitamins and minerals and how they
effect on a human body because I’m curious about it.
I want to know is there anything I can do to improve my own health because you can
always do a little – now they used to say when I first started 30-some years ago
writing copy for the nutritional area, it used to be like 80% was genetic. Now they are
talking about 15 to 20 percentage genetic, 80% is lifestyle.
So, it’s your lifestyle and what you read and what you drink. So you’ve got to have
that passion. And if you don’t have it, get out. My advice to you is to just simply get
out of it. I’ve given that advice to some of my mentees that tell me, “Well, look Ted,
I’m thinking about going into this business or this business.” I say, “Listen, which one
do you have the most interest in?”
“Oh, I’m more interested in this one.” Well, that’s the business, because there’s no
one business that’s perfect for everybody. The best business for you, anybody
listening to us today, is the one that you love the most, that you’re passionate about.
And you’re going to do a better job, and you’re going to write better copy, and your
marketing is going to be more inspired. This is the direction you want to go. Critical.
Michael: Brilliant, brilliant. Top advice for everybody out there; how people want to
take this and do something they want to do and not just to make money.
Ted: Yeah, that’s right. Money is a byproduct. Money is OK, but it’s a byproduct. It
comes after. I think one good formula is: find something you love and have passion
for, and the money will follow, assuming you’re not in some field where there’s
absolutely no market for it.
I mean, obviously, if you have a lot of passion and there’s no market for a particular
product or service, you’re not going to be able to make a lot of money. But if there’s a
market for it, and you have passion for it, and you become good at it and you
understand it, and you can differentiate yourself from all other people that are
marketing similar products, you’re going to be successful.
Michael: Brilliant, brilliant. I was actually going to say something along those lines
myself, so that’s top advice.
So as you mentioned earlier in the interview, you spent nearly $100 million,
even more, on advertising over the years. And, what sort of top tips for getting
advertising cheaper – because obviously the cheaper the better?
Ted: Yes, well, I have a whole segment that I teach at my longer seminars, where
basically you get advertising at up to 80% discount. But basically, I can just tell you
particularly these days, if you’re talking in print media, print media is having a lot of
problems now. It’s no secret. You read the financial papers, and magazines and
newspapers are having difficulty competing with the electronic Internet media, all
that’s happening on the Internet.
So you can make really good deals. So just a few quick tips. When you are looking at
potentially advertising in a print media of any kind, be it a newspaper or a magazine,
assume that you’re going to be able to get a good deal on the advertising in that
publication. And assume that what is called the rate card, or the rates that the
magazine or newspaper quotes, are simply a wish list on the part of the magazine or
newspaper.
See, when the magazines or newspapers deal with big companies and their
advertising agencies, they love to spend money. But entrepreneurs like you and me
and the listeners today want to get as much advertising as possible for the lowest
amount of money.
So all of the sudden, you have a different power, different motivation for your
advertising purchase, than let’s say an advertising agency does. So you’ve got to
make it clear, that when you’re talking to a magazine that you are looking for a very
good test rate for your advertising.
And basically, simply by asking questions of that publication, assuming that it’s right
for you, assuming that it is to your audience and to your market, assuming that it has
other ads in it – because a magazine without any ads in it, you want to avoid like the
plague. Because if it doesn’t have any ads in it, it means it’s not a good direct
response medium. But if it has direct response ads in it, that’s a good sign.
Assume that you can get a good deal if you just simply ask questions. Simple
questions to ask are, “What’s the best deal you can give me to test your publication,
Mr. Advertising Owner? Because if our ad works in your publication, we’re going to
run it on a regular basis and we’ll be a regular advertiser.” And of course, the larger
your ad, the better deal you’ll be able to make.
Particularly, if you’re a full page advertiser, you’re going to be able to make a really
good deal because the best deals come from those that buy full page space in a
magazine or newspaper. Full page in a magazine, or quarter page in a newspaper.
What are your top tips for getting people to take action, and actually buy
something from you?
Ted: What you’ve got to do to get people to take action, no matter what you are
selling, no matter what market you are in, no matter what media you are using –
people have to feel they are buying dollars for pennies. By that I mean you’ve got to
make your deal so attractive that the person would rather have what you’re offering
than they would to keep the money they have in their pocket. If you want a challenge,
that’s it.
Because people that have never sold anything by direct marketing think it’s easy.
You just write this beautiful letter, with flowery language, with a great headline, and
people just reach in their pockets and send you checks for hundreds of thousands of
dollars. If it were that easy, there’d be a lot more millionaires then there are. The
ones that are millionaires have realized – and a lot of them are my students – you’ve
got to sell dollars for pennies.
One way to do that is with great copy. You’ve got to have great headlines, great sub-
headlines, great body copy, and a great offer. What I mean by a great offer is this:
You’ve got to have, these days, at least three and usually five or six free bonuses
that are worth more, actually worth more than the value of the total deal that you are
selling. That’s what I mean selling dollars for pennies.
Let’s say you’re selling a $100 deal of any kind, whatever it is, some widget for $100.
If you have free bonuses worth $149 or $198 or $197, and you’re selling for $97, the
whole deal, the deal then becomes… But this is where your copy has to be strong:
You’ve got to convince your prospect that you’re selling dollars for pennies.
People do not want to send you $100 and get a dollar’s worth of value. Then you are
selling pennies for dollars, and if you’re selling pennies for dollars you’re going to go
bankrupt. It’s only a question of time. The only way you’re going to avoid bankruptcy
is sell dollars for pennies. When you are sitting down and writing copy, I’m not just
sitting down and writing copy that’s powerful. How can I make a deal that’s so
attractive that the person can’t help but order the deals?
Now, if people don’t know you, people have no knowledge of you, you have no
reputation, you’re a complete stranger to them, there’s a bigger challenge to get
somebody to part with their money. One way to do it is you sell dollars for pennies.
“Look, I’m willing to take the risk on this offer. Not you. You don’t have to take any
risk. I’ll take all the risk. I’ll send you the product, and you try it for a month.
You send me no money; I’ll send you the product. At the end of a 30 day period, if
you aren’t thrilled with the product, simply send it back and you’ll owe me nothing. I
didn’t charge you anything; you’ll still owe me nothing. If you love the product and
wouldn’t part with it for anything, I’ll bill you $97 for that product.”
See, you’re selling dollars for pennies, and you’re just reducing the risk to nothing.
This is one way to get a lot of sales from people who are complete strangers to you.
Another way that we use to do it a lot offline – and some of my clients still do it
because they follow my earlier models – is, look, send us your check or money order
or credit card information to buy this product. We won’t cash your check or money
order or charge your credit card for a 30 day period.
You have to be thrilled and satisfied with the product. At the end of 30 days, we’ll
deposit your check in the bank or we’ll charge your credit card. And if you’re not
satisfied with the product, just simply send it back and you’ll owe nothing and the
matter’s closed. What could be fairer than that? Is that a good deal or not, Michael?
What do you think?
Ted: Great deal. So anybody listening today, we’re in what a lot of people think are
tough times. I noticed that with my clients, some are making more money than they
ever have. My business is booming because people need more marketing help than
they ever did in so-called tough times than they do in regular times.
But there are some businesses that are being affected these days by the economy.
One way to get sales is to do these dramatic and radical things to get sales, because
you have to convince the person.
Some people say to me, “But Ted, a lot of people may send back the product.” Well,
if you don’t believe in the product enough to let people try it before they pay for it,
improve the product. Spend your time improving the product. If your product is so
weak and so flimsy and so lousy that you’re unwilling to do that, you ought to close
your shop anyway. You’re in the wrong business.
The only way that you’re going to stay in business is a good established product
you’re proud of. Plus, will you sleep better at night if you know your product is just
second to none – fantastic. This is what I teach my people to do. The easiest thing, in
a way, is improve your product.
The hardest thing is to get customers to buy the product. So spend your time mostly
in getting people to buy the product, and partly in improving the product so that it’s so
darn good, nobody would ever want to return it if they’re in their right mind. Now,
that’s how you want to look at your business.
Michael So, you spoke at Yanik Silver’s Underground Seminar. You actually spoke
at two of his events, but the first time I saw you was in London. I see you talk on
videos, and you just have so much energy and presence about you. What is your
secret for this? How do you keep that energy level up?
Ted: Well, that’s a good question. I’ve never been asked that exactly, but that’s a
great question. I like that, Michael.
Well, basically, I love what I do, so I have passion for what I do. I’m also committed,
personally, to help as many entrepreneurs to succeed in this world as I possibly can.
I have a figure in my mind of two million minimum.
Now, I’m working on a plan to help young entrepreneurs that are below age 21, that I
haven’t focused on. Most of my readers and clients, let’s say, are over 20, 21. I like
the idea of helping teen-aged entrepreneurs, because when I was a teenager I would
have liked it if a Ted Nicholas type of teacher was in my life.
I love what I do, so I have passion for what I do. I’m also committed,
personally, to help as many entrepreneurs to succeed in this world as
I possibly can. I have a figure in my mind of two million minimum.
They’re the hardest people to control because they think for themselves.
Governments have a harder time controlling entrepreneurs. In other words, free
society has more entrepreneurs than an un-free society. Even un-free societies
need some entrepreneurs, but they have to black marketeers.
I like the idea of just helping people being free, being successful, being
entrepreneurs, and it just turns me on. I love doing it. And don’t tell anybody, Michael,
but I would even do it for free.
But I have found out when I do it for free – when I first started I did it for free because
I sold out for more money than I could ever spend in 1991. But I found out when you
don’t charge people for your services…
Ted: …even a small amount, they don’t value it. I was helping my friends build
successful businesses and they weren’t valuing. So I thought, I’m going to have a
seminar, and I’m going to charge more money than anybody charges in the US,
because those people are going to value what I say at the seminar.
I had the Olympic champions of business at my first seminar in Florida. I found out
that people will value when you charge them an appropriate amount. In other words,
all my seminars have a money back guarantee. You come to the seminar; if you’re
not thrilled with the results the first day of that seminar, we’re happy to give your
money back. We don’t want you in the seminar.
If we’re not delivering value, we don’t want you in the seminar. But people tell me, in
one day they get more value – it’s very flattering – than they’ve ever gotten at any
other seminar than they ever have, the whole length of the seminar, the whole time of
the seminar.
It turns me on. Again, this is a little longer answer then you were probably looking for
or probably expected, but this is what keeps me going, keeps me excited. And I’m
just excited about what I’m doing. I can’t wait for my next seminar.
Michael: Oh, I’ve heard you speak twice and it was incredible. I think the first time
you spoke was for about four hours. It was only expected to be 45 minutes, and not
one person left the room I think. It was like 9:00 or 10:00 at night when you finished.
It was incredible. OK Ted, where you can people find out more about you and
your services?
Also, I have several home study courses, and as I mentioned before briefly during
the interview, you could become a mentoring member. I’m going to be cutting this off
very soon. But basically I have a $97 a month program that now you can still get in at
$47 per month. $47 per month. You have access to me personally, where people
have paid me as much as $120, 000 a year minimum, you have access to me as a
member to run by your copy, get better ideas on headlines, better ideas on structure.
You get $680 some dollars… Again, I don’t have this in front of me. Over $600 worth
of free bonuses if you join that mentoring program. If you’re not thrilled with it, you
can cancel it at any time.