Issue #53
— Tuesday, April 23, 2019
Posted by
Denny Hatch
The World’s Greatest
Financial Services Copywriter
Financial Services Copywriter
Louis Engel (1909-1982): “Creative Genius
Who Brought Wall Street to Main Street”
The most unbelievable newspaper ad ever published!
Louis Engel was Advertising and Sales Promotion
manager for the brokerage firm Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Beane. It
had two offices in Manhattan as well as one each in Newark, NJ and Stamford,
CT.
Engel’s
fame—and his greatest achievement—was a single full-page black-and-white
newspaper broadsheet advertisement published in The New York Times October 19, 1948.
• With 6450 words jammed onto the page, it was the
longest ad in the history of The New York
Times.
• Not a single photograph, drawing, table, chart or graph
was used anywhere to break up the monotony of black-and-white words, words,
words.
• The page was not created nor designed to pull
inquiries. However the following short paragraph was included at the end as an
afterthought:
These terms
are defined in a booklet, “How to Invest”, which we have just published. A
basic guidebook for all security owners, this new publication develops in
greater detail the story of how this stock and bond business works. It reviews
the basic principles of sound investing, such as analysis of market trends, the
diversification of holdings, and the management of a portfolio. We will be glad
to send you a copy.
The Results: Astounding!
• One month
after publication 5,033 requests had been received—4,000 of them the first
week. 3,534 came by mail, 947 by telephone and 552 from visitors to one of the
Merrill Lynch offices. Total number of items requested: 20,000+.
—Julian Lewis Watkins, THE
100 GREATEST ADVERTISEMENTS
• “What
was most amazing,” Engel recalled, “was that we got hundreds and hundreds of
long and thoughtful letters.” Some respondents were profusely appreciative. One
person wrote: “God bless Merrill Lynch… I have been wanting to know this all my
life… I owned stocks and bonds and I never really knew what I owned.”
• The
firm ran the same advertisement, or slightly revised versions, in newspapers
across the country, not only during the next few months, but indeed, for years
thereafter. The total number of
responses exceeded three million, and those returns translated into
millions of prospective customers for the firm’s eager brokers. With that one
concept alone, Engel proved himself a promotional genius. His subsequent
aggressive campaigns, which were typically both educational and eye-catching,
set new standards for brokerage firms and other enterprises in the financial
services sector.
The
Secret of Engel’s Success: Brilliant Copy
Plus Forcing the Reader's Eye to Keep Moving
A number
of years ago I wrote and published WRITE
EVERYTHING RIGHT! Of the 81,000+ words, I believe the five most important
words are these:
“Avoid
gray walls of type.” —David Ogilvy
Here’s
what I’m talking about:
These lazy editors have
turned the “joy of reading” into grim hard work.
For starters, imagine if you’re in the
middle of one of these tedious texts and you are interrupted—ringing phone,
doorbell or nature calls.
• When you return, you
have recreate in your mind the thread of the writer’s argument.
• Finding your place
means skimming, scanning and scrambling to figure out where you left off.
• The design give you no
touch points to help you remember where you were.
Note Louis Engel’s design and layout—upper deck,
headline, lower deck and subhead in the box—all designed to telegraph the
importance of the message and preview what is coming.
How Engel forced reader’s eye to keep moving
In addition, Louis Engel strategically inserted
three subheads, a call-out and no less than 18 crossheads (mini-headlines) to
introduce individual paragraphs and sections.
If
interest flags for a moment anywhere in the piece, the reader’s eyes will flick
to a mini-hed nearby and interest is recaptured.
Further,
if the reader is interrupted by a phone call or doorbell, touch-points
throughout make it easy to see where to resume reading.
My Opinion:
All authors should consider using the visual
techniques of copywriting professionals such in as this ad by Louis Engel to make
their prose more inviting and readable. And I’m talking all authors:
• Presidential press secretaries, academics,
lawyers, and judges.
• Business people creating memos, reports, letters
and white papers.
• Writers of articles, non-fiction and maybe even
fiction.
• Out-of-work professionals polishing their
résumés.
• Since 2004, 1800 U.S. newspapers have crashed and
burned. One reason: in the world of Tweets (280 characters) and Texts (160
Characters) the vast majority of readers today can only deal with bite-sized
paragraphs.
• To save the newspaper industry, I urge publishers to always think of the 277 million texters and the 326 million Tweeters in the U.S.—literate folks who are used to
communicating in bite-sized paragraphs. I urge newspaper editors and designers
to employ the devices below described by Ed Elliott and David Ogilvy throughout
their publications. The alternative: always keep their résumés up-to-date.
Ed Elliott’s 28 Devices Can Turn a
Skimmer into an Interested Reader
• Table of contents.
• Headlines and subheads.
• Photography, especially of people and action.
• Tables, charts, graphs.
• Illustrations clarifying or reinforcing the text.
• Captions under every visual. People read captions
as they skim.
• A word or subhead that is bigger, bolder,
blacker, or has a different color than other elements on the page.
• Enlarged numbers, possibly followed by an
enlarged or bold lede.
• A word or line set off at an angle or in a box or
a burst.
• Text inside an arrow or a ruled box.
• Anything that interrupts a page-by-page pattern
of columns.
• Text with a light screen behind it.
• Pull quotes.
• A paragraph set off in bold or with a double
indent.
• Handwritten indications.
• Bulleted text, especially with bullets that are
larger or different from other bulleted text.
5 Ways to Get Maximum Readership
• TEXT SIZE: Ten or eleven points is optimum for
readability; maybe one point larger for older readers.
• COLUMN WIDTH: 35 to 55 characters is a good
target range.
Ten or
eleven point is generally most readable on a column width of about a third of a
page. Larger than eleven point should probably be about a half page wide.
Columns wider than a half page are not quickly read.
• ALIGNMENT: Rag right is often better than
justified. It creates a text shape that allows an area for the eye to rest. It
can also appear more inviting, less imposing, more personal.
6 Design techniques to AVOID
• AVOID: text without sufficient contrast to its
background. Examples:
—A
background screen that is too dark.
—Paper
color that is too dark.
—Text
that is too light—printed in a color other than black.
• AVOID:
text printed over—or reversed out of—a busy or distracting background.
• AVOID: text reversed out of a dark color.
• AVOID: flush right or centered paragraphs.
• AVOID: text that is too condensed.
• AVOID: character spacing that is too tight.
• AVOID: running a headline
across a 2-page spread. Can't be quickly skimmed so can get ignored.
Ed Elliott, Direct Marketing Designer/Art Director/Creative
Director, Specializing in generating response to lengthy messages.
Takeaways to Consider
• NOTE: In 1953 Little, Brown & Co. published Louis Engel's book, How to Buy Stocks. It sold over 7 million copies across 8 editions through 1994.
• What separates the great advertising copywriter
from other writers is a laser-like focus on achieving two aims—grabbing
attention and keeping the eye moving all the way to the end.
• “You cannot bore people into buying your product.
You can only interest them in buying it.” —David
Ogilvy
• “People will not be bored in print. They may listen politely at a
dinner table to boasts and personalities, life history etc. But in print they
choose their own companions, their own subjects. They want to be amused or
benefited. They want economy, beauty, labor savings, good things to eat and
wear.” —Claude Hopkins
• Same thing with a letter, e-mail, memo or
article. If the reader gets bored in the middle and never reaches the punch
line, coda or call to action, the writer has failed.
• “It
takes hard writing to make easy reading.” —Robert
Louis Stevenson
• “Neatness rejects involvement.” —Lew Smith
• “Ugly works.” —Bob Hacker
• “Avoid gray walls of type.” —David Ogilvy
• “After two or three inches of copy, insert your
first crosshead (mini-headline) and thereafter pepper mini-headlines
throughout, They keep the reader marching forward. Make some of them
interrogative, to excite curiosity in the next run of copy.” —David Ogilvy
• “An ingenious sequence of boldly displayed
mini-headlines can deliver the substance of your entire pitch to glancers who
are too lazy to wade through the text.” —David
Ogilvy
• "Short words! Short sentences! Short paragraphs!"
—Andrew J. Byrne
• "Short words! Short sentences! Short paragraphs!"
—Andrew J. Byrne
###
Word count: 1428
Hi Denny-
ReplyDeleteLoving your emails...you fit more inspirational information in one email, than most people I get emails from do in a month. They should be printed out and read frequently to let the information truly sink in...
Keep up the good work!
-Randy Redinger
Thanks Denny-
ReplyDeleteAnother of your thoughtful summations of the best in the craft! And I appreciate the guidance on how to update these gems for use with current generations.
Bill Minter
You have helped more people than you probably know. Like disgruntled consumers, maybe one out of 100 will write a serious complaint letter (post, tweet, rant video). I am guessing the same is true with thank you communications. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteMany thanks to all for your enthusiastic responses. If you have friends, family, colleagues who might benefit from this cranky blog, tell them (1) it's free; (2) I pledge to do my damnedest not to ever waste their time and (3) they can cancel any time. Thank you again. Do keep in touch. And.... Ceheers1
ReplyDeleteI wonder in today's world of reading on line, getting news and information from Twitter and other sources would an ad like Engel's work or even be read today?
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