Finally the New York Times & US government clean up their acts and agree with elBenbo
Published: Thu, 06/06/19
A couple years ago, I submitted an article to a very big and very popular site (that has since gone on hiatus) read by men looking to improve their success with dating (mostly), but also business, travel, and life in general. The readers were starting to move on from just being interested in PUA and getting laid in foreign countries or to getting more into making money and internet marketing. So what I did was, I slightly edited the last chapter of my first Villains book into an article for it about the 13 ways the Joker creates massive, unforgettable, indifference-killing impact.
i.e. Pure content, zero sales pitch.
In fact, the only pitch in the entire book is the last page where I put my URL.
The result?
The article was rejected on arrival.
The reason?
“Topic is fine but the article reads too much like a sales letter.
I'm expecting a sales pitch at the end.”
Which I took as the ultimate compliment.
Why?
Because it meant my writing had gotten to the point where it’s pure “copywriting” — fast paced, low attention span-friendly, and keeps people reading (even the site owner obviously read the whole thing to the very end). About 12 years ago, when in a copywriting client dry spell, I decided to use ezinearticles to practice writing more persuasively, and treated them all as sales copy to sell the link in my resource box. I was doing it consciously. At this point, when writing non-sales content, I don’t even know I’m doing it anymore.
I suspect my novels (I hope so, anyway) are the same.
Anyway, point is this:
I believe infotaining copywriting is the future of persuasive communication.
I also believe those who do it are far ahead of the curve.
Even the New York Times is starting to use infotaining-style headlines, and more sensationalist writing they would have shunned just 10 years ago.
As do so-called “serious” news programs.
And, even, the US government has dabbled with it.
In their case, it was to the tune of melting their server during a routine PSA once.
I show this government example in my new “Infotainment Jackpot” book.
A book I’m launching this weekend.
And, that you can get for a $150.00 off ($241 vs $391) until Sunday at midnight (EDT) here:
http://www.EmailPlayers.com/jackpot
Ben Settle
P.S. If you own my old “Agora Tapes: Infotainment” program, realize this book is only about 40% the same information. So if you have that version, you’ll have to determine if it’s worth buying this new one at the discounted price or not.