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Marketing Research: Individual Words
by James D. Brausch
http://www.QuitThatJob.com
We all know that phrases like "Who else wants to know" in a headline can improve
our sales. Have you ever thought about the individual words and their impact on
your profitability?
I recently performed a statistical analysis on several thousand ads while
looking at individual words and profitability.
The first task was to determine the profitability of each ad being analyzed.
This was done using the age-old mailorder marketing method. Basically, if you
see an advertisement month after month and year after year, it is probably
profitable. If you see an ad only once or twice and then it changes or
disappears completely, the advertisement was probably not very profitable.
The next task was to simply look for the occurence of a list of words in each ad
while noting whether the ad was profitable or not. The results were tallied and
lots of words were removed from the list because there simply wasn't sufficient
data to come up with a statistically significant result.
I won't bore you with the rest of the details. Here is a list of some of the
words found much more often in profitable ads than in ads that didn't produce a
profit:
accessories, an, best, blue, buy, by, causes, cheap, discount, discover, easily,
fast, find, guaranteed, has, improve, increase, lower, more, nationwide, near,
need, of, on, one, order, payments, powered, pricing, rates, reduce, stop,
superb, the, view, what, with
Here is a list of the words found much more often in ads that were NOT
profitable:
affordable, after, and, as, at, before, better, help, here, how, else,
excellent, experience, for, led, listings, loan, method, money, mortgage,
naturally, now, options, photos, search, secret, secrets, sell, step, to, try,
unlimited, us, who, you, your
Now keep in mind that correlation can not prove causality. This research isn't
saying that all ads that use the word "excellent" are doomed to being
unprofitable. However, it is saying that a statistically significant
percentage of ads that use the word "cheap" are profitable and a majority of
those that use the word "affordable" are not profitable.
If your ad copy currently uses the word "affordable" (a word from the "bad" list
above) and you change that word to "cheap" (a word from the "good" list above),
will your profitability increase? There are no guarantees. There are an
unlimited number of factors that could impact that result. Not ALL ads that use
the word "cheap" were profitable. Not ALL ads that use the word "affordable"
were unprofitable. However, the use of the word "cheap" instead of "affordable"
is more likely to improve your profitability.
You still need to split test to find out the answer in any particular situation.
But, why not start out with the most likely words to be profitable in ad copy
generally speaking?
Take a look at your current ad copy and see if you can find any of the words in
the "bad" list that have good replacements in the "good" list. Run a split test
and see if your profitability increases. What can it hurt to put some math on
your side?
James D. Brausch is the creator of
QuitThatJob.com, a
step-by-step coaching membership site to help you build an Internet business
with residual income that will help you Quit That Job!
QuitThatJob.com is
based on James' actual method of building his own business and real research
like you found in this article.
http://www.QuitThatJob.com
qtjarticle@yahoo.com
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