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Don’t Bamboozle Your Readers: Honesty in Copywriting is Key

by michellereno Expert(November 2007) (rank 13th)
 
 
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Originally posted atE-Marketing Performanceon November 16, 2007.

Almost exactly four years ago, my husband and I decided to check out some new cars at one of the dealerships in town. We had no intentions of buying a new car, but we were just curious what was available and what prices were like. Six hours after walking on the lot, we were driving off in a car that we were never interested in buying. We left the dealership that Friday at midnight, and when we got home, we were completely baffled by what had just happened.

We got had.

The multiple salesmen that “worked” with us employed some of the dirtiest tactics I’ve ever witnessed:

  • They befriended us, pretending they liked the same things we did.
  • They played to our emotions by finding out what was important to us, like having a family, and used that as a tactic to encourage us to get the car.
  • They stuck us in a tiny office while they went to talk to their finance manager to see what they could do about the price.

Hungry, exhausted, and defenseless, we signed the contracts so that we could just leave.

In the middle of the night, I woke up in a panic, experiencing the worst case of buyer’s remorse. I consider myself a somewhat intelligent person and am good at doing business, but I’ve never been deceived by trickery before.

We got bamboozled.

My husband and I went down the next morning, walked straight into the manager’s office, and asked for our trade-in car back. They decided to take a few thousand dollars off the price of our new car and give us better financing. We agreed that would suffice for the way we were treated the night before. Needless to say, that was hands down the worst customer service I’ve ever experienced.

Four Years Later…

Earlier this week, I got the card on the right in the mail, in what I thought was a handwritten envelope. Excited to get a Thanksgiving card from a friend in Illinois (I didn’t know I had one), I opened the card to find the letter at the right.

Four years after the worst buying experience of my life, they again bamboozle me by making me think I’m getting a card from someone I like when, in actuality, it’s from the most awful car dealership in Reno.

HOW THIS RELATES TO SEO

Now, before you think this is just a rant about a terrible experience I had, there is actually a lesson to be learned here. In SEO, a lot of what can be done in this industry is trickery - both to the spiders and the customers. That’s why Google cracked down with PageRank; it was to try to keep the market honest.

In writing for SEO, you want to be honest.

Earnest Hemingway once wrote, “Write the truest line you know.” Being honest and up-front with products, features, services, etc. will get you a lot further than deceiving your readers will. Sure, they may buy your product, but if they’re dissatisfied, they’re more likely to tell others about it (as I just did above).

For whatever reason, people are more inclined to share bad experiences than they are to share great experiences. When was the last time you told someone about a great waiter at a restaurant? Now, when was the last time you told someone about awful customer service? See?

Customers aren’t naive like I was four years ago. And since we can’t lock them in a small room, hungry and tired, they can take their time to research to get the best product or service. They can see through transparent words meant to get them to buy. And if they don’t see through that, they’ll tell all their friends not to buy the same product or service. They want to protect the ones they care about by not letting their friends get had.

Be honest and up-front, and you’ll get more conversions.

 
 

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Re: Don’t Bamboozle Your Readers: Honesty in Copywriting is Key

rene-lemerle
Vote:

November 2007

good article Michelle...i very much empathize with your car buying experience (and they wonder why they have a bad rep)...

as a marketer - the key is to focus on the strength's of our products...and use that as the basis of a strong proposition. honesty lies in not necessarily highlighting the negatives, but realistically promoting the positives....its all about setting the right expectations to ensure customers become advocates.
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Re: Don’t Bamboozle Your Readers: Honesty in Copywriting is Key

palbertus
Vote:

November 2007

After having worked with lots of different kind of salesmen from office copiers (the worst) to social marketing (supposed the right ones), here's what I think about selling and bamboozling : It's not a fact of the will to be honnest or tricky, it's a question of managment and environment. Why car dealers cheat people ? Why the butcher don't ? Both maybe good and right people on real life, but the first one has to reach too high objective in a over-coompetitive market and the second one sell first need things, food. More the product you're going to buy is over-manufactured and available, and more companies will use advertising, marketing and behavioring process to argue. Social marketing use the same ideas to make you involved to causes and get founds. What's the best : being conditionned for buying a hoover or giving to charity ? Just keep in mind for the next times that you're also a player in the game, not a prize ;-)
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Re: Don’t Bamboozle Your Readers: Honesty in Copywriting is Key

michellereno
Vote:

November 2007

You make some interesting points regarding who cheats and why. Having tougher goals and objectives sometimes means dirtier tactics to reach those goals. Although unfortunate, it's the way it goes. But as writers, we don't have to stoop to those tactics to reach our audience.
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Re: Don’t Bamboozle Your Readers: Honesty in Copywriting is Key

amirbq
Vote:

November 2007

Thanks for sharing your thoughts and experience, Michelle.

There is a fine line between Selling / Defining fine qualities of a Product   VS   Going overboard and getting into every possible BS talk to sell the product.
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Re: Don’t Bamboozle Your Readers: Honesty in Copywriting is Key

michellereno
Vote:

November 2007

I agree that there's a fine line between selling a product and pushing a product, but in this instance, the line was pretty nonexistent. 
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