Monday, November 13, 2006

ArticleBlaster Don't Test Goofy Things


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Please consider this free-reprint article written by:
James Brausch

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Article Title: Don't Test Goofy Things
Author: James Brausch
Word Count: 740
Article URL: http://www.isnare.com/?aid=99699&ca=Marketing
Format: 64cpl
Author's Email Address: support[at]glyphius.com (replace [at]
with @)

Easy Publish Tool: http://www.isnare.com/html.php?aid=99699

================== ARTICLE START ==================
When I started online, I was a very avid tester of
everything... including what I now consider goofy things.
Because of that, I know all kinds of goofy things� and a few
useful things. I happen to know that a link that says �Don�t
Click� will get more clicks than a link that says �Click Here�.
That�s not very useful for marketing because it�s not the clicks
that count� it�s the sales.

I also happen to know that a white background is the most
profitable from split tests. Yep; I really did test every other
color of background (32 variations of different colors including
pink and purple). Now that is useful information. However, doing
that test probably cost me $20,000 in lost sales. I�ve done
many, many, many other �goofy tests� that have cost me a ton of
money.

Why was that a goofy test? Because it�s very easy to do a
statistical analysis of other people�s sites to get that
answer. You don�t need my expertise or a large dataset to get
that answer. It�s extremely obvious. Go to the top 20 most
profitable sites on the �net. What color of background do they
use? Now go lower in the list to get a control. Do you see that
a few of the lesser profitable sites on the �net are doing what
I did� a goofy test. They are testing something very, very
basic that has already been testing by literally millions of
others. The answer is known.

Think about the process of split testing as �zeroing in� on the
most profitable sales page. Do you remember that game �higher
and lower� you played as a kid? It went like this. Someone
picked a number between 1 and 100 and didn�t tell anyone. Then
someone guessed a number. The answer would be �higher� or
�lower�. Amazingly older kids would guess the number reliably
in 6 guesses. Younger kids would take dozens of guesses.

What did the older kids know? They had a strategy. In fact, the
most efficient strategy is obvious to the older kids and they
would always use it� that is until they realized that it wasn�t
even a game anymore because the most efficient strategy was
known. The older kids would first guess the number 50. If the
answer was �lower�, they would guess 25. If the answer was
higher, they would guess 75. They would continue to split for
up to 6 guesses and they would have the answer� guaranteed!

Split testing is the exact same process. However the number is
between 1 and nearly infinity. If we just randomly do split
tests, we will be like the younger kids who first guessed 17
and then guessed 77 and even sometimes guessed numbers that had
already been ruled out with prior �higher�/�lower� answers.

Here is the best way I have found to optimize a sales letter
using the �older kids� strategy.

1. Do a statistical analysis of profitable and unprofitable
sites for the general layout, color, items of content (ie:
headlines, testimonials, guarantees, etc), font and other such
general items. I have already done a lot of these and you can
get the answers with the Statistical Copywriting course. Don�t
test known unprofitable things (like bonuses). That�s goofy.

2. Do the same for the words and symbols used on profitable and
unprofitable sales pages. I�ve already done this with Glyphius.
Use it. Don�t test low scoring stuff. That�s goofy.

3. Now that you have a sales letter that contains the
profitable items (guarantee, testimonial, headline, etc) and it
is arranged like profitable sales letters (white background, a
profitable font, a profitable headline color, etc), THEN� AND
ONLY THEN� start your split testing to make it more profitable
for your particular product.

Don�t test any goofy stuff. You really don�t have a need to
test the wingdings font, a purple background and yellow text.
That�s just goofy and you�ll lose sales if you do it. We
already have that data. It�s known. It�s not profitable. It�s
goofy to test it again yourself.

Instead start with the Statistical Copywriting copywriting
course. Optimize all of the words in your copy with Glyphius.
Then start with split tests on the truly unknown stuff that can
actually improve your sales.

About The Author: James D. Brausch is an avid split tester and
an analyzer of other people's profitable sites to avoid split
testing goofy things. You can find his course here:
http://www.StatisticalCopywriting.com

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For more free-reprint articles by James Brausch please visit:
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