THE WIZARD OF ADS
ROY H. WILLIAMS
PRESIDENT WIZARD OF ADS INC. ROY@WIZARDOFADS. COM
Creative Handcuffs & Isaac Asimov
Creativity is counterintuitive. You hate it when you are handcuffed and expected to do your best work, but the secret of doing your best work is to be handcuffed. When Sean Jones sold controlling interest in Spence Diamonds a number of years ago, I left that company when he did, just as I left when Dewey Jenkins sold his company two weeks ago. My relationship is always with the business owner, never with the company. Here’s why: a brand without trust is just a product, and a product can be replaced. To become truly trusted, you have to forge a bond with the customer. People don’t bond with corporations. People bond with people. I am a better-than-average ad writer 1. because I cheat, and 2. because I don’t fight the handcuffs. This is how I cheat: 1. I never work with a person unless I really enjoy talking with them. My relationship with that person is the source of my inspiration. How can I make the world love and trust someone if I don’t love and trust them myself? 2. My new friend must have unconditional authority to say “absolutely yes” without having to check with someone
else. Anything with two heads is a monster. 3. Their company must be operationally excellent. Great ads won’t grow a broken business. 4. The product or service they sell must have a solid profit margin and a long purchase cycle. A short profit margin is the father, and a short purchase cycle is the mother, of every twitchy little bastard that has ever been born. I hit home runs because I never swing at a pitch that is not in my sweet spot. Ad writing isn’t like baseball. A baseball batter gets to look at only six pitches — two strikes and four balls — before they have to leave the batter’s box. But the independent ad writer doesn’t face a pitch count. You can wait for that perfect opportunity that is in the center of your happy little sweet spot. The crack of the bat shatters the crystal silence as the adrenaline pumps the crowd screaming to their feet while the ball arcs through space toward a little boy in the seventh row who has been waiting patiently all day with his baseball glove. Your sweet spot may be different from mine. This just means you have a different superpower. The secret of success is to know your superpower.
I promise you have one. It doesn’t matter that you’re not an ad writer, you have a superpower! If you don’t know what it is, ask the people who know you best. So now you know how I cheat. I mentioned a second thing that makes me a better-than-average ad writer: I don’t fight the handcuffs. Yes, I scream at the handcuffs, I mourn the day they were born and I suggest to the handcuffs that they do things that are not anatomically feasible, but then I calm down and pretend they are cufflinks and that I am the kind of guy who wears cufflinks. A few months ago Sean Jones asked me to meet the new CEO of Spence Diamonds. His name is Callum Beveridge. Callum flew to Austin and we spent a couple of days together, and I really like him. He asked me if I could bring back the magic of the old Spence Diamonds radio campaign. I told him that would be impossible because Sean Jones would not be available as a voice actor. Callum reminds me of Dewey Jenkins. Both of them, when I said, “It’s impossible,” asked me the same innocent question: “Well, if it could be done and you were going to do it, how would you go about it?” “Well, Callum, the only way would be to use Sean Jones as a character that never
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