Episode #188 – David Deutsch On How An A-List Copywriter Gets Inside Your Mind And Persuades You
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Manage episode 258580321 series 1567841
A copywriting living legend returns to the podcast.
If you go back to Episode #44, David gave great advice on “Hot Button” Emotional copy.
He’s on the copywriting Mount Rushmore…
he worked for the legendary David Ogilvy…
and he holds several current controls with big publishers.
How does he get into the mind of the prospect and learn what makes them tick?
David lays out several simple and easy ways to gain that insight.
His lifetime of experience makes learning from him straightforward and clear.
This episode is one to come back to again and again.
In this episode, you’ll discover:
- The “method acting” way to slip into your prospect’s shoes. (How to get into the deeper issues which make persuasion easy).
- The one mistake copywriters make that kills the sale right from the start. (Make sure your copy stays in THIS form).
- How to sharpen and tighten your copy today by creating this one thing over and over.
- Shocking confessions of presidents and top salesmen. Get your copy sizzling from the start.
- The often-overlooked strategy that has become the secret weapon of the smartest marketers.
Mentioned:
Intro and outro backing music: Forever More by CREO
Hey everybody, welcome back to the podcast and today we have a very special guest I’ve been looking forward to for awhile
he is a legend and copywriting circles. Brian Kurtz, who we had on the show previously, refers to him as one of the Mount Rushmore of Boardroom copywriters. David Deutsch welcome to the show.
David Deutsch: Well thanks, it’s great to be here.
David Allan: Yeah, it’s really exciting to have you on the
show. This is a real pleasure and an honor.
David Deutsch: I appreciate that. I appreciate
that nice introduction.
David Allan: Well, you are a legend amongst copywriters and everyone who listens to the show a lot we have a lot of copywriters, of course we’ve had a lot of copywriters on
the show and some some famous ones as well but you’re seen as sort of that top A-list pinnacle so maybe let’s go back
to the very beginning and start with your superhero origin story. How did you get into this?
David Deutsch: well I got into it just I found myself working at an ad agency in New York Ogilvy and Mather – yeah the big one today one but I was just working there as a temp okay and I
just thought hey as long as I’m here or this advertising stuff looks pretty interesting maybe I could try my hand at
writing so I persisted a little bit and got a chance to do some copy got into you know full-time doing copy and that’s, that was the origin it was very unintentional like oh I’m here at Ogilvy
I guess…
David Allan: what was the culture like
working there well you know it’s funny
it’s like when you grow up in New York
City you don’t or you know like a fish
in water doesn’t really think of it as
being in water so you just sort of think
well this is what all advertising
agencies are like they’re founded but
they’re big they’re founded by a genius
you know they have a teaching culture
but it was you know it was very unique
because of that it was very much like a
teaching hospital you know okay it was
very important you know learning and
teaching and it was very
it was very you know you did things in a
certain way you know there were obese
you know rules for doing things and it
was great to have that that kind of
education especially that respect of
course for direct response that oba be
had right and you how did you have much
personal interaction with Ogilvy was he
around at all or were you mostly
interacting with some of the other
people I was mostly interacting with
other people although I did get to react
interact with him
nice that’s that’s excellent because
obviously he is a like yourself now he’s
a legend of copywriting everyone that’s
listened to show hopefully has read his
books and if not shame on you so take us
so who were the top copywriters working
for Ogilvy when you were working there
oh gosh you know at a place like that
you have creative directors you know
like john ray and was there some people
like that that that that oh my god
you’re taking me back many years it’s
just very interesting I think I’ve
always you know and so forth and it’s
sort of like he’s you know watch some of
his very popular video that everyone’s
that probably has seen of him talking
about direct response and so forth but
it’s interesting to hear somebody who’s
actually was you know around at that
time has insight into like what was that
like because we sort of we sort of look
back now and it has so much sort of
legendary status to it but like you said
I’m sure when you’re doing it just seems
perfectly sort of like Mad Men you know
about 10 or 20 years you know with that
you know not not so you know Mad Men was
kind of probably an exaggerated version
certain way anyway but it was kind of
like that you know the the the dynamics
of it oh gosh I was there for a couple
of years before I moved down to Richmond
and started working it you know well any
ad agency would be a smaller at agency
but you know working with small working
with smaller ad agencies which was kind
of fun because I got to do all the cool
stuff you know I got I got well and also
because I wanted to I suppose I could
have just been a writer but I kind of
liked buying media I kind of liked
except for the time I you know thought I
made like a $60,000 mistake on a
newspaper ad that we’re gonna have to
eat but it turned out I didn’t that’s
that sort of was you know it’s like I
don’t know if I want to do media anymore
but you know especially like going after
new business and all that stuff I just
found that a lot of fun so right now a
lot of copywriters it seems like I’ve
heard John Carlton talk about this a bit
and from having people on the show and
so forth it seems to bear out over time
with copywriters by and large seem to be
a rather introverted have a lot of
introverted people involved in
copywriting and would you consider
yourself introverted or you say you like
the media buying and the interaction
stuff what do you think no I’m a
high-functioning introvert okay I guess
it’s the best way to subscribe that I I
do pretty well I you know but then I
have to go and regroup and you know get
my get my energy back right but yeah I
enjoy that I don’t I don’t I I probably
like writing better in fact but I’m not
sitting in a room by myself writing but
when I’m with other people or at least
are other people next door I try to do
that whenever I can and work work more
you know partnering kinds of things
working with other writers or in fact a
lot of what I do now is kind of working
with other writers in terms of training
and creative directing or copy
supervising write things like that so
from the small ad agencies what was the
next step well the next step was
covering Jay Abraham okay that was like
hey I want to do this I want to I want
to be more involved with companies on a
different level so I set out to kind of
be a junior Jay Abraham and and help
people with marketing and you know get
know Gabe Jason was do you get give me
you and you know I try doing that a
little but I soon found myself I soon
found people were far more willing to
pay me money to write copy and that my
skills translated pretty well probably
largely thanks to David Ogilvy into
direct response so
I hooked up with John Finn who was kind
of a copywriters agent in California he
put me in touch with people like Jim
ruts I worked with Jim for a while with
this great great copywriter and got into
the whole world of writing for people
like boardroom and and and the big
publishers very nice so when you sort of
hit that level what was it like to go to
work for people like boardroom I mean
were you aware of them beforehand and so
forth that when you got first got
involved with them or was it’s just yeah
I had never never heard of I never
really heard a boardroom till I started
working with Jim I think nice and he was
working with them at the time yeah yeah
he’d been working with them for a while
Jim practically like invented the maggle
log I mean I think he literally may have
so working for boardroom what year was
that when you started at board remember
oh gosh you know the early 90s yeah I
think first project with Jim yeah and
you’ve gone on to etch quite a like you
said we said at the beginning at a
legendary status at least of Brian Kurtz
is mine for sure and in most people’s
opinion so how did you ascend to the
heights of the world oh that’s an
interesting question you know I think
just this sort of you know drayton bird
calls it this this feeling of never
quite being satisfied you know of always
feeling it could be better I could be
better
you know and as a conjurer learning I
kind of like learning things and
persuasion and copy and and putting
words together so I was pretty diligent
in terms of reading you know I read
Claude Hopkins when I was at Ogilvy cuz
over he said you should read Claude
Hopkins right so I took it out of the
took it out of the library I think I was
the first person to take it out in like
four years or something yes and so I
it’s it’s partly that I think partly a
lot of study and I think partly also
putting myself in a position to learn
from people you know working under Jim
ruts and and and working under Jim punky
and and
you know and people like that I think
because there’s in a way there’s really
no substitute for that you know you can
learn stuff from books and from meeting
people’s copy but to really have someone
look at your copy and tear it apart tell
you to go and do it over and tell you
okay this is you know finally what we’re
looking for and now were you in terms of
the some of the ways these mentors of
yours you know were they directly
teaching you or you know it’s sort of a
hands-on approach and saying like no
this is like you said like destroying
your copy and I mean you rewrite it or
wasn’t more of a company thing where
you’d pass it through and they would
change it so forth and then tell you
after or sort of how did it all work
yeah you know it’s an interesting
question because you know as a lot of
people didn’t really have or articulate
a philosophy right as I would have
expected they would you know it was more
like don’t be boring you know specially
gym but suitable and I think he’s ever
written a boring word of copy so it was
more like that it was more learning
right as you say from from what they did
to my copy because there’s nothing like
trying to solve a problem and then
seeing how someone else solved the
problem like it’s like oh I struck how
do I make this interesting and there
what about this is it no like this oh my
god that’s amazing and then you look at
it you know you deconstruct okay how did
they do this oh they did this you know
they they took it and they found a an
aspect of it I think bullet writing
helps a lot right um I’m a big fan of
that and I love to do bullets and I
think that was great training because
you could really see in a bullet you can
see what the template is yeah you know
what never to do what always to do ten
things to do the thing X that does why
you know what everyone’s doing and not
telling you how to add emotion it was
like a great little little training
round yes it just sharpened copy skills
you know there’s a thing in I don’t want
to go off on a long tangent but there’s
a thing in training in in learning
things which involves the idea of very
isolated learning like when you’re
learning soccer they found one of the
best way
to learn it is to put people in a really
small room and make them play soccer so
you’re like constantly being castable
and you’re constantly having to block
that makes sense yeah
and it’s so kind of like that with
bullets it was like constantly got it
made this clever got to make this work
got to make this interesting got to make
this interesting how do I take this and
make it interesting and so it was a
great you know a great training ground
for that because bullets are kind of
like a microcosm for the rest of the of
the copy you know there’s a fine line
between bullets and regular copy you
know you could say bullet what never to
eat on an airplane you say you know hey
I’d like to tell you a little bit about
something that may surprise you did you
know that there’s something you should
never eat on an airplane you know it’s
true and in this book I’m gonna tell you
what it is as well as many other things
that you should never do that could be a
bullet or it could be body copy or it
could be a headline mm-hmm yeah that’s
so true I think I enjoy writing bullets
myself and trying to figure out ways you
know to make them interesting and to
suck people into the what what could
that be about you know I remember
getting sucked into bullets myself
specifically ones I’m Gary Halbert had
written as I learned later and I just
thought to myself wow what is like I
think because I bought a bodybuilding
course when I was 19 and I like later
learned that Gary wrote the letter for
it right and I and I remember just I can
still feel it waiting for the package to
arrive and I was looking over the
bullets love what I then you know I
think we’re just this is what’s gonna be
in the product oh my goodness what you
know one thing never to do when you walk
into a gym or whatever it was but I
still remember that bullet so there’s
such power and those things and you know
it’s it’s it’s a powerful way to to
learn copy is to see how copy affects
you yeah because that’s that’s you don’t
need someone to look at your copy wait
wait you can feel does it does it
resonate with me and you can feel when
you can feel your own copy does it does
it resonate would it make me want to
want to buy this or want to read the
book that this bullet is from there’s a
famous story I’m I wish i
really knew who the guy was but I think
he was associated with the guy who wrote
The Wall Street Journal letter whose
name escapes me off the top of my head
oh yeah who is another writer who was
associated with him wrote the copy for a
book a product that was a book and when
the guy he gave it to the you know the
prot the owner of the business the owner
was like well this isn’t the book I I
wrote you know he’s like no this is the
book you should have wrote and then I
went back it changed it now have you
encountered some of those things and in
your lengthy copywriting career you’re
talking about
fuck you know like changing a product
yeah like when people come to you with
stuff I mean a lot of copying you’re
like and you do the obviously the
research aspect to find out all the
different details about it and so forth
then you think okay I wrote this cup
this is what it should be you know and
then I’ve gone back and changed the
product sorry that happened to me also
don’t forget you’re talking about offers
to so the the book may stay the same but
hey what about let’s add these bonuses
right you know and then that may be
something you can or the angle of the
copy itself you know the book is titled
a certain way or right now in terms of
what you’re doing nowadays now you don’t
have many controls yeah yeah how many
controls you currently have with the
that’s basically what you’re known for
though having these long-standing
controls yeah yeah if we include the
things I’ve kind of helped creative
direct or helped on then this probably
quite a few there’s maybe six or so Wow
you know that our mailing right now
that’s awesome and that’s sort of you’ve
course come from that Direct Mail world
and now we’re in the Internet age we’re
right directly else seems to be I mean
people still do it obviously but it
seems to have sort of it doesn’t have
that the sizzle or the or the sexiness
perhaps that had in the past where it
was the only option or one of the
options what’s your yeah that makes it a
good well that makes a good weapon I
think and you know Brian Kurtz probably
talked about this a little bit you know
the power of direct mail and
right how scalable it is you know
because when you find the thing that
works to a certain segment right yeah
you can find other names you know like
that whereas you try to scale something
on the internet it doesn’t quite work
because I don’t know the traffic costs
start to get up and up and costs more to
get keywords and etc etc yeah and and
also because people aren’t mailing
there’s a big potential right you know
it’s not so hard to stand out in the
mailbox all right it’s a can untap it’s
become an untapped resource for many
yeah so God’s sake don’t tell people so
now since you’ve been on both sides of
that you’ve been in the sort of Direct
Mail thing and now you’re in the
Internet age what have you noticed about
some of the copy you see you know
nowadays as opposed to when you I mean
basically when he was doing direct mail
you have to have a lot of skin in the
game almost to even send that copy out
yeah at least spend some money you know
and a good chunk chance or to get the
names or however you were doing it yeah
but nowadays you can throw something up
pretty quickly for copy out there being
tested and driving traffic to it what
have you noticed about how this whole
thing is involved well I mean there’s a
lot of aspects to that obviously just
because something’s on the Internet as
you say it’s not something that
someone’s willing this is really to put
a lot of money behind so you’ve
certainly a lot more junk right out
there on the other hand you doing it
right you also have a tremendous ability
to test very quickly and very rapidly so
there’s a certain copy evolve then you
know among smart people very very
rapidly right you put something up it
works you know this this much you make
some tweaks you try a new headline try
some new copy some new pictures new
graphic format and gradually you’ve
turned a single into a home run right
and you’ve let the market almost tell
you what the copy should be I mean you
got to be small enough obviously to know
what copy to write so they can choose
this one or this one but it is sort of
this Darwinian you know survival of the
fittest that’s that’s like speeding up
‘evil it speeds up evolution you know
like controls of oven direct mail and
get better and better but on the
internet they can evolve you know like
really fast
yeah the iterations are super fast
mm-hmm nowadays you said you’re mostly
involved as sort of you know copy
cheeping being sort of overseeing things
and so forth and working with other
writers now when it comes to getting the
best out of let’s say my own copy if
you’re the writer or if you’re hiring
writers because we have course business
people a listen to this show hopefully
it will get a copywriter to write their
their copy what are some of the ways I
know this is sort of stuff you’re into
nowadays what are some of the ways to
get the best copy out or at least start
with something that has potential I
think it sounds a little bit cliche but
it’s that it starts with an
understanding of the market you know and
and really on a deep level you know on a
level of what are these people want that
goes beyond you know someone wants to
make more money or someone wants to get
rid of their arthritis you know what
does it really like to have arthritis
what is it like to every time you go to
open a jar – like hesitate because it’s
gonna hurt to do that you know what does
it like not be able to pick up your
grandkids you know if you’re talking to
doctors you know what do they really
want you know what doctors want is
dividend from John Carlton really you
have to give him some credit you know
doctors are different from chiropractors
you can’t like if you’re doing practice
management
you can’t talk the same way to doctors
as you can to chiropractors can’t you
say make more money in your practice you
know doctors you know have a different
image of themselves not as not being
money-grubbing you know and they may
want more sanity in their life because
doctors are constantly pulled in 20
directions chiropractors I think think a
little more broadly than maybe about
retirement and they also they also
there’s a certain they want to have more
respect because they’re not considered
doctors so there’s that element of you
know how do you know how do you address
that you know in the copy that you’re
you’re writing to them and
all markets you know have that but you
know do you do the work of really
digging down there talking to people and
and and and looking you know it’s almost
like you got to just see beneath the
surface and some people are really good
at that like Chris Haddad and you know
John Carlton and if you read their copy
you can see how they’re talking to that
level beneath the surface right it’s
like pulling back the curtain and seeing
the wizard yeah yeah yeah it’s what
people they’re talking to what people
you know really want because they know
that somehow now what sort of things
could people do for those people who are
either aspiring copywriters just getting
started or people who are in the early
throes of a copywriting career what sort
of you know what sort of the best angles
to take on research where do you go you
know who do you who do you want to talk
to what are some of the steps that you
personally take when you’re starting
with something yeah gosh it’s many
things you know one of the best ways is
to get like the company’s best salesman
to sell you on the product right what’s
their sales pitch write it down
transcribe it um get the president of
the company to sell you on it you know
if there’s no salesperson or or someone
to really sell you directly like what do
they do what have they found talk to
customers talk to prospects what’s going
through their heads what kind of things
do they think about are they glad why
are they glad they they bought the
product what’s the how do they talk
about the problem how do they talk about
product you know people talk about
things in different ways you know to
people with diabetes talk about
themselves as diabetes sufferers do they
talk about high blood sugar do they talk
about their glycemic index do they talk
about you know what are they how do you
if you went on a forum and tried to talk
and you weren’t a you didn’t really have
whatever disease it was like they would
know pretty quickly by the way you talk
one so you don’t want to be that yeah
you want to be the person that could
talk about it in a way that that you
would fit in there so oh you know the
other thing too is you know the answers
are in
you you know you can you can it’s called
method acting in acting you know you sit
down get the chair close your eyes and
really pretend to be a person that has
whatever problem it is right pretend to
be a person with arthritis what would
that be like to go through the day like
that what would it be like to you know
be someone if you’re selling a business
opportunity well would you like to be
someone that’s making you know forty
thousand a year and trying to feed their
family and and feels like they want
something more but they don’t know quite
know how to get it you know what does
that feel like what sort of things do
they see around them you know do they
see a television that’s you know not a
big-screen TV because they can’t afford
that you know do they do they see a home
that’s not as big as they would like it
to be what are they feeling are they
feeling like they’re not as good a
provider or a husband not as good a
father as they could be because of that
some of the deeper issues that surface
level like you’re saying and what’s
keeping me from buying this product you
know if you really think about yourself
buying the product right why did you not
buy it you know it’s like I’m gonna look
stupid if I buy this and it doesn’t work
and my wife’s gonna say why did you pay
$200 for this product you know like
another product you’ve bought so many
products so you know and yes I know that
it works but would it work for me you
know a lot of times people leave out
that aspect of things right it’s like
this really works really works with all
these people that work for yes but
you’ve never addressed the issue of well
it works for me because I’ve tried all
these things and they haven’t worked it
I don’t know that I’m as smart as these
other people it’s worked for I don’t
know if I have the skills that these
other people had so and your copy has to
kind of talk about those things that’s
that’s great now with your current sort
of work with other writers what are some
of the most common things you see people
doing you know for lack of a better term
doing wrong leaving out you mentioned a
few of them there and what you just said
what are some of the other main yeah
because it’s usually over and over it’s
usually the same sort of stuff that
people are yeah
or missing it is you know it’s people
think of themselves as writers and they
sit down to write and they become
writers and they don’t realize that
they’re not writers they’re just trying
to
I hesitate giving you the word sell
they’re just trying to convince someone
to do something you know and instead
they go into this write early you know
it’s like what’s a way to get their
attention I got to tell them it’s a
killer you know thing to do and and when
in reality the answer to what they
should write is just what would you say
to someone that was sitting across from
you in a bar you know but you wouldn’t
say kinds of things people write and
copy these days kill their opportunity
to make you know you know you would be
more look Joe I know you’ve tried a lot
of stuff I you know this is you know
this is different it’s different because
it’s the first thing that you know gives
you this but it also does it in this way
you know a little bit of a hint of
mechanism to it you know that’s really
the biggest thing is just that read the
copy you wrote as if you’re reading it
to someone to the prospect and did you
feel ridiculous when you’re reading it
or do you feel like you’re really
talking to that conversation yeah yeah
so David what’s our projects do you have
of your own going on what are you into
like right now like if people want to
get a hold of you maybe they want some
information from you what do you got
going on and where should they go
well my website is David L Deutsch comm
d-a-v-i-d L and then de UT SCH calm and
you know mainly what I do these days is
I work with you know companies or
individuals helping them be better
writers you know either directly with
writers or with with a company that uses
either outside writers or they have
their own staff writers and I’ll do
training or I’ll do kind of copy
supervising or create you know creative
directing whatever you want to call it
right just kind of getting it up to the
next level and you know I just really
enjoy doing
that really like making other people’s
copy I’d rather work on 10 pieces of
copy with other people then do one piece
of copy on my own right very good
so yeah that’s great well you’ve really
really really delivered here today I
mean it’s awesome and thanks for coming
on the show by the way it’s been a real
pleasure again an honor to have you on
the show so glad we can we’re able to
arrange this my favorite subject now for
people who listen to the show I’ve
talked to everybody next week hopefully
someone even half as insightful and
entertaining as
The post Episode #188 – David Deutsch On How An A-List Copywriter Gets Inside Your Mind And Persuades You appeared first on Drop Dead Copy.
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