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0495 – 17 - Lead in Lines

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Manage episode 327986548 series 2964576
Content provided by Peter Stewart. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Peter Stewart or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

2022.05.10 – 0495 – 17 - Lead in Lines

17 - Lead in Lines

By creating the atmosphere of a conversation, it’s easier to pretend you’re in one.


Most commercial copy sets up a problem, and then provides a product, brand or service as a potential solution. For example, “Want to get your laundry whiter than white?” After that you will presume that the answer will be “Yes I do, but how?” Acting is re-acting to the response that you got. You are having a conversation albeit a one-sided one. Do that and you will sound less robotic.


Sometimes I like to surprise my friends by calling them up and just launching into a conversation. No preamble of “how are you?”, “have you got a moment?” or “I wanted to tell you about so and so…”. I may, as soon as they answer, simply say “You free Sunday?” or “Unbelievable!”. It throws them, because I’ve destroyed the ‘conversational expectation’.


Similarly, if you start a script-read going straight into the first sentence, then mentally you are unprepared. It’s unnatural to just say “The all-new Pontiac Mercury has all-round safety buffer zones” or “Got a stubborn stain that you just can’t shift?” or “The port of Dover is closed tonight and hundreds of lorries and their drivers are queued-up through Kent…”. Logically and naturally, you need to have a reason to start saying those things, ‘permission’ if you like, from your listener, to get into the ‘zone tone’.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  continue reading

1002 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 327986548 series 2964576
Content provided by Peter Stewart. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Peter Stewart or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

2022.05.10 – 0495 – 17 - Lead in Lines

17 - Lead in Lines

By creating the atmosphere of a conversation, it’s easier to pretend you’re in one.


Most commercial copy sets up a problem, and then provides a product, brand or service as a potential solution. For example, “Want to get your laundry whiter than white?” After that you will presume that the answer will be “Yes I do, but how?” Acting is re-acting to the response that you got. You are having a conversation albeit a one-sided one. Do that and you will sound less robotic.


Sometimes I like to surprise my friends by calling them up and just launching into a conversation. No preamble of “how are you?”, “have you got a moment?” or “I wanted to tell you about so and so…”. I may, as soon as they answer, simply say “You free Sunday?” or “Unbelievable!”. It throws them, because I’ve destroyed the ‘conversational expectation’.


Similarly, if you start a script-read going straight into the first sentence, then mentally you are unprepared. It’s unnatural to just say “The all-new Pontiac Mercury has all-round safety buffer zones” or “Got a stubborn stain that you just can’t shift?” or “The port of Dover is closed tonight and hundreds of lorries and their drivers are queued-up through Kent…”. Logically and naturally, you need to have a reason to start saying those things, ‘permission’ if you like, from your listener, to get into the ‘zone tone’.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  continue reading

1002 episodes

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