Non Fiction

Scientific Advertising

Claude Hopkins

Update Subscription Section 14 of 17 - Table of Contents
CHAPTER FIFTEEN

Test Campaigns


Almost any question can be answered, cheaply, quickly and finally, by a
test campaign. And that's the way to answer them--not by arguments
around a table. Go to the court of last resort--the buyers of your
product.

On every new project there comes up the question of selling that article
profitably. You and your friends may like it, but the majority may not.
Some rival product may be better liked or cheaper. It may be strongly
entrenched. The users won away from it may cost too much to get.

People may buy and not repeat. The article may last too long. It may
appeal to a small percentage, so most of your advertising goes to waste.

There are many surprises in advertising. A project you will laugh at may
make a great success. A project you are sure of may fall down. All
because tastes differ so. None of us know enough people's desires to get
an average viewpoint.

In the old days, advertisers ventured on their own opinions. The few
guessed right, the many wrong. Those were the times of advertising
disasters. Even those who succeeded came close to the verge before the
tide was turned. They did not know their cost per customer or their
sale per customer. The cost of selling might take long to come back.
Often it never came back.

Now we let the thousands decide what the millions will do. We make a
small venture, and watch cost and result. When we learn what a thousand
customers cost, we know almost exactly what a million will cost. When we
learn what they buy, we know what a million will buy.

We establish averages on a small scale, and those averages always hold.
We know our cost, we know our sale, we know our profit or our loss. We
know how soon our cost comes back. Before we spread out, we prove our
undertaking absolutely safe. So there are today no advertising disasters
piloted by men who know.

Perhaps we try out our project in four or five towns. We may use a
sample offer or a free package to get users started quickly. We learn in
this way the cost per customer started. Then we wait and see if users
buy those samples. If they do, will they continue? How much will they
buy? How long does it take for the profit to return our cost of selling?

A test like this may cost $3,000 to $5,000. It is not all lost, even
when the product proves unpopular. Some sales are made. Nearly every
test will in time bring back the entire cost.

Sometimes we find that the cost of the advertising comes back before the
bills are due. That means that the product can be advertised without
investment. Many a great advertiser has been built up without any cost
whatever beyond immediate receipts. That is an ideal situation.

On another product it may take three months to bring back the cost with
a profit. But one is sure of his profit in that time. When he spreads
out he must finance accordingly.

Think what this means. A man has what he considers an advertising
possibility. But national advertising looks so big and expensive that he
dare not undertake it.

Now he presents it in a few average towns, at a very modest cost. With
almost no risk whatever. From the few thousands he learns what the
millions will do. Then he acts accordingly. If he then branches out he
knows to a certainty just what his results will be.

He is playing on the safe side of a hundred to one shot. If the article
is successful, it may make him millions. If he is mistaken about it, the
loss is a trifle.

These are facts we desire to emphasize and spread. All our largest
accounts are now built in this way, from very small beginnings. When
business men realize that this can be done, hundreds of others will do
it. For countless fortune-earners now lie dormant.

The largest advertiser in the world makes a business of starting such
projects. One by one he finds out winners. Now he has twenty-six, and
together they earn many millions yearly.

These test campaigns have other purposes. They answer countless
questions which arise in business.

A large food advertiser felt that his product would be more popular in
another form. He and all his advisers were certain about it. They were
willing to act on this supposition without consulting the consumers, but
wiser advice prevailed.

He inserted an ad in a few towns with a coupon, good at any store for a
package of the new-style product. Then he wrote to the users about it.
They were almost unanimous in their disapproval.

Later the same product was suggested in still another form. The previous
verdict made the change look dubious. The advertiser hardly thought a
test worth while. But he submitted the question to a few thousand women
in a similar way and 91 per cent voted for it. Now he has a unique
product which promises to largely increase his sales.

These tests cost about $1,000 each. The first one saved him a very
costly mistake. The second will probably bring him large profits.

Then we use test campaigns to try out new methods on advertising already
successful. Thus we constantly seek for better methods, without
interrupting plans already proved out.

In five years for one food advertiser we tried out over fifty separate
plans. Every little while we found an improvement, so the results of our
advertising constantly grew. At the end of five years we found the best
plan of all. It reduced our cost of selling by 75 per cent. That is, it
was four times more effective than the best plan used before.

That is what mail order advertisers do--try out plan after plan to
constantly reduce the cost. Why should any general advertiser be less
business-like and careful?

Another service of the test campaign is this:

An advertiser is doing mediocre advertising. A skilled advertising agent
feels that he can greatly increase results. The advertiser is doubtful.
He is doing fairly well. He has alliances which he hesitates to break.
So he is inclined to let well enough alone.

Now the question can be submitted to the verdict of a test. The new
agent may take a few towns, without interfering with the general
campaign. Then compare his results with the general results and prove
his greater skill.

Plausible arguments are easy in this line. One man after another comes
to an advertiser to claim superior knowledge or ability. It is hard to
decide, and decisions may be wrong.

Now actual figures gained at a small cost can settle the question
definitely. The advertiser makes no commitment. It is like saying to a
salesman, "Go out for a week and prove." A large percentage of all the
advertising done would change hands if this method were applied.

Again we come back to scientific advertising. Suppose a chemist would
say in an arbitrary way that this compound was best, or that better. You
would little respect his opinion. He makes tests--sometimes hundreds of
tests--to actually know which is best. He will never state a supposition
before he has proved it. How long before advertisers in general will
apply that exactness to advertising?
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