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Are you having trouble selling your
product or service? Are you feeling like the chaotic state of the world
prevents you from succeeding? Are you wondering how you can increase your
sales in the most cost effective ways? Are you feeling like your competition
is breathing down your neck?
Many of my clients feel the same way. They want to succeed, to make a nice
living in their business, but they feel overwhelmed, uncertain, and even
despondent. They feel they have too much competition. They feel marketing
doesn't work, or takes too much work. They feel people don't have enough money
today to spend on what they are selling.
And that's why I think it's time to reveal the strange story of the long
forgotten "crackpot" mail-order prophet.
During the Great Depression of the 1930s the average person didn't have enough
money to feed themselves or their family, let alone enough extra cash to order
books through the mail. Yet during those lean years one man made a fortune
selling books and courses entirely by mail. His name was Frank B. Robinson. He
founded "Psychiana," the world's eighth largest religion and the
world's largest mail-order religion.
You may never have heard of him or his movement before today. But during the
1930s and 40s, Robinson's name traveled around the world. Millions of people
read his books, studied his lessons, and practiced his methods. The press
called his positive thinking, new thought religion a "media
business" because Robinson advertised so heavily.
In 1928 Robinson wrote an ad for his new philosophy that began with the
headline, "I TALKED WITH GOD." An advertising agency in Spokane,
Washington said the ad would never work. But Frank believed in his message and
trusted his hunches. He borrowed $2,500 from people he barely knew, spent most
of it on printing his lessons, and invested $400 to place his ad in
"Psychology Magazine."
That ad pulled 5,300 responses. Robinson ran it in numerous magazines and it
always pulled a 3% to 21% response. Within a year he had a full-time job
fulfilling requests for his books and lessons, soon shipping a million pieces
of mail a year out of his office in Moscow, Idaho. The post office in that
little town had to move into a bigger building to handle all the mail.
Robinson's ads appeared in 140 newspapers, 180 magazines, and on 60 radio
stations, all at the same time. His postal bill in 1938 amounted to $16,000
and his printing bill hit $40,000. He received 60,000 pieces of mail a day,
reached more than two million people, and sent his message to 67
countries---all within one year of running his first ad.
"Advertising is educating the public to who you are, where you are, and
what service you have to offer," Robinson wrote. "The only man or
organization who should not advertise is the one who has nothing to
offer."
What can we learn from Frank B. Robinson?
1. He believed in his product. When you don't believe in what you are trying
to sell, it shows. It'll show in your lack of commitment to your marketing, in
poor advertising, in poor service, or in other ways. As I mention in my book,
The Seven Lost Secrets of Success, sincerity is one of the "lost
secrets" to success. Robinson had sincerity. While his movement made tons
of money, Robinson accepted only $9,000 a year as his salary. Whether you call
him a crackpot or a savior, he believed in his product. He knew he had
something people wanted. In fact, Robinson sold his religious lessons with a
money-back guarantee.
2. He advertised relentlessly. If you don't tell people that you exist, they
won't know it. The reason you aren't aware of Robinson or his movement today
is because he's dead. (He died in 1948). No one is advertising his message.
Without consistent and persistent advertising to educate the public, the world
won't know of your business.
3. He tracked his results. Robinson believed in the spiritual world, but he
also knew he lived on the earth plane where numbers matter. He tracked
responses from his ads to know what worked and what didn't. For example,
astrology magazines brought him an 18% response to his ads while national
weekly papers brought 3%. Knowing that, Robinson could invest more money in
larger ads in the better pulling magazines. Find out where your business comes
from and focus more advertising in that area.
4. He continued to create products. Robinson knew once people tasted his
goods, they would want more. He wrote 28 books during his short lifetime.
These, along with his correspondence courses, gave him a deep product line.
Your current satisfied customers will always be your goldmine. Create more for
them to buy.
5. He remained optimistic. Despite the harsh reality of the Great Depression
years, and despite competition from religious institutions that had been
around for centuries, Robinson flourished. He didn't believe anyone or
anything could stop him. When you have that strong of an inner conviction,
nothing CAN stop you. If you think you have competition with a similar
business in the same town, consider what it must have been like for Robinson
to have such empires as the Catholic Church, the US government, and famous
ministers and politicians trying to close him down!
Whatever you may think of Robinson or "Psychiana," you have to admit
he knew how to advertise his business.
"After all, it's the results in human lives that count," he wrote in
his 1941 book, The Strange Autobiography of Frank B. Robinson. "Talk is
cheap."
What are you going to do now to increase your business? Remember, talk is
cheap!
Joe Vitale
is widely recognized by many as the greatest copywriter in America. Can you
beat him? Try out the "World's Shortest Advertising IQ Test" and see
how you stack up: Create
Advertising That Sells
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