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šļø Try this 1980s National Enquirer YouTube Ad "Hook" Trick
50+ year old Direct Response strategy that keeps working...
Direct Response Legend Gary Halbert wrote about this āSickening Statisticā back in the early 1980s š
āYou want to know what some people would consider a sickening statistic? Here it is:
MORE PEOPLE READ THE "NATIONAL ENQUIRER" IN ONE SINGLE WEEK THAN HAVE EVER READ THE BIBLE IN THE LAST 2,000 YEARS!ā
ā Gary Halbert, The Boron Letters
You can find this chapter from Halbertās Boron Letters and hundreds of other must-read Direct Response masterpieces at The Gary Halbert Letter archive here š
Now, maybe youāre wondering:
Is Gary Halbertās āBible vs. Enquirerā statistic 100% accurate?
Who knows?
Iāll let you run the math on that.
But thereās no doubt about it:
If youāve ever been in US supermarket checkout line, youāve definitely seen the National Enquirer:
And the Enquirer (especially in its heyday) is read by hundreds of millions of people with each and every weekly issue.
And most important from a Direct Response principles standpointā¦
The National Enquirer has mastered the art of:
Capturing attention from the broadest possible market
and converting that attention into action
Letās explore how to apply this to your Direct Response Video adsā¦
Todayās Newsletter is Supported by Inceptly
Direct Response Video & Traffic Agency
Are You a Direct Response Marketer Spending $1k+ Per Day on Ads?
Direct Response Video Ad Tactics from The National Enquirer
In just a moment weāll get to two (2) of the very specific tactics Gary extracted from the National Enquirer which are going to help you to:
Create new ābreakthroughā winning ads faster, stay one step ahead of your competitors & come up with novel, āoutside-the-boxā hooks & angles for your ads on YouTube, TikTok, Meta, etc - or ANY platformā¦
Eliminate creative fatigue with a never-ending supply of new hooks & angles to test
But a couple things before we get into all thisā¦
First, every Enquirer cover is a masterclass in getting as many people as possible to:
š STOP what theyāre doingā¦
š Pick up the magazineā¦
š³ ā¦And BUY.
As a Direct Response marketer, thereās a LOT to learn here and apply to your campaigns, no matter what platforms youāre running on (video, print, email audio/radio, whateverā¦).
Now of course, when you see an issue of the Enquirer in the supermarket, the familiar images of celebrities definitely catch your eye. No doubt about that.
But what really sets the āhookā and creates an insatiable desire for more informationā¦
ā¦are the HEADLINES.
Hereās what Gary has to say about this:
āAnd what do Enquirer writers excel at above all else? You guessed it -- HEADLINES. Their headlines are so powerful, they have so much "grabbing power" that, every week, people who have sworn they'll never again buy such a publication, are almost forced to purchase it in spite of themselves.ā
- Gary Halbert - read the full letter here
A good headline will:
šļø Grab attention
š” Instantly create curiosity
š Drive action
ā¦All with just a few carefully chosen words.
But maybe youāre wonderingā¦
āWhy would āheadlinesā matter when it comes to Direct Response Video ads?ā
Great question.
Direct Response YouTube Ads Brainstorm Session (free)
Want help scaling your Direct Response offer/product on YouTube, Connected TV and other Direct Response Video Ad Platforms?
Schedule a FREE Brainstorm Call with Inceptly, the team behind $950M in Direct Response revenue here:
šš https://inceptly.com/call
Why Your āHookā is Your Video Adās āHeadlineā
Imagine you're in line at the supermarket, and a jaw-dropping headline from the Enquirer makes you pause and reach for the magazine.
Your YouTube ad's "hook" - those all-important first 5-10 seconds - needs to have the same effect:
š It should stop viewers in their tracks
š« Make them forget about the "skip ad" button
š„ And get them to stay engaged long enough to hear the complete āsales argumentā you present in the video
And not only thatā¦
Your adās ability to capture and retain user attention past the first 5 and 10 seconds of your ad is also crucial to driving down your YouTube ad traffic costs:
Hooks and the āMystery Metricā that Drives Your YouTube Ad Traffic Costs
On the Google Ad chart above we have:
Cost of traffic (Avg CPM, or average cost per 1000 impressions)
Our āMystery Metricā
Notice anything strange?
š When our āMystery Metricā goes DOWN, cost of traffic goes UP ā¬ļø.
And vice versa...
š When our āMystery Metricā goes UP, cost of traffic goes DOWN ā¬ļø.
Itās a nearly perfect inverse relationship.
And what is this āMystery Metric?
Itās āEngagementsā: defined by Google as 10 seconds of view time or a click on the ad
Why does Google use this metric?
And how can you leverage this for your own adsā success?
Read the full breakdown in this VidTao blog post.
So with all that said, what specifics can we extract from the National Enquirerās success to boost your own adsā success on YouTube & other video ad platforms?
Gary Halbertās got some advice for you on thatā¦
Tactic #1: Use these 2 Headline Ingredients
In this newsletter episode Gary Halbert says these 3 approaches are some of the most powerful ways to frame your headline:
š° News
š Benefit
š Do both 1 & 2 in the same headline.
Check out Guthy Renkerās Proactiv anti-acne product for great examples of this approach applied to Direct Response Video Ads.
Proactiv works with A-list celebrities like Kendall Jenner, Justin Bieber, Katy Perry, and many more. But letās check out this Proactiv ad from Jessica Simpson to see this approach in action:
Letās take a closer look:
š° News:
The ad opens with a shocking revelation from Jessica Simpson herself: "If you're like me, your skin is far from perfect. I've struggled with difficult skin for years."
Coming from a celebrity known for her beauty, this confession is unexpected and newsworthy.
It instantly grabs the viewer's attention by humanizing Jessica and creating a relatable problem that the viewer likely shares.
The news? Even someone as famous & gorgeous as Jessica Simpson has battled bad skin.
š Benefit:
Jessica then pivots to the amazing benefit, saying "...but now I have clear skin I can depend on" thanks to Proactiv.
The impact of this promised benefit is amplified because of the surprising "news" of Jessica's past skin problems.
If Proactiv can take someone from embarrassingly bad acne to flawless, camera-ready skin? The implied benefit for the average viewer is immense.
Just like a juicy National Enquirer headline, this unexpected problem-solution story arc instantly hooks the viewer and creates an insatiable desire to hear the rest of the story.
āļø Leading with the "news" of a celebrity's private pain
āļø Highlighting the product as the life-changing "benefit"
Can you think of ways to test this out in your next video ad āhookā?
Hereās a quick example from inside VidTao YouTube Ad Library.
This time itās Onnit, working with Joe Rogan on this YouTube ad with nearly $300k estimated total adspend:
"I always take Alpha Brain. It seems to fire up your brain at a higher RPM level."
āā¦But what if I canāt afford Celebrity Talent?ā
This Celebrity News / Private Pain + Benefit approach - pulled straight from National Enquirer headlines - might work great if youāve got the funds to invest in hiring A-List Celebrity Talentā¦
ā¦But what if you donāt have that kind of cash laying around?
The answer to your predicament lies again with The National Enquirer.
You just need to step back a few decadesā¦
Because back in the 1970s & 80s, while celebrity news was indeed a huge part of the Enquirerās appeal, youād see A LOT more straightforward news + benefit headlines.
Like this gem from 1979:
š«šš½šø Now letās set aside that UNBELIEVABLY good main headline for a momentā¦
ā¦And zoom in on those side headlines:
"New Hope for Millions With High Blood Pressure" (news of a breakthrough solution plus the benefit of better health)
"How You Can Be Superhealthy - And Live Longer" (news you can achieve an extraordinary level of health, with the benefit of longevity)
News + Benefit.
Any of these headlines could be adapted into a video ad hook to stop scrollers in their tracks.
Wrapping up + Next Stepsā¦
This email is already pretty longā¦ So weāll dive into the #2 National Enquirer Gary Halbert tactic in tomorrowās emailā¦
ā¦Plus weāre going to look INSIDE the National Enquirer, to what was essentially the āFacebook Adsā of direct response offers in the 1970s & 80s:
Why all this talk about ads that are 50+ years old?
Weāre not on some nostalgia kick hereā¦
Keeping with todayās theme - it has everything to do with another quote from Gary Halbert.
ā¦All about why becoming a āstudent of marketsā is THE evergreen āmake moneyā skill.
(ā¦NOT copywriting, media buying or marketing tactics.)
āNow, pay attention. The very first thing you must come to realize is that you must become a "student of markets". Not products. Not techniques. Not copywriting. Not how to buy space or whatever. Now, of course, all of these things are important and you must learn about them, but, the first and the most important thing you must learn is what people want to buy.ā
- Gary Halbert - The Boron Letters
Weāre going to get into all that in tomorrowās email.
PLUS - youāre going to see a case study of how a struggling 23 year-old college student went all-in and invested his entire $20k savings on a single National Enquirer adā¦
ā¦And created a $100 million per year Direct Response Video Ad Empire as a result.
Stay tuned!
The VidTao Team
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