Claude Hopkins was an advertising pioneer in the late 19th/early 20th century who worked for major agencies and clients. He established several principles of effective advertising based on his experience, including that advertising should focus on selling to individuals by emphasizing benefits and value, providing full information and specific details to customers, using psychology and demonstrations to appeal to human nature, testing advertisements through experiments, and emphasizing cost and results through measurement. Hopkins believed advertising should be a science based on constant learning from mistakes and experiments rather than guesses.
2. Lifeandcareer
≒ 18661932
≒ Lord & Thomas, Chicago (predecessor of Foote Cone Belding, now Draft FCB).
≒ Schlitz, Quaker Oats, Goodyear, Palmolive.
≒ He was cocky, but he KNEW what worked and what didnt through countless cycles of trial and error.
≒ He made a ton of money in his day. $185,000 a year about $4 million today.
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3. Principlesandphilosophy
≒ Advertising is salesmanship
≒ Focus on the individual customer
≒ Offer service
≒ The value of full information
≒ Tell your full story
≒ Be specific
≒ Psychology
≒ Samples and demonstration
≒ Emphasis on cost and result
≒ Testing and experimentation
≒ Sell to consumers, not to dealers
≒ Never advertise negatively
≒ Passion and hard work
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5. The only purpose of advertising is to make sales.
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6. Advertising is multiplied salesmanship. It may appeal to thousands while the
salesman talks to one. A salesmans mistake may cost little. An advertising mistake
may cost a thousand times as much. Be more cautious, more exacting, therefore.
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7. The way to sell goods is to sell them.
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8. That is one of the greatest advertising faults. Ad-writers abandon their parts.
They forget they are salesmen and try to be performers.
Instead of sales, they seek applause.
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10. Dont think of people in the mass. That gives you a blurred
view. Think of a typical individual.
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11. The advertising man studies the consumer. He tries to
place himself in the position of the buyer.
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12. Ads are planned and written with some utterly wrong conception. They are written
to please the seller. The interests of the buyer are forgotten. One can never sell
goods profitably, in person or in print, when that attitude exists.
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13. Every campaign that I devise or write is aimed at some individual member of this
vast majority. I do not consult managers or boards of directors. Their viewpoint is
nearly always distorted. I submit them to the simple folks around me who typify
America. They are our customers. Their reactions are the only ones that count.
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14. I know of nothing more ridiculous than gray-haired boards of
directors deciding on what housewives want.
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15. We must get down to individuals. We must treat people in advertising
as we treat them in person. Center on their desires.
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16. We cannot go after thousands of men until we learn how to win one.
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18. Remember that the people you address are selfish, as we all are. They care nothing
about your interest or your profit. They seek service for themselves. Ignoring this
fact is a common mistake and a costly mistake in advertising.
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19. People can be coaxed but not driven. Whatever they do they do to
please themselves. Many fewer mistakes would be in advertising if
these facts were never forgotten.
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20. The best ads ask no one to buy. That is useless.
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22. Ad ad-writer, to have a chance at success, must gain full
information on his subject. A painstaking advertising man
will often read for weeks on some problem which comes up.
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23. Caffeineless coffee has been advertised for years. Only through weeks of reading
did we find the way to put it in another light.
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24. To advertise a tooth paste this writer has also read many volumes of scientific
matter dry as dust. But in the middle of one volume he found the idea which has
helped make millions for that tooth paste maker.
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25. The maker may say that he has no distinctions. However, there is nearly always
something impressive which others have not told. We must discover it.
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26. Genius is the art of taking pains. The advertising man who
spares the midnight oil will never get very far.
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27. The uninformed would be staggered to know the amount
of work involved in a single ad. This is no lazy mans field.
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28. Advertising is much like war... Our intelligence department is a vital factor.
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30. When you once get a persons attention, then is the time to
accomplish all you ever hope with him.
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31. In every ad consider only new customers. People using your
product are not going to read your ads.
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32. We cannot expect people to read our ads again and again.
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33. In one reading of an advertisement one decides for or against a
proposition. And that operates against a second reading.
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34. Ads should tell the full story. People do not read ads in a series.
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35. We should not lose our opportunity. Every ad should include whatever we have
found appealing to any considerable class.
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36. All appeals which prove themselves important should be included in every ad.
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37. One fact appeals to some, one to another. Omit any one and a certain percentage
will lose the fact which might convince.
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38. The more you tell, the more you sell.
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39. Any reader of your ad is interested, else he would not be a reader.
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41. Give actual figures, state definite facts. Take the tungsten lamp as an example. Say
that it gives more light than other lamps, and people are but mildly impressed. Say
that it gives 3-1/2 times the light of carbon lamps, and people realize that you have
made actual comparisons. They will accept your claims at par.
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42. The weight of an argument may often be multiplied by making it specific.
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43. One actual figure counts for more than countless platitudes.
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44. Indefinite claims leave indefinite impressions.
But definite claims get full credit and value.
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46. Human nature is perpetual. So the principles of psychology are fixed and enduring.
You will never need to unlearn what you learn about them.
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47. Curiosity is one of the strongest forms of human incentives.
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48. Then he said, Try our rivals too said it in his headlines. He invited comparisons
and showed that he did not fear them. Buyers were careful to get the brand so
conspicuously superior that its maker could court a trial of the rest.
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49. Many have advertised, Try it for a week. If you dont like it, well return your
money. Then someone conceived the idea of sending goods without any money
down, and saying, Pay in a week if you like them.
That proved many times as impressive.
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50. Remove all restrictions and say, We trust you,
and human nature likes to justify that trust.
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51. Ask a person to take a chance on you, and you have a fight.
Offer to take a chance on them, and the way is easy.
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52. An offer limited to a certain class of people is far more effective than a general offer.
Those who are entitled to any seeming advantage will go a long way
not to lose that advantage.
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53. Prevention is not a popular subject, however much it should be.
People will do much to cure a trouble, but... little to prevent it.
They do not cross bridges in advance.
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55. The product itself should be its own best salesman.
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56. No argument in the world can ever compare with one dramatic demonstration.
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57. Samples are of prime importance. However expensive,
they usually form the cheapest selling method.
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58. You say that is expensive. So is it expensive to gain a prospects interest.
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59. They would not think of sending out a salesman without samples. But they will
spend fortunes on advertising to urge people to buy without seeing or testing.
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60. Many advertisers lose much by being penny-wise. That is why they ask ten cents
for a sample, or a stamp or two. Putting a price on a sample greatly retards supplies.
Then it prohibits you from using the word Free in your ads.
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61. Bear in mind that you are the seller. You are the one courting interest. Then dont
make it difficult to exhibit that interest. Dont ask your prospects to pay for your
selling efforts. Three in four will refuse to pay perhaps nine in ten.
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62. We do not advocate samples given out promiscuously. The product is cheapened.
Give samples to interested people only.
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64. Your object in all advertising is to buy new customers
at a price which pays a profit.
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65. Ads are not written to amuse, but to sell. And to sell at the lowest cost possible.
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66. Countless advertisers without a trace on cost are judging ads by appearance. That
is why so much money is wasted in advertising. People do not know their costs...
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67. The money is spent blindly, merely to satisfy some advertising whim.
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68. ...thousands of advertisers... spend large sums on a guess. And they are... paying
for sales 2 to 35 times what they need cost.
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69. ...figuring cost per customer ...that is the only way to gauge advertising.
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70. I have no sympathy with dignified and orthodox advertising.
We are in business to get results.
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71. Many an old advertiser has little or no idea of his advertising results.
The business is growing through many efforts combined,
and advertising is given its share of credit.
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72. We see... men spending five dollars to do what one dollar might do. Men getting
back 30 per cent of their cost when they might get 150 per cent.
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73. We can at least know what we pay. We can make keyed comparisons,
one ad with another.
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74. I want to sell what I have to sell, and sell it at a profit.
I want the figures on cost and result.
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76. We must discover what appeals are most impressive.
We learn that by keyed tests...
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77. Guesswork is very expensive. Perhaps one time in fifty a guess may be right. But
fifty times in fifty an actual test tells you what to do and avoid.
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78. I have little respect for most theories of advertising,
because they have not been proved.
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79. Our success depends on pleasing people. By an inexpensive test
we can learn if we please them or not.
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80. ...let the thousands decide what the millions will do.
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81. One can always learn what is wanted and what is not wanted,
without any considerable risk.
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82. I never spent much money on any wrong theory.
I discovered quickly the right and the wrong.
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83. I made so many mistakes in a small way, and learned something from each.
I made no mistake twice. Every once in a while I developed
some great advertising principle.
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84. None of us can afford to rely on judgment or experience. New problems require new
experience. We must test our undertakings in the most exact way possible.
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85. We find that some methods which succeed in one line cannot by applied to another.
So, regardless of principles, we must always experiment.
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87. We cannot afford to sell anything twice. We cannot spend large sums in expense
and concessions in selling our goods to dealers. Then spend other large sums in
selling for the dealer. The tax is too great on the consumer. We must choose.
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88. Much money is often frittered away on... dealer help.
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89. To get dealers to stock an unknown line on promise of advertising is not easy.
They have seen too many efforts fail, too many promises rescinded.
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90. The average dealer does what you would do. He exerts himself on brands of his
own, if at all. Not on another mans brand. ...they make four times as much on
products of their own.
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91. Many of the wrecks in advertising come from trying to sell things over and over.
One first sells to the jobber, and he demands a large percentage.
Then he tries to sell to the retailer. He wants free goods and extra margins.
Yet all the results depend on the consumer.
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92. One can never win out in that way. It is like a man who tries to do business with
excessive overhead. He bears the expense, the risk, and the effort,
and his profits are dissipated.
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93. If a line can be sold by interesting dealers, let the dealer sell. But if we are going to
sell our goods for him, we cannot pay him more than the profit
of a mere distributor.
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94. Win consumers and let them sell to dealers.
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97. To attack a rival is never good advertising. Dont point out others faults. The
selfish purpose is apparent.
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98. Do not picture or feature ills. The people you appeal to have enough. Show and
feature the happier results which come from your product or methods.
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99. Repulsive ideas seldom won readers or converts. People do not want to read of the
penalties. They want to be told of the rewards.
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100. People are seeking happiness, safety, beauty, and content.
Then show them the way.
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101. Tell people what to do, not what to avoid.
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102. Assume that people will do what you ask. Say, Send now for this sample.
Dont say, Why do you neglect this offer?
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103. The positive ad outpulls the other four to one.
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105. The man who does two or three times the work of another learns two or three times
as much. He makes more mistakes and more successes, and he learns from both.
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106. We do best what we like best.
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107. I have always been an addict to work. I love work as other men love play.
It is both my occupation and my recreation.
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108. I consider business as a game and I play it as a game.
That is why I have been, and still am, so devoted to it.
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110. Advertisers will multiply when they see that advertising can be safe and sure. Small
expenditures made on a guess will grow to big ones on a certainty. Our line of
business will be finer, cleaner, when the gamble is removed. And we shall be prouder
of it when we are judged on merit.
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111. Safe principles are evolved only by those who know with reasonable exactness
what the advertising does.
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112. Every ad is surrounded by countless appeals. Every effort involves much expense.
The man who wins out and survives does so only because of superior science and
strategy. He must know more, must be better grounded,
must be shrewder than his rivals.
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