By Eugene Schwartz

Copywriting is the simplest of all possible jobs. It consists solely of turning items into ads, of making the physical verbal, of constructing an emotional holograph of the product so convincing that people will part with their good money to share it.

To produce copy, therefore, is not really to write it into being, but to listen it into being. In other words, to be a semi-passive conduit between the producer of the item, and it's needer. Between the man who makes it do what it does, and the other man somewhere out there who needs what it does.

The first step, therefore the essential step in turning an item into an ad, is turning yourself into a listener.

You listen two ways: first with your ears, and then with your eyes. You hear everything you can about the product, and then you read everything you can about the product.

The thing that astounds me, when I read most ads, or work with writers, is that they really haven't bothered to listen deeply enough. This is the most obvious in book copy, where you can check the ad against the text. But it also stands out quite clearly in product advertising, where you can check the ad against the way the product works for you.

Lazy ads produce bad ads. Here's what I've discovered about sharpening mine:

1. Sit down with the owner of the product the man who's hiring you and pump hell out of him. Put on a tape recorder and have him talk for 3 or 4 hours. Ask him where the product came from, what it does, what are its problems and how he's tried to cure them, why it's better than its competitors, who likes it, who doesn't like it, what proof he's got that it works, what strange uses have people got out it, what funny stories has he accumulated in regard to its manufacture or use, what problems was he trying to solve when he created it, how would he improve it if he had unlimited money, what causes most of his refunds, who works for him to help him make it, how it is made, does he keep up the quality, who writes him what about it, etc.

2. Talk to his customers. Do it in person or on paper. See if they agree with him. If they don't find out why.

3. Listen to his competitors. They often tell you more about the opportunities they're missing in their ads, than the opportunities they're seeing and therefore seizing. Let them write a possible head or two for you, out of the body copy of their ads.

4. Then put all the material down, in one big pile, and underline it. Start blending it together like you'd make a cake. Give it, first, priority (your head and sub-heads); and then, order (the body claims). And then type it up preferably adding little of yourself except as selector and condenser.

Want examples? Well, Joe Cossman spoke my most successful fishing lure head SWIN UNDER ITS OWN POWER I just put it on paper for him.

Harry Lorayne blurted out my longest-lived book head: GIVE ME 15 MINUTES AND I'LL GIVE YOU A PUSH BUTTON MEMORY. Again, I just put it on paper.

Martin Edelston dreamily pronounced my best-known newsletter head: READ 300 BUSINESS MAGAZINES IN 30 MINUTES. I just picked it out of a 17-page transcript a day later.

And Bill Bartman came up with FLOATS FAT RIGHT OUT OF YOUR BODY... Dave Ross with INSTANT LEARNING... Clem Martin with WORLD'S FIRST EFFORTLESS EXERCISER.

You see? People constantly ask me why I haven't burned myself out by now... how I can write three or four fresh ads each week without going crazy.

The answer is simple: I don't write them. I listen them. And you can too.