Showing posts with label Claude Hopkins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Claude Hopkins. Show all posts

Sunday, September 15, 2024

A Bushel and a Peck: Seven Blog Posts About Advertising

If you're getting close to retirement and have been paying attention, you've probably learned many lessons that may be helpful to younger peers. Whether helping them learn new hacks, or ways to avoid getting caught in traps, it feels good to make a difference in another's life or career. 

This is not to suggest that we old-timers don't have new things to learn. After all, we were taught at an early age the importance of making a commitment to lifelong learning.

Over the course of 30 years in advertising, I've learned a thing or two about all facets of marketing, thanks to good mentors and good books. As a writer I like to share what I have learned. Or perhaps it's just something in my nature. Either way, what follows are seven blog posts about advertising, many of which were first published in Business North in my Marketing Matters column. 

If you find something useful here, please share it in the comments. Thanks for exploring.

1.    5 Insights from Claude Hopkins: Godfather of Scientific Advertising

https://medium.com/swlh/5-insights-from-claude-hopkins-godfather-of-scientific-advertising-9e3f60aa7078?sk=1cf52b4f931db28e692061862c926c37

 

2.   I Know I Need to Advertise, But Where? And How Much Should I Spend?

https://medium.com/swlh/i-know-i-need-to-advertise-but-where-and-how-much-should-i-spend-4ef4e65debbe?sk=0cf6f66c4c73376fa50440bc7c121801

 

3.   10 Insights from David Ogilvy, On Advertising

https://ennyman.medium.com/10-insights-from-david-ogilvy-on-advertising-e0c3209f2b84?sk=dbe02359a9ece733bae9daf8f7cafaa7

 

4.   Five Reasons People Hate Advertising*

https://medium.com/swlh/five-reasons-people-hate-advertising-4f20a5bc4ed4?sk=769317e0c2aa4447fe1645b0718e68f6


5.    An Attempt to Correct a Few Misconceptions About Advertising

https://ennyman.medium.com/an-attempt-to-correct-a-few-misconceptions-about-advertising-64a868a52874?sk=a79f921486d89988fd9ee24bff652648

 

6.   Ethics and Advertising

https://pioneerproductions.blogspot.com/2008/11/ethics-and-advertising.html


7.    “Let Us March Against Philip.” 

https://ennyman.medium.com/let-us-march-against-philip-c51ed458a675?sk=1bccbd5d07555f0b1ab95dbd8192ac59

 


*Also published in The Startup

Monday, October 12, 2020

An Anecdote about Claude Hopkins from Tim Wu's The Attention Merchants

As soon as I saw the title it caught my attention. Of course a lot of titles catch our attention, but fail to deliver. From the start I knew Tim Wu's book would deliver the goods.

As one who made a career of learning how to get peoples' attention and influence their behavior (ad man whose back pocket weapon was networking and PR) I've been an avid student of what's happening in the media and in the info age's digital space. Tim Wu's well-researched and anecdotally rich book places today's advertising/influence game into a historical context. 

David Ogilvy's books formed a portion of my education as an advertiser, as did the writings of Ries & Trout. Ogilvy pays tribute to Claude Hopkins, influential advertising "genius" who authored Scientific Advertising and My Life In Advertising, as the father of modern advertising.

The first chapter of the book is about how newspapers became more about marketing than about news. Rather, how the news papers became a different sort of business than merely leafleting stories. Then in chapter two he relates to us the story of Claude Hopkins and the formation of Hopkins' ideas as an early snake oil salesman. I've read both of Hopkins' classics on advertising and influence, but was unaware of his beginnings. 

The 1893 Chicago World's Fair was a turning point in the life of the young man from Michigan. (It's surprising how that singular event made an impact on so many people and their lives. Houdini immediately comes to mind as does the inspiration for "America the Beautiful.") For Claude Hopkins, he became mesmerized by a huckster named Clark Stanley. The audacious Stanley, dressed in cowboy attire with a beaded leather jacket and colorful bandana, would take rattlesnakes and throw them into a vat of boiling water, then skim off the material that floated to the top and sell it as medicine. "Good for what ails you." Indeed.

This was back in the days before truth in advertising laws existed. These were the days before FDA approval was required to sell medicines. There were plenty of these kinds of entrepreneurs making their way from town to town back in the day. You will even meet them in the tale of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn. 

Hopkins felt inspired to write stories and ad copy for one of these products, Dr. Schoop's Elixir of Life. He was rewarded for his success in three ways. The first, financially. The second, the experience he gained. Third, the unexpected outcomes from his success.

His success with Dr Schoop's led to bigger things in Chicago. He began promoting the amazing Liquozone and was a pioneer of free samples. The claims for Liquozone included endorsements by doctors. Unfortunately, this was truly bad medicine. This was taking place during the time Upton Sinclair's The Jungle was bringing other cultural scourges to light. The government stepped up regulations and subsequent media excoriations led to the demise of Liquozone. 

The end of the story for Hopkins was disillusionment and something of a breakdown. He retreated to a cottage in Michigan and turned to writing, intending to give up the advertising game. Easier said than done. 

* * * * 

The book is well researched and has much to offer readers, whether they be in the marketing game or targets of today's "attention machinery."

Here's a review by someone whose handle on Amazon is E l R:

A history of the attention industry. It's shocking. This book contextualises the current internet/smart phone attention grab as merely the last in a long line of technologies used by commercial forces to capture and resell your attention. Together with Adler's Irresistible, and Carr's The Shallows, this is in my view essential reading to anyone that uses modern media technology.

I will continue reading and keep you apprised. Currently I rate if 5 stars. If this changes I will let you know.

* * * *

I think it interesting that the cover of the book features a fishing lure as the graphic. A bare hook in the water will not catch fish, except by luck. Lures are designed to capture attention. 

Thursday, February 4, 2016

Current and Recent Readings: Too Many Books, Too Little Time

There really are so many good books out there. We read them for different reasons. Some serve as simply a diversion. Others provide nutrition for our souls. Still others give our "brain muscles" a workout. Here are a few books that I've been enjoying right now or recently completed.

Symmetry by Marcus du Sautoy
I picked up this gem after recently re-reading my interview with Portuguese artist Margarida Sardinha regarding her 2015 project Symmetry's Portal which led me into revisiting (via books) the remarkable features of The Alhambra.

The Red Book by Carl Jung
The Amazon listing about this volume calls it "the most influential unpublished work in the history of psychology." My friend Dan introduced me to this hefty volume so I could see the illustrations, more than 200 in all. But the substance is Jung's private wrestling with the meaning of Self, consciousness and universal truths about who we are. Four decades ago I read Jung's Memories, Dreams and Reflections and was impressed with his candor.

50 Philosophy Classics by Tom Butler-Bowdon
I finished the audiobook in December. Having found it to be such a valuable resource I purchased the paper version to use as a reference. A great thought-stimulator. Useful tool for stirring up themes to cogitate upon so you can produce the illusion that you're a deep thinker.

The Power of Habit by Charles Duhigg
Exceptionally insightful.  Listened to the audiobook this past month and will do it again. Utilizes insights from the latest research in neuroscience. Compelling stories bring home essential truths. Yes, we're creatures of habit, and when those habits are bad ones we need to apply ourselves to cultivating new ones. We begin by becoming aware of our triggers.

Scientific Advertising by Claude Hopkins
Duhigg's book uses stories from a variety of sources. One of these sources was Claude Hopkins, an influential ad man from the first half of the twentieth century. I'd read Hopkins many years ago because my own advertising guru, David Ogilvy, consider Hopkins his own shining light. Were you aware that it was an ad campaign by Claude Hopkins that prodded a whole nation of people to regularly brush their teeth?

Illustration from The Red Book
The Light on Synanon by Dave Mitchell, Cathy Mitchell and Richard Ofshe
Current bedtime reading. When I read it in the early 1990's it triggered an idea for a story which later became an unproduced screenplay. Still gonna try to resurrect that project if I live long enough.

Rocket Men by Craig Nelson
Currently reading this one as I commute. Absolutely compelling thus far. Reminds us of the context when that first moonshot took place, during the Cold War. The Russians had already embarrassed us with Sputnik and other achievements. A moon landing would be a major PR coup, which really amounted to a "puff our chests out" opportunity to gloat. Had the Russians been first on the moon would that have meant Soviet communism was superior to our democratic capitalism? Rocket Men is an excellent addition to the many other books about the story of NASA. An good follow up to Tom Wolfe's The Right Stuff. (EdNote: A few reviews on Amazon indicate that this book may not be entirely reliable in all its facts, though for now it's been a good read.)

* * * *
What are you reading these days?

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