https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jOi6KRGGatQ&feature=youtu.be
Part 34 in a 35 part series on headlines from John Caples book, Tested Advertising Methods.
Amazon-Proof Your Business https://brianjpombo.com/amazonbook/
Transcription
Do you use questions in your headlines?
Hi I'm Brian Pombo, welcome back to Brian J. Pombo Live.
And I'm giving away the topic today, because we're talking about headlines once again, this is the 34th out of 35 proven formulas for writing headlines, written by John Caples. In his book Tested Advertising Methods, and we're we've gone through all of them, except for to the last two.
So this is the first of the last two tonight is number 34. These are formulas you can use for writing headlines. And honestly, I have I don't have one of these that I have followed more often than this one. Okay, this is my favorite, because it's simple. And it does a very fancy trick in it. And that's all. All it says is number 34.
Have your headline, ask a question.
That's it.
That's all you got to do.
Have your headline ask a question. That's if you have to do that.
There's something that happens in the mind. If there's a question being asked, a person has to read it, and they have to consider it more than just a statement.
Any headline can be a statement. But when you're asking a question, it causes the person to have to consider it to some extent.
Now, it may not be something that they understand. And so they can gloss over it and move on. Just like a lot of people won't click on this video or this podcast episode or this blog post. Because it talks about headlines.
They're like oh, headlines, whatever, and they move on. But what it is attracting is it's going to attract a person who wants to know more about headlines. Okay, they are going to click on this and you might be one of those people. That's why you're watching or listening or reading this is because you're interested in oh well, what's he mean by that?
You know, if nothing else, it doesn't mean they have an answer for that question. What matters is that they hear the question, and they consider what the idea is behind the question.
That causes interaction, that interaction leads to the next step. If you go back and you look at all the different videos that I've put out all the different podcast episodes from this particular show, which is made to be clicked on, it's made to attract new people. They're almost all questions.
That that is the is the thing that I always fall back on, is using a question, because a question causes curiosity, a question causes a person to go wonder what that means. It just pulls in people like nobody's business.
So if all else fails, if you use this one headline formula for writing your titles, for writing your email, subject lines, for whatever, if you're looking to pull people in, ask a question. It's just that simple. And I could give you some of the some of the examples he has here.
What good are frequent flyer programs if the miles take off before you do?
Would you believe the milk jug on the right is 45% lighter?
Would you ever run out of trees for a forest product company?
Did you know you can give your dog perfect nutrition?
You see, some are better, some are worse. But a question will always cause you to stop an...