Chapter Five Flashcards

1
Q

21 Bullet Point Templates You Can Use Today [1/3]

A
  1. The “Wrong!” Bullet
  2. The “Theme Sequence” Bullet
  3. The “Two-Step” Bullet
  4. The “Giveaway” Bullet
  5. The “Reverse Hook” Bullet
  6. The “Naked Benefit” Bullet
  7. The “Transactional” Bullet
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2
Q

21 Bullet Point Templates You Can Use Today [2/3]

A
  1. The “If…Then…” Bullet
  2. The “Truth About” Bullet
  3. The “Single Most” Bullet
  4. The “How-To” Bullet
  5. The “Number” Bullet
  6. The “Sneaky” Bullet
  7. The “Better Than” Bullet
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3
Q

21 Bullet Point Templates You Can Use Today [3/3]

A
  1. The “Simple Fact” Bullet
  2. The “What” Bullet
  3. The “What Never” Bullet
  4. The “Do You?” Bullet
  5. The “Why” Bullet
  6. The “Secrets of” Bullet
  7. The “Probing Question” Bullet
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4
Q
  1. The “Wrong!” Bullet.
A

When you can contradict a common assumption, use the “wrong!” bullet.

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5
Q
  1. The “Themed Sequence” Bullet.
A

For instance, “7 Deadly Diet Sins” or “3 Humiliating Secrets Men Don’t Want Women to Know.”

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6
Q
  1. The “Two-Step” Bullet.
A

A two-step bullet offers a parenthetical elaboration on the main benefit statement. This parenthetical statement is the real “magnet” in the bullet.

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7
Q
  1. The “Giveaway” Bullet.
A

Every now and then, “give” them something.

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8
Q
  1. The “Reverse Hook” Bullet.
A

Interesting fact plus unexpected benefit.

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9
Q
  1. The “Naked Benefit” Bullet.
A

This bullet makes a direct benefit claim, but it must be supported by some additional facts or intrigues that deepen your reader’s interest.

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10
Q
  1. The “Transactional” Bullet.
A

Simple transaction: “Give me … and I’ll give you…”

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11
Q
  1. The “If… Then…” Bullet.
A

Give the prospect something easy for him or her to do or comply with—and associate it to a benefit.

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12
Q
  1. The “Truth About” Bullet.
A

Works with any controversial question, point, or issue.

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13
Q
  1. The “Single Most” Bullet.
A

When you have a provable superior benefit, use this kind of bullet.

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14
Q
  1. The “How-To” Bullet.
A

Simple and direct approach. This is the most common type of bullet.

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15
Q
  1. The “Number” Bullet.
A

Use this when you have a specific number of techniques, multiple ways of doing a certain thing, or multiple “reasons why.”

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16
Q
  1. The “Sneaky” Bullet.
A

Use when you can imply an element of conspiracy.

17
Q
  1. The “Better Than” Bullet.
A

A great way to get their attention; find something good that you can do better.

18
Q
  1. The “Simple Fact” Bullet.
A

When you can’t use a “blind” bullet, use simple facts but make them interesting. Present “worst case” scenarios to set them up.

19
Q
  1. The “What” Bullet.
A

A variation of the “how-to” bullet.

20
Q
  1. The “What Never” Bullet.
A

The negative form of the “what” bullet; plays on the “fear factor.”

21
Q
  1. The “Do You?” Bullet.
A

Use when you think you know they are doing something that is a mistake (which your product avoids).

22
Q
  1. The “Why” Bullet.
A

A simple version of “reason why” copy — that keeps the “reason why” hidden.

23
Q
  1. The “Secrets Of” Bullet.
A

If you have an unusual solution, device, or tactic, use this bullet to build curiosity.

24
Q
  1. The “Probing Question” Bullet.
A

Ask a question you are reasonably certain you know the answer to.