Attract More Buyers to your Product: Use Metaphors

Oct 19
21:00

2002

Judy Cullins

Judy Cullins

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Surprise your ... buyers. Give them ... ... After we entered school we had a lot to learn. We left the sand box, the nap, and the all day playing with our ... No wonder we h

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Surprise your potential buyers. Give them chocolate frosting!

After we entered school we had a lot to learn. We left the sand
box,Attract More Buyers to your Product: Use Metaphors Articles the nap, and the all day playing with our imagination. No
wonder we have lost touch with our original, playful, creativity.
We are in the information age, expecting to read short, concise
pieces. Yet, we can, if we play a little, add more of our original
ideas to our books if we use metaphor.

Metaphor means wedding a word to an image, sound or feeling.
Metaphor is a fusing of dissimilar entities into one new image.
Metaphor asserts a likeness between two unlike things. Images
are word pictures that give language power and richness by
involving our senses in the experience. When you wed an image
or feeling to something totally unexpected, you produce a new
pattern--a metaphor that creates a powerful picture.

The purpose of metaphor is to intensify your awareness of the
images around you. Clichés are worn out metaphors. Avoid
platitudes because your reader will be bored with them and not
read on. Write naturally and avoid pompous words like "utilize."

Metaphors create tension and excitement by producing new
connections. Hence, they reveal a truth about the world we
previously didn't recognize. The power of metaphor is to surprise
us.... Marilyn Ferguson, author of The Aquarian Conspiracy,
says, "Metaphor builds a bridge between the hemispheres,
symbolically carrying knowledge from the mute right brain so it
can be recognized by the left as being like something already
known."

When your potential customers glance (about 12 seconds) at
your front cover and back cover, and see originality there
through metaphor, they will gain insight that sheds new light on a
familiar concept, idea, event or feeling. Your metaphors hook
them and seduce them. Now, they will hand you their check or
credit card feeling good about themselves for the decision.

Fieldwork:

1. Start a Metaphor List. Keep it filed where you can find it
easily and add to it.
Every time you hear a good one, write it down. Use other
people's metaphors as a springboard for you own.

2. Play with these exercises:

Practice: Writing is...as painful as a tooth being pulled... riding a
roller coaster... a self-revelation. Now try your title or part of
your "tell and sell" (unique selling proposition which includes
benefits), and back cover copy. Self-care is...a bubble bath in
the middle of a workday... breathing in the mountain air... lighting
a candle near my workstation.

3. Complete these metaphor starters: Remember to use concrete

words--of image, sound and feeling. Forgo all clichés.
I'm as silly as
I'm as frazzled as
I'm as happy as (no clams, please)
I'm as frayed as
I'm as dizzy as
I'm as low as
I'm as powerful as a
I'm as sleepy as
I'm as tired as
I'm as cold/hot as
I'm as energetic as
I'm as spiritual as
I'm as comfortable as
I'm as loose as

Expand the list using the subjects of your book. Think and
picture your audience as you create more powerful writing.

4. Re-define all general benefits in your introduction, "tell and
sell," or sales letter.

Example:

-Life is...
-Life looks like...
-Life feels like...

Try these out:

-Stress is...
-Authentic is...
-Health is...
-Spiritual is...
-Marketing is...
-Promotion is...
-Profits are...
-More life is...
-Better Communication is...
-More money is...

Let your potential buyer see or feel how it is after they purchase
your product or use your service. Then, they are more
comfortable with buying. They need to see the results and feel
themselves better for using your product.

5. Just for fun:

"I was as dizzy as a dervish, as weak as a worn-out washer, as
low as a badger's belly, as timid as a titmouse, and as unlikely to
succeed as a ballet dancer with a wooden leg."

Each of you has the powerful potential for making connections
and seeing relationships in your own unique way. Metaphor
making is a highly personal and richly creative experience. Play
with metaphors and use them in all of your sales materials.

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