Posted by:
Clayton Makepeace
January 30, 2006
Issue #28
- 3 inconvenient facts self-appointed copy gurus never tell you …
- How logic lapses and organizational flubs kill great sales copy …
- How many drafts are enough?
- The single most important quality of a great writer …
- And much, Much MORE!
Dear Business Builder:
I’ve been married. Twice. For a total of 32 years (so far). And if I’ve learned anything from the experience, it’s that it’s always wise to apologize before doing pretty much anything.
… So for the article you’re about to read, please accept my humblest apologies.
I do not intend to insult, degrade, discourage or belittle anyone – least of all you, dear reader. To the contrary: My mission is to equip, challenge, inspire and motivate you.
In truth, my vision for you is greater, higher and richer than your own dream is for yourself. Tremendous success, wealth and personal fulfillment await you further down this path that you have taken – the road to achievement in the direct response marketing industry.
But to help you realize that dream, it’s high time someone told you the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth …
What the Internet’s “Direct Response” hucksters never tell you
Right now, the Internet is lousy with ads promoting seminars, courses, books and reports on how to write great direct response sales copy.
A few – products offered by Michael Masterson at AWAI, Bob Bly, Gary Bencivenga, and a few others I could name – are by people I know and respect as great direct response marketers and are worth their weight in diamonds.
But many other copywriting and direct response products are promoted by poseurs: People whose only qualification is that they once attended a seminar or read a book on how to write sales copy. Truth be told, none of the best direct response companies would ever even think of hiring these people.
Ask any of these guys or gals to name the clients they’ve written huge winners for … the names of the great copywriters they’ve beaten in the real world … the names of companies whose sales and profits they’ve exploded … and you’re likely to get a blank stare.
Still, I’ve ordered a bunch of their stuff just to see what they’re selling. And you know what? Most of it isn’t half bad. These guys and gals have dutifully regurgitated many great principles that really can boost response.
The problem isn’t so much the quality of the information they sell as the tone and content of their ads. To read many of them, you’d think that direct response copywriting is just another “Get Rich Quick” scheme.
“It’s easy,” they say. “Just pay me a not-so-small fortune for my book/course/seminar – and YOU TOO can get rich in direct response!”
But in their haste to sell you something, the “infopreneurs” fail to mention a few “inconvenient” facts. And as fate would have it, what they’re not telling you could make all the difference in the world for you …
Inconvenient Fact #1:
You have to think – HARD!
Writing effective ad copy isn’t about throwing a lot of random thoughts at a prospect until he’s willing to do anything – even buy your product – just to shut you up.
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Posted by:
Clayton Makepeace
January 23, 2006
- Why 90% of today’s ad campaigns are a total waste of money …
- How Madison Avenue sleight of hand turns savvy business people into drooling morons …
- The four things every ad MUST accomplish to be successful …
- A great opportunity for copywriters – in a place you’d never even THINK of looking …
- Much more!
Dear Business-Builder,
Sometimes I wish I had gone into advertising instead of direct response marketing.
I can see myself nestled in a posh Madison Avenue corner office, hauling down six figures a year, creating beer-swilling frogs, taco-eating Chihuahuas and other madcap characters …
… And of course, personally casting ads in which scantily clad babes with legs up to here and bushels of bouncing booty and boobage cavort in soapy slow motion!
I can see myself being worshipped as an “advertising genius” for this “brilliant” work … getting huge bonuses and promotions … winning armfuls of creative awards … and getting my smiling face plastered all over the cover of Ad Age.
The best part? Knowing that nobody will ever ask the question, “… But do his ads work?”
Unfortunately, I didn’t take that route. Instead, I wound up in direct response marketing – where every order and every penny generated by every ad, every direct mail package and every Internet campaign I create is carefully tracked.
Within a few weeks, days, or – in the case of TV and Internet promotions – a few hours, everybody knows whether I’m a genius or a hack.
If my client puts $500,000 in the mail, he expects at least $500,000 in net sales back – PLUS ten thousand or so new customers. If my copy does that for him, I’m gold.
If not, I’m a schmuck – and if I ever tried to convince a client that my bomb of a promo enhanced his “brand awareness” or “image,” he’d probably think I’d lost my mind.
That means I don’t have the luxury of sacrificing proven sales-boosting techniques in the name of creativity. Every promotion I create must accomplish all the things that are necessary to do in order to make the sale.
But most of the ad campaigns created by major ad agencies are NOT trackable. And that simple fact is now creating some of the worst advertising ever produced … costing American consumers a freakin’ fortune … and is at the root of what I am convinced is the greatest scam ever perpetrated in the corporate world …
(more…)
Posted by:
Clayton Makepeace
January 16, 2006
Issue #26
Will these Marketing Mega-Trends make you
– or break you – in the year ahead?
Dear Business-Builder,
If I’ve learned anything in my 30-odd years of promoting investment newsletters, it’s that predicting the future can be a dangerous game.
And so, to prove that I really HAVEN’T learned anything in my 30-odd years promoting investment newsletters, I’ve decided to polish up the old crystal ball – and try my own hand at prognostication.
Sounds like I’m about to crawl out on a limb just before I saw it off – right?
Not really – ’cause I’m cheating a little.
Each of the predictions you’re about to read is ALREADY coming true. Some of these trends have been developing and accelerating for two or three years now. And human beings what they are, each one of them is a slam-dunk to continue – not only in 2006, but for years to come.
The thing is, the marketing environment is changing faster now than at any time in my career – and the Internet is the reason why.
No matter what anyone might tell you, the Internet is NOT just another medium. Other mediums cost money. Lots of it.
Send a direct mail package to 1,000 prospects and it’ll cost you five hundred smackers or more.
Contact the same number of prospects through Print, TV or radio and you could pay $5/m, $10/m or $20/m – maybe more.
But you can send e-mails to 1,000 folks over the Internet for next to nothing.
And not only is the Internet nearly free for marketers, there’s a lot of free stuff on here for consumers, too. Like the eLetter you’re reading now, for example.
See, if this was 15 years ago – say, 1990 – and I wanted to help a bunch of nice folks sharpen up their ad copy and marketing strategies, I’d have:
- Started a print newsletter …
- Written a red-hot direct mail promotion for it…
- Mailed my promo to everyone who had ever bought any information product relating to copywriting or direct response marketing at the cost of around $450 per thousand pieces mailed ($450/M), and …
- Popped champagne corks if I got my $450/M back.
I would have been thrilled to break even on my new subscriber effort. It meant I got a new subscriber for free. And even though I’d have to spend $12 or $15 over the next year to actually fulfill each subscription, I’d have counted on renewals and additional product sales to those subscribers to make me a tidy profit.
The Internet, of course has changed all that. Now, you don’t have to pay $450/M to attract subscribers. And you don’t have to pay through the nose to print and mail the welcome kit or regular issues to subscribers.
So – at least for the time being, the Internet has made marketing and fulfillment of information products a lot cheaper. But in doing so, it has also cheapened the value of published information. So much on the Internet is available for free, selling informational products isn’t as easy as it once was.
OK – so I guess I’ve pre-ambled enough. Let’s get on with the forecasts …
(more…)
Posted by:
Clayton Makepeace
January 9, 2006
- Are “Faux Benefits” killing your sales copy?
- Why product features are far more important than you’ve been led to believe …
- The simple secret to exploding your sales results in just five easy steps
- And MORE!
Dear Business-Builder,
A serious crisis has arisen that must be addressed immediately – before I can crit even one more copy cub’s draft…
The other day, I had the dubious pleasure of reviewing copy submitted by a new group of my beloved cubs – each of whom has read The Masters and even completed courses on copywriting … and each of whom I believe has the innate talent to (eventually) become one of the greats.
Each cub was told to write benefit-oriented headlines for a series of natural supplement products.
The first headline jumped up and shouted…
Get Off The Hormone Roller Coaster!
“Well,” I said to myself, “THAT certainly sucks!” And so I turned to the next one …
Balance Blood Sugar Levels Naturally!
… And the next …
Flush Deadly Toxins Out Of Your Colon!
“Whoo boy,” I said out loud, “I should be getting combat pay for this!”
See, not a single one of those “benefit-based” headlines contains a single real benefit! Instead, each contains a “Faux Benefit” – a product feature masquerading as a benefit!
Apply my patented “forehead slap” test to each of those headlines and you’ll see what I mean.
- Have you ever been awakened in the middle of the night … sat bolt upright in bed … slapped yourself on the forehead and exclaimed, “Holy Moley – I gotta get off of the hormone roller coaster?”
- When was the last time you were jarred out of a deep sleep exclaiming “Jeez Louise – I need to balance my blood sugar levels naturally!”
- And have you EVER jumped out of a warm bed to holler, “I gotta flush some deadly toxins out of my colon!”
No? Me neither!
Have you ever found yourself feeling eager to PAY for a product that would do any of those things for you?
Nope? Join the club!
I mean – getting off the hormone roller coaster sounds like it might be a good thing. On the other hand, roller coasters are fun. Heck. People pay money to get ONTO them!
I suppose balancing blood sugar levels is good, too. And if you’re making a list of folks who are “all for” flushing deadly toxins out of my colon – or any other part of my body for that matter – put me at the top of it.
But are these really benefits our prospects crave – and are willing to pay for?
Of course not. Our “hormone balancing” prospects want to stop having hot flashes and mood swings and stop losing their libidos.
Why? Well, for one thing, because hot flashes and mood swings are irritating – even miserable. And for another – drilling down even deeper – because all of these things threaten the intimacy and security of their primary relationships. Nobody wants to be a hormone hermit!
Nobody really wants to balance their blood sugar levels, either. But anyone in his or her right mind DOES want to avoid the misery of blindness … cold, numb, painful limbs … amputation … and premature death that go along with diabetes.
And frankly, while “flushing toxins out of my colon” is nowhere near the top of my personal “to do” list, I WOULD prefer not to be constipated, or plagued with uncontrollable diarrhea, or have to poop in a bag for the rest of my life, or die from colon cancer.
The Faux Benefits heralded in these headlines are mechanisms … processes … product features that deliver benefits. They are not, in themselves, real benefits that anybody craves or wants to pay for.
My beloved copy cubs failed to drill down to the real, bottom-line, rubber-meets-the-road benefit each product provides – the tangible, measurable, real value they bring to prospects’ lives: The value that prospects are willing to – once again – pay for.
This is a cardinal and common sin even among more seasoned copywriters – and that business owners and marketing execs too often let us get away with.
Here’s another: Failing to fully explore the benefits that each benefit provides. In short, squeezing every feature until you’ve explored every benefit … and then squeezing every benefit for the secondary benefits IT provides.
Confused? Me too – sometimes, anyway. Let’s work through this together …
Benefits 101
Let’s start with four basic facts …
-
Every product has features: Features are merely objective facts about a product (or the company behind it). In three-dimensional products, features include size, shape, weight, construction, color options and more.
In information products, features include number of pages, size, frequency of publication (for periodicals) and the types of information that are presented.
- Fortunately, most features are there for a darned good reason: Prospects don’t want features. They want you to change their lives for the better.
Product features are merely the means to that end. That means features can have a place in ad copy – like telling prospects how many issues they’ll get per year … how many big pages are in your book … or that your widget is made from carbon steel for strength or carbon fiber for lightness.
Beyond that, features are a yawn because they’re about the product; not about the prospect. Or, as in the examples above, they can help demonstrate how your product delivers a benefit.
The good news is, just about every product fact – every feature – is there to provide a benefit that your prospect IS willing to pay for.
- There are more benefits associated with each product feature than are dreamt of by most copywriters: Benefits are like bunny rabbits: Give them a little time and they’ll begin multiplying – each benefit or combination of benefits producing one, two, three or more new benefits you never thought about before.
The secret to kick-butt sales copy is to identify each and every benefit a product provides – and then to look at each benefit and ask, “What does THAT do for me? What additional benefits does that benefit provide?”
- Your prospect has strong feelings about every dimensionalized benefit you present: Connecting each fully dimensionalized product benefit with a strong emotion that your prospect already has about the benefit (or the lack of it in his/her life) makes sales copy irresistible.
Benefits that sing and soar
– in five simple steps
Here’s a little exercise to help you drill down to the benefits prospects are willing to pay for … fully dimensionalize those benefits … and then connect those benefits with powerful response-boosting emotions that your prospect already has about those benefits (or the lack of them) in his life.
By the time you’re through, you will have a complete list of company and product features … you will have squeezed every possible benefit out of those features … you will have fully dimensionalized those benefits … and you will have connected each one to a powerful emotion your prospect has about each one of them.
In short, you’ll have a comprehensive “features/benefits/dominant emotion” inventory you can refer to as you write your copy.
I do NOT suggest that you do this on every project. After a while, this kind of thinking comes naturally. But even for more advanced writers – and especially for folks who supervise writers – going through this exercise can go a long way towards finding new themes and adding power to your promotions.
To begin, create a spreadsheet with these headings:
| Feature |
Why? |
Benefits |
Dimensionalize |
Dominant
Emotions |
Rank |
Step #1:
Create a Comprehensive FEATURES Inventory
If you’ve read any books or taken any courses on direct response copywriting, you’ve probably learned that features are immaterial. Only benefits matter.
Only problem is, that’s just horse-pucky.
Features are the fathers of each benefit your product provides. And if every product benefit has its roots in a product feature, identifying and fully understanding each feature is essential to identifying all the benefits your product provides.
And so, if features are the fathers of benefits, it makes sense to begin at the beginning – by listing all the key facts about 1) The business and 2) The product or service you’re promoting.
Start by answering the following questions about the company and the spokesperson behind the product in the first column of your table…
-
“What are your qualifications?” What degrees or certifications have you earned in your field of endeavor? From which institutions? What associations are you a member of? How many years have you provided this product or service?
How many customers (patients, clients, etc.) have you served? Are you the largest or oldest in your area of expertise? What specialties do you offer that your competitors don’t?
- “What resources do you use to produce a superior product or service?” How large an army are you putting to work on the prospect’s behalf? Who are the stand-out players? What unique or proprietary tools do you use to produce the desired result?
Do you have custom computer programs or hardware that nobody else has? How many customer service reps are available to make ordering comfortable and easy? How many service techs are on your payroll who can respond when the product needs service?
- “How is your location a factor?” Are you closer to your prospects than your competition? Are your headquarters impressive-looking? Is your office close to a major intersection or freeway off-ramp? Do you offer plenty of free parking?
Or, if you’re promoting a product for a national company, how does its location help you produce a superior product? Are you offering an investment product that’s produced on Wall Street or anywhere in New York, for example? Or are you selling a politically oriented product that’s produced in or near Washington D.C.?
- “What’s your reaction time?” Are appointments readily available? Do you perform your service faster than your competition does? If I order this product, how fast will I get it?
- Inventory: How many different products do you have available? How does that compare to what your competitors offer?
Product or Service Features
Now, it’s time to really start digging – with answers about the product or service you’re offering …
-
Purpose: What, exactly, does your product or service do? If it accomplishes several things, great – list everything you can think of!
- Physical dimensions: How does your product compare to competing products? Is it smaller? Bigger? Lighter? Heavier duty?
If it’s a published product, how many pages are in the book or the regular issues of the newsletter or magazine? Is the page size larger that what the prospect may be used to?
Are there illustrations, charts, or graphs? Is it written simply – in a way that’s easy to understand? Does it give clear, concise directions that anyone could follow? How many times do customers hear from your client each year (count regular issues, bonus issues, e-mail alerts, web site updates, etc.)? What regular features are included?
If you offer nutritional supplements, are your pills smaller than the competition’s? Does the prospect have to take fewer of them, or take them just once a day? What are the ingredients? Are they fresher than those used by some other competitors? More absorbable? More potent?
- Performance metrics: How quickly can your product be delivered, installed and/or begin producing results? How fast does your product complete the desired task? How thoroughly does it do its job? How long does it last? How do your product’s performance metrics compare to similar products offered by your competitors?
For investment products, what results has it produced for investors in the recent past? How did it perform at key turning points in the economy or markets – the tech wreck of 2000, or the gold price explosion of the 1970s, for example? How and when did it help prevent investors from making major blunders?
For health products, how fast does it work? How can I know it’s working? What studies have proven that it works? Or for information merchants, what health breakthroughs were you the first to publicize? How else does the past performance of the author, editor or the product itself demonstrate the superiority or indispensability of the product?
- Credibility: What have customers, subscribers, peers and others said about your product or service? What guarantees and/or warranties come with it? How do they compare to what the competition offers?
- Available options: What choices does your product offer to prospects? What colors or sizes does it come in? How do your terms make ordering the best fit possible for customers? Is it customizable in any way? How do these choices make your product superior to the competition?
- Timeliness: How quickly can your product be delivered and/or installed? How does this compare with the competition?
-
Pricing: What are your prices? How do they compare to the competition? Do you deliver more for the money? Or does your product’s quality demand a higher price?
If applicable, divide your price by the numbers 12, 52 and 365 – and then write down the product’s cost per month, week and day.
These are just a few idea-starters – please do not stop here!
Use this opportunity to think through every step of the process that your prospects experience when shopping for, buying and using your product or service.
Step #2:
Attach a “Why” to Each Feature
The next step is to figure out why these features are included in the product or service, and then to turn those reasons into tangible benefits that will bring value to the customer’s life.
So now, in the “WHY?” column next to each feature, enter the benefits each feature provides.
Example: If you’re selling a high quality drill bit, your entry might look like this:
Feature: Constructed of carbon steel.
Why: Never wears out.
On the other hand, if you’re promoting a dentist, your list might look like this:
Feature: A TV in every exam room.
Why: More comfortable for the patient and time passes more quickly.
The “why” for an investment newsletter might go like this …
Feature: Daily e-zine included with subscription to monthly newsletter.
Why: Stocks move fast; opportunities could be lost without split-second updates.
Or, if you’re writing for a book on health, you might write …
Feature: Specific prescription for each age group on each supplement recommended.
Why: To eliminate reader confusion.
Attach as many “whys” to each feature as you can.
My guess is that as you review your completed list, you’ll be getting pretty excited. And for good reason: Your brain is already beginning to take the next step – visualizing how these features improve your customers’ lives!
Step #3:
Turn Features into Benefits
The simple act of completing Steps #1 and #2 above could easily multiply sales and profits at tens of thousands of businesses from coast to coast – merely by shifting the spotlight off of the advertiser and his product or service and on to why their features are important to the customer.
But still, we focused entirely on a company and a product or service. Now, we’re going to bring your prospect into the picture – and answer the question, “What’s in it for me? How does each of these features – these facts about the business and product or service – directly connect with and improve my life?”
Think about how each feature and “Reason Why” benefits your customer, and list every possible way each one of them brings value to your prospect’s life.
We’re going to ask the one question that’s constantly at the forefront of your customer’s mind: “What’s in it for me?”
And we’re going to answer by listing the problems your product or service solves … the desires it fulfills … and the future disasters it will help your customers avoid.
Be sure to think about immediate benefits as well as those the customer will experience later on.
If you’re selling one-hour oil changes for example, you can save your customer oodles of time right now, today. But you also make it easy for him to properly maintain the family chariot, thereby helping him avoid an inconvenient or even dangerous breakdown and costly repairs later on.
Write each benefit as a “you” statement – as if you’re talking face-to-face with your prospective customer, patient or client.
Then, go back over your list of benefits … look at each one … and ask yourself, “What additional benefits does this benefit bring to my life?” Keep drilling down until you hit the Mother Lode – the benefits that mean the most and bring the most value to prospects’ lives.
Step #4:
Dimensionalize each benefit
I don’t know who first coined the word “dimensionalize.” I do know that it drives my spell-checker bonkers, so it’s probably not in any dictionary you’ll ever see.
But the word “dimensionalize” does a great job of describing what “A” level copywriters do – the extra mile we travel to make sure each benefit in our copy is as compelling as possible.
When you “dimensionalize” a benefit, you give it added dimension by painting word pictures of all the ways the prospect will enjoy that benefit. You compare that benefit with those offered by others. You add specifics that demonstrate all the ways the benefit will enrich the prospect’s life.
When you’ve finished, your list may look something like this, for example:
Feature: Constructed of carbon steel.
Why: Never wears out.
Benefit: The last drill bit you’ll ever buy.
Dimensionalized Benefit: You can save up to $75 a year in broken drill bits … hours of unnecessary trips to the hardware store … and hundreds of dollars in lost income!
Or in our hypothetical promotion for a dentist, your list might look like this:
Feature: A TV in every exam room.
Why: More comfortable for the patient and time passes more quickly.
Benefit: Your appointment is over before you know it!
Dimensionalized benefit: Great for fidgety kids: The time zips by. In fact, just last week, littlie Jimmy asked if he could stay longer.
The benefit drawn from a feature offered by an investment newsletter might go like this …
Feature: Daily e-zine included with subscription to monthly newsletter.
Why: Stocks move fast; opportunities could be lost without constant updates.
Benefit: You’ll never get caught wondering what to do when major events break!
Dimensionalize: You’ll lock in your profits when the market sags and go for even greater profit potential by getting into each up-move on the ground floor.
Or, if you’re writing for a book on health, your list might look something like this …
Feature: Specific prescription for each age group on each supplement recommended.
Why: To eliminate reader confusion.
Dimensionalize: You’ll always know precisely what you should be taking … how much you should be taking … and even when to take it.
Step #5:
Connect each dimensionalized benefit
with a dominant resident emotion
I’ve already written reams about this – and this issue is already running a bit long, so there’s no need to go into great detail at this time.
The point is simply to identify how your prospect is likely to feel about each of the dimensionalized benefits on your list.
Do NOT stop at listing just one emotion per benefit. Think about how the prospect feels about the lack of this benefit in his or her life now. And about how the prospect will feel as he or she is enjoying that benefit. And about how they’ll feel as others see them doing things better … being healthier … richer … happier.
One last thing: When you’re done, review your inventory and rate each benefit/emotion combination on a scale of one to five.
As you assign each ranking, think about three things:
- The relative importance of the improvement each benefit brings to prospects’ lives: A benefit that can prevent cancer would be scored higher than one that merely produces sweeter breath, for example…
- The relative number of prospects most likely to covet that particular improvement: More people are likely to have arthritis than cancer…
- The relative intensity of the emotion(s) connected to each benefit.
Finally, sort the entire spreadsheet by these rankings in descending order.
When you’re done, you’ll have systematically created a comprehensive inventory of features, benefits and dominant emotions for your product.
Then, USE your inventory to make sure you press every possible hot button as you begin writing your copy – and please, for mercy’s sake – to get real, dimensionalized, emotionalized BENEFITS into your lead copy!
More next time!
Yours for Bigger Winners, More Often,

Clayton Makepeace
Publisher & Editor
THE TOTAL PACKAGE™
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Posted by:
Clayton Makepeace
January 2, 2006
Issue #24
Dear Business-Builder,
Maybe it’s just me … but don’t you think Thanksgiving Day is scheduled at the weirdest possible time of the year?
I mean — what genius decided we should all give thanks for the year’s blessings on the fourth Thursday of November? Heck — November isn’t even finished, let alone the year!
When I become king, I’m moving Thanksgiving Day to January 1. That way, we can all know just how good the whole year was — and be properly thankful for all the good stuff!
Right now, for example, as I think back over 2005, I’m absolutely blown away by all the amazing new things the last 12 months brought to my life …
The sixth year of the 21st Century was easily one of the most exhilarating — and certainly the strangest — I’ve ever had. I worked harder, took more risks and did more new things than at any other time in my 33-year career.
I ended a long-standing exclusive relationship with a client who had paid me millions … accepted two exciting NEW clients … spoke in public for the first time ever … and was thrilled when the American Writers and Artists Institute honored me with their 2005 “Copywriter of the Year” award.
I launched THE TOTAL PACKAGE in June … wrote 24 content-rich issues … received and responded to 2,049 fun, positive emails from subscribers (and only 3 nasty, negative ones) … self-published my first half-dozen or so eBooks … held my first teleseminar series … and launched QwikCrit™.
Plus, I copy chiefed and critiqued a couple dozen projects for seven younger writers … and personally wrote nine, 24-page direct mail and Internet promotions for Health Resources, Phillips Publishing, Boardroom, Agora, Weiss Research and Healthy Directions.
And next week, I’m announcing my most exciting “first” of all: My first-ever live event — the Clayton Makepeace Power Marketing Summit, in Washington D.C. on April 20-22, 2006 (Keep an eagle eye on your eMail box … trust me: You do NOT want to miss it!).
So to everyone who made all this amazing stuff possible …
The Redhead (wife Wendy) — my greatest champion (as well as my unrelenting task mistress) …
Tanya — my long-suffering Jill of all trades …
Julie — who works diligently to introduce this eLetter to new readers each week …
Steve — who has been a godsend on the editorial side …
Mary Ellen, Christine, Richard, Kat, Nehal and to everyone else in our Florida offices who make THE TOTAL PACKAGE possible …
And of course, to my clients, copy chiefs, copy cubs — and every single one of my wonderful subscribers …
… THANK YOU from the bottom of my heart!
I am truly grateful to each and every one of you for helping to make 2005 a banner year for me!
(more…)