Scientific Advertising
By Claude C. Hopkins
table of contents
Chapter 6 - Psychology
The competent advertising man must understand psychology.
The more he knows about it the better. He must learn that
certain effects lead to certain reactions, and use that
knowledge to increase results and avoid mistakes. Human
nature is perpetual. In most respects it is the same today
as in the time of Caesar. So the principles of psychology
are fixed and enduring. You will never need to unlearn what
you learn about them.
We learn, for instance, that
curiosity is one of the strongest human incentives. We employ
it whenever we can.
Puffed Wheat and Puffed Rice were made
successful largely through curiosity.
"Grains puffed to eight
times the normal size." "Foods shot from guns." "125 million
steam explosions caused in every kernel." These foods were
failures before that factor was discovered. We learn
that cheapness is not a strong appeal.
Americans are extravagant.
They want bargains but not cheapness. They want to feel that they
can afford to eat and have and wear the best. Treat them as
if they could not and they resent your attitude.
We learn that people judge largely by price. They are not experts. In the
British National Gallery is a painting which is announced in a catalog to
have cost $750,000. Most people at first pass it by at a glance. Then later
they get farther on in the catalog and learn what the painting cost. They
return then and surround it.
Chapter 6 continues
|
Next Chapter
|