Susanna's Online Magazine

Award-winning journalist and freelance copywriter, Susanna K. Hutcheson, presents news, thoughts and ideas on the world of business, marketing, copywriting and much more.

Wednesday, 23 July 2008 09:27 pm

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Tuesday, June 27th

The Age of Philanthropy or Egoism or Just the Way it's Always Been?


Fortune magazine says in it's current issue that Warren Buffett gave more money away than John D. Rockefeller or Andrew Carnegie. That is in inflation-adjusted dollars. While that is true the fact is Andrew Carnegie gave away 90% of his money in his lifetime. Buffett is giving away over 85% of his fortune.

Had Carnegie lived longer he probably would have given it all away. In my mind Carnegie was the biggest giver in that the amount is less important than the percentage of what one has. But that really is not the important issue. Five percent may not be a lot --- although when you talk millions and billions it is indeed quite a lot.

To be sure Carnegie's gifts created libraries which helped many people, myself included, to become self-educated and to learn things they would not have otherwise learned. Mark Twain and others said Carnegie was an egoist because he liked to see his name on buildings, he liked the attention he got from giving away his money.

Well, let's face it. We all like to see our own names. Even serial killers love to see their names in the paper. It makes them feel important. So let's assume that Andrew Carnegie did give to see him name on libraries among other things. What harm is there in that? And as long as we can walk into any library in the country and borrow a book that can teach us or entertain us we have much to be grateful for. If the library bears Carnegie's name, that's fine. He deserves that.

Giving Back?

People are using the term "giving back" when discussing what these people are doing. Even Bill Gates used the term about his gifts. Why? They earned the money. It was not given to them. You can only give back what was given to you. These men earned what they have. They do not owe it to anyone. They are not obligated to give it to anyone. They could leave it to their families.

They have decided that to do so would not be a good idea. Indeed, those who inherit wealth generally turn out to be worthless individuals who are unhappy and have lives no one should envy. So to leave wealth to one's children is doing them no favor. As Buffet says, "You should leave them enough to do anything but not enough to do nothing." How true.

Carnegie believed that those who were wealthy had a moral obligation to give their fortune away before they died to benefit society. In particular, this money was to be spent in a way that did not encourage laziness (charities that only dealt with symptoms and not the problem) but that created institutions that made opportunities for anyone with the right character to be successful and rich.

In The Gospel of Wealth, Carnegie outlines his ideas about what he called "the problem of our age — the proper administration of wealth." Carnegie laid down the principles of "the business of benevolence" — and introduced philanthropy as we know it today and as is being put into play by Gates and Buffett.

First, Carnegie rejected the practice of leaving vast sums of money to one's heirs. He thought children should be provided for but he also believed that giving a child a fortune would do much more harm than good.

So what Gates and Buffet are doing today is not really anything new. It may be good. And hopefully the large sum of money will indeed bring cures to terrible ills around the world just as Rockefeller money cured polio and Carnegie money brought knowledge to everyone regardless of age or color of skin or the amount of money they had.

But hopefully society will not start to think that people with wealth "owe" them their wealth. In our capitalistic society a person has a right to what he or she earns and has no obligation to support others who may simply choose not to support themselves. Let's hope that any gifts will be used to help people help themselves and to become productive citizens.

Carnegie's gifts did that perhaps more than any philanthropic gift in history. For it is in reading and learning that we can become productive and it is through being productive that we are able to give to others who truly deserve it.


Susanna on 06.27.06 @ 11:07 AM CDT [link]


Friday, June 23rd

How To Eliminate the Competition and Become More Successful.




I'm re-reading a great old book called HOW TO WIN FRIENDS AND INFLUENCE PEOPLE by Dale Carnegie. I read the book the first time in the sixties and again in the seventies and once in the eighties. I haven't read it since. But I should have.

People today are rude. People are unkind to each other. You see that in the customer service of most companies. You see that in the people you do business with daily. You see that --- if you look --- in yourself. I know I see it in myself sometimes.

A month or so ago a man e-mailed me for information about my copywriting services. I promptly responded as I generally do. He didn't get back to me. I consider it quite rude and unprofessional for a person who asks for information not to reply with at least an "I'm not interested." But most do not. This man was one of those.

So I forgot him as I do all those who contact me and for whom I do no work. I deleted most references to him so they wouldn't take up space on my computer system and in my backups.

Then a few months later he contacted me. "I'm sorry I didn't get back to you but I've been extremely busy. Would you send that information to me again?"

I honestly didn't remember a thing about what he had originally contacted me for. I barely recognized his name. Because people are self-absorbed they figure everyone remembers them. Of course, that's not the case.

I e-mailed him back and told him honestly that I didn't recall his e-mail and asked him to refresh my memory.

Well, that was not what Dale Carnegie would have had me do. I broke a major rule. I hurt this man's fragile ego and ignored his need to feel important. He saw that I hadn't been sitting around waiting for him to reply to my proposal or whatever I had sent him. In fact, I had forgotten him.

Of course, he didn't reply to me and that I suspect is why. In his mind I had belittled him and made him feel small after he had tried to make himself look important.

What should I have done? I should have pretended that I remembered him and tactfully found out what it was he had wanted. Or better yet, I should have struggled to locate a printout of his e-mail to me or some record I might have of the e-mail.

I should have made him feel important. He obviously wanted to feel important because he told me how awfully busy he had been. That was intended to impress me. Of course, it did not. But people say that for one or more of three reason:

1. They really have been busy (rare)
2. To make an excuse (frequent)
3. To make them appear important (almost always)

In this day of rudeness, we need to get back to the basics if we expect our businesses to grow. People will always need to feel important. People will always prefer to do business with people who make them feel important and valued.

Think of the people in your own life who you care for the most. My guess is that each one of them have one thing in common --- they make YOU feel important.

I know that the people in my life who I have valued the most were people who liked me and made me feel important and valued. They weren't the people who were the smartest or most successful. I was never easily impressed and never intimidated. The only people who mattered to me were those to whom I mattered.

I give my business to people and companies who at least give the appearance of appreciating my business and valuing me. People who are friendly and return my calls rate very high on my value system. People who fail to return my calls and e-mails are discarded and quickly forgotten. These people have shown me a disrespect and I return that with my own disrespect. I think most people are the same way.

Perhaps it was easier to be kind before we were attacked by terrorists on our own soil. Perhaps our lives are more complicated and the times more dangerous. But we all share this time. We all share the same threats. It is hard on all of us. We should be nicer to each other rather than unkind. Is it that hard to do?

This is the age of very rude, very unkind people. That's one reason we are not loyal to any one company or person. People are so busy trying to make themselves appear important that they forget the people on whom their livelihoods depend --- customers, clients and prospects.

It would do us all a lot of good to get back to the rules of life and business that Dale Carnegie made popular for so many decades. Get a copy of the book. You will not win friends and influence people with rudeness and unkindness. We're all going off in the wrong direction and we need to turn around.

The people who have meant the most to me in my life were those who were kind to me and who showed me respect. It's hard not to like such a person. So if you want to be successful, be kind and thoughtful to people. Return their calls and their e-mails. Make them feel important. Don't do so much horn blowing and building up your own ego at their expense. You'll be important when you make them feel important. You will be repaid with a good reputation and lots of business.

One of the most memorable individuals in my life was Mary Turkington of Topeka, KS. Mary was the executive director of The Kansas Motor Carriers Association for many years. She was a very effective lobbyist at the state house and in Washington D.C. and an important person in her time. She was also, for a brief time, my stepmother.

What I remember most about Mary was that everyone liked her. No one didn't like Mary. They enjoyed being around her. Why did they like her and delight in her company? The reason was simple. She made everyone feel like the most important person in the world. She called them by their name. She used their names a lot. She looked them in the eye and showed a real interest in them. She talked about them, not herself. Her secret was just that simple.

It made Mary a well liked person. She earned the respect of everyone who knew her or knew of her. And it made her very successful.

Had she been rude and hateful like most people today she would have been disliked. She would have been a failure. She would have retired without friends or a support system. But Mary retired with many friends and lots of business associates with whom she continued activities in the business world. She can look back on her life as a success.

Andrew Carnegie, one of the most successful and richest people in history, had his simple philosophy put on his tombstone. It read, "Here lies one who knew how to get around him men who were cleverer than himself." All successful people in all walks of life know it is wise to get smarter people than themselves around them to fill in the gaps of their own lack. They know the value of other people and don't take all the credit for themselves.

Emerson said, "Every man I meet is my superior in some way. In that, I learn of him."

Dale Carnegie said in his book, "You can make more friends in two months by becoming interested in other people than you can in two years by trying to get other people interested in you."

It is true and always will be true that people do things for their reasons, not yours. Yes people are selfish and think the world revolves around themselves. You can't change that. You're like that too. So am I. So live with it. Work with it. Accept it and use it. Let them think the world DOES revolve around them. It won't hurt you. It may even make you rich!

I don't mean flattery. Flattery is phony and people hate it. I always know when I'm being buttered up and it instantly makes me dislike the person doing it. No, I'm talking about really caring about the other person and his or her needs and concerns. I'm talking about being gracious to them and saying nice things about them --- things that are true.

The only way to influence other people is to talk about what they want and show them how to get it. Use the bait they like --- not what you like. You may like steak. But if you want to catch a fish you use a worm, not steak.

If this method of dealing with people doesn't work, you can always go back to showing everyone how important you are. Then you'll be in the majority again and someone else can stand out from the crowd and grab the success that could have been yours.

Dale Carnegie said, "The world is full of people . . . grabbing, self-seeking. So the rare individual who unselfishly tries to serve others has an enormous advantage. He has little competition."

A woman called me a few weeks ago. She was the buyer for a large corporation and asked my opinion of a certain product which is sold online. She knew I used it at one time. I told her it was a fine product. But I added truthfully that technical support was practically non-existent.

"If technical support is important to you, I wouldn't consider buying it," I told her. I added that if I had known before I bought it that support was so bad I would not have made the purchase from them.

"I sort of suspected that," she said. "I am still waiting for a reply to my e-mail," she added.

I told her that throughout the years that I had the product I got very few replies to my e-mails to them and they gave close to no support. So she opted not to buy from them. That company lost at least one large order because of their self-serving attitude and lack of care for the other person. I suspect they've lost much more and will at some point be out of business.

Businesses can only survive so long by being self-serving and not acknowledging customers and others as important to their success. The same applies to individuals. Since so few people and businesses really care about anyone other than themselves the person who develops the ability to do so will indeed have little or no competition.

So begin now to eliminate the competition. Begin to give a damn about others. It costs you nothing and gives you so much.




Susanna on 06.23.06 @ 11:32 AM CDT [link]


Saturday, June 17th

Creative Brief Template - Proposal Template and Radio Commercial Template Available


A number of people come to my site daily looking for creative brief templates, proposal templates and information about writting radio commercials. I decided to provide them with some useful tools. Perhaps you too could benefit from them too.

This is where you'll get information about my Creative Brief Template and Proposal Template. I'm also including a free storyboard template that can be printed out and used over and over.

The radio format template is very useful if you write lots of radio spots or even just one from time to time. It won't give you the words but it will make your scripts look professional.

These are in Microsoft Word format.

Have a good weekend.


Susanna on 06.17.06 @ 04:57 AM CDT [link]


Sunday, June 11th

Attention Copywriters - Don't Let Clients Change Your Contract or Take Advantage of You.


If you're a copywriter, you probably use a contract in dealing with clients. If you don't, you should. For the most part you really won't need written agreements. Most of your business transactions will, as a general rule, flow nicely.

But there will be that client who comes along who will give you more grief than any amount of money he may give you is worth. Or, you may get no money at all yet all the grief.

For example, last week I had a prospective client who wanted a Web site written. It was a fairly small job and not especially much money as jobs go. It would have paid about $3,000. But it would have been fun.

So I sent him a contract. He kept it much longer than normal. I had a feeling he was pulling one. I expect some clients to seek council whenever they do any deal. I have no problem with that. But this man was of foreign extraction and such men are often throwbacks to the caveman and they think all women are fools to be taken advantage of. And, to their credit (or lack of same) some of them think they're so sharp they can take advantage of any natural born American citizen, man or woman.

This antiquated attitude has been bred out of most men under fifty in all but the middle east and some men in France. Many old duffers over sixty in all countries still suffer from this problem unless they've had women bosses or very bright wives or in some manner have managed to overcome this illness of mind.

Well, about a week after I sent him the agreement he sent me an email and said he was ready to overnight me the check if I'd just agree to a "few minor, standard changes" his lawyer had made.

See, their gambit on this game is to come in at the last minute . . . just under the wire . . . and put the money before you and want just a tiny change. You learn this at Screw U.

I never agree to changes in my contracts. I have them created as they are for a reason and I don't negotiate them. But for the fun of it I read the document. The changes were not minor nor standard. He had it fixed so that if he didn't like the copy, he didn't pay for it. He also had it so he paid in three payments. I always get paid in full in advance.

In addition, he had it in there that I was to do the design. Now I don't design anything. I make that clear on my site, in my conversations with clients and certainly in my proposals and agreements.

This ol' boy must have thought I was so hungry for a job I'd sign anything! Well, he picked the wrong broad. If I didn't work another day in my life, I have all the money I need. I didn't need his job. I don't
need any job. I accept a job if and when I choose to and on my terms.

The only thing I'll negotiate is I will come down on price. But ONLY if I take something of keen value away from the prospective client . . . take it totally off the table. I know there's an article on the net
about how we copywriters give a high quote and expect to come down. Well, if that's true, it does not apply to me!

When I was young and starting out people took advantage of me. But with age comes wisdom. And if you're young, take my advice. Use a very good contract. Don't let prospective clients trick you into changing it in their favor. Don't come down on your fee unless you take something of value off the table.

Another piece of advice that, if heeded, will serve you well is to never, under any circumstances, let our client see the final polished copy you've written for him until he has fully paid for it and signed an agreement stating that if he writes you a bad check, stops pay on a check or does a credit card charge back you will be repaid and you will retain all rights to the copy. Once a person gets what he wants he's not anxious to pay for it. If you withhold it until you get full payment, he'll be in a greater hurry to pay you.

Most clients have enough business sense to not take advantage of you. But some will if given an opening. Do the best job you can for your client. But take care of yourself first. You can be certain that he's taking care of himself and not thinking of you and your needs.

There are some real tricksters out there. Many people have learned how to act very friendly and innocent and all the while they're figuring out how to screw you. They attended SCREW U University.

And do not be intimidated by lawyers either. Some clients bring them in. Most lawyers are not all that bright and half don't know too much about the laws in their very own states. Especially intellectual property law or Internet law. Just because someone is a lawyer does not make him or her especially smart.

Bottom line --- not all people are good people. Lots of ill-informed people think that copywriters will take any job and sign any agreement to get a job. No matter where you are in your career, don't let them do this to you. It's a form of rape.
--------------

I have edited a new ebook. If you'd like to learn all about it visit this page on my site. It's mostly for writers, speakers and copywriters but people in many professions will find it most useful.
-------------

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Susanna on 06.11.06 @ 04:27 AM CDT [link]


Sunday, June 4th

82-Year-Old Man in Wheelchair and on Sedation Medication Chases 16-Year-Old Girl


Young and rather fetching as young girls can be while their stomachs are still flat and other parts less so, the girl was waiting for her mother who was visiting someone in a retirement home. The girl was in the main living area reading a book.

A skinny ancient man in a wheelchair rolled up to her. He began to talk. Being a friendly girl she replied and talked to him. Then he reached over to her and started to reach for things that an old man ought never to reach for on a young girl.

So she ran. She was a good runner because she was an athlete. But the old man was right on her heels --- pushing the wheelchair with strong arms. Finally the girl found her mother who proceeded to use language to the old man that all mothers use when their daughters are threatened. Not pretty language but effective language.

Later the mother found out that the ancient man was 82-years-old and took a very strong drug that slows the body down to a crawl! Well, it’s supposed to.

That young girl was me. I had just had my first lesson in motivation.

I learned early that men . . . all men . . . are motivated by sex.

In my thirties I was pursued by a man for whom I had absolutely no attraction. The man was dying of cancer but he still wanted sex. I didn’t have to physically run from this man but I quietly walked away. I was quite disappointed in this situation because I thought the man was a friend and I was trying to be kind to him because he was ill. But a woman can’t be kind to a man as he mistakes that for something far greater. And no, he didn’t get what he wanted. At least not from me.

When ensconced well into my forties I had an old neighbor man come over to help me with my drapes and he made a pass at me. I told him I would break his legs if he didn’t get the hell out of my house. I feared if I injured him I’d go to jail so I figured it best to extract him from my home.

So what, if anything, does this have to do with copywriting and marketing? Simply this ----- sell to what motivates people.

No, I don’t mean what you think I mean. Shame on you!

How many ads for cars do you see where a pretty young, very thin woman is drapped over the front of the car? These ads are saying, “Buy this car and women will fall all over you.” No, the copy doesn’t say that. The picture says it. It’s implied.

I’m a weight lifter and subscribe to several bodybuilding magazines. I’m always appalled at the way the female bodybuilders are made to look like sex objects and the men like gods but that’s another story. When you look at the ads you see young women hanging onto these fine self-absorbed studs. The hunk is selling supplements, of course.
What does the ad say? “Buy this supplement and you too will have fine young things hanging all over you.” Again, no the copy doesn’t say that. The pictures do.

The way to sell to men, straight or gay, is to promise sex. Now get your mind out of the gutter. I don’t mean it that way either. I mean you promise that what you sell to them will in some way, shape or form lead to more sex in their lives, make them more attractive to their chosen prospective sexual partners.

Want to sell a supplement. Show a fine looking man with six pack abs and add four beauties hanging onto him, looking at him admiringly and you’ll sell the supplement. I guarantee it.

But tell him that the supplement will make him build muscle and burn fat and it might sell a few guys but not many. You’ve got to sell to what really motivates a person. If the man is gay, you sell the gay lifestyle. You just replace the beautiful women with beautiful young men.

Now it doesn’t matter what you sell. You can still use sex to motivate. I sell copywriting. Now how dull is that! But when a man thinks he’ll be more attractive to women if he has money --- which he is --- then he’ll want the best copywriter money can buy. He knows that great copy will give him more money and more money will get him more women or make him attractive to the one or ones he already has. In other words, sex.

Look, I didn’t invent these motivators. I don’t even like them. But that’s the way it is. Men don’t think like women. Women are not motivated by sex.

The highest rate of sexually transmitted disease is now among the elderly! Those naughty senior citizens are doing it all over the place with anyone and everyone. Why? Well, Viagra has done one hell of a selling job. You’ve gotta’ watch out for these old men with a pocket full of blue pills. As Mae West might say if she were alive today, “Is that a blue pill in your pocket or . . . are you just glad to see me?” These old men with the blue pills will be on you like a tick on a dog.

And the old girls figure --- what the hell --- I can’t get preggers anymore and I still enjoy the same things. Why not. If the ol’ boy can get it up, let’s go for it. Well just shame on those old folks! But hey, great marketing.

My point? Sell to what really motivates people. You don’t have to say, “Buy this supplement from me and you’ll get more sexual conquests than you can handle.” But say it in a subtle way, an indirect way.

Oh, I know that people are motivated by lots of things. People are motivated to keep up with the neighbors. They want to eat and drink what the stars and the rich eat and drink. They want to be seen in Abercrombie and Fitch bracelets and shirts because the beautiful people are in these things.

But the real motivator behind it all is sex. At least for men and perhaps some women. I find that women are more motivated by money and security. Women bore of sex easily. And looking at the waddling western women one wonders if they ever exercise any part of their bodies to the extent the sexual act requires. More ass than class, some of these women and many men.

So the bottom line --- no pun intended --- is to sell to what motivates. Don’t come right out and say it. But do it with finesse.

And a final word to you women --- watch the old men in wheelchairs or old men who are dying. They chase until they’re in the ground.

A girl learns early in life to fasten her seat belt . . . ‘cause it’s gonna’ be a bumpy bumpy ride.



Susanna on 06.04.06 @ 04:38 AM CDT [link]




Susanna K. Hutcheson

Susanna K. Hutcheson is a well-known, prolific writer and copywriter. She started her career in 1967 and has been a reporter on numerous newspapers, a feature writer on major magazines and trade publications and editor and owner of several weekly newspapers. She is executive copy director of Power Communications. She is also a press card-carrying award-winning journalist.






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