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HOW TO USE "UPWORDS" TO INCREASE RESPONSE

I once took a media communications course in which I discovered
an interesting example of the way the mind works. As part of a
given lesson, a videotape was shown of a televised newscast
during which a journalist was about to give a live report on a
forest fire that was devastating the mid-west. The news anchor in
the television newsroom said, "We now take you to Sally Smith;
she is in the station's helicopter flying above the scene of the
fire."

He then turned to the background screen, which gave a live
bird's-eye view of the raging fire, and asked: "Sally, tell us...
How big is the fire?" In a voice partially drowned by the
whizzing sound of helicopter blades, Sally reports: "John, it's
so big, it's covering well over 140 acres of land -- that's about
200 football fields back-to-back."

You Ought to Be in Pictures

As you can sense from the above example, people think in
pictures. The mind does not think in words, letters, or
numbers -- unless it is told to do exactly that. The mind is a
very simple organ and it hates confusion. It will naturally
translate words or phrases into their visual equivalent. For
instance, if I told you to think of a garbage can, you're not
going to think "G-A-R-B-A-G-E..." You will automatically
visualize some sort of garbage can.

Why do you think Microsoft Windows and the MacIntosh computer
dominate the marketplace in computer operating systems? It is
because, rather than having to type in an elaborate command for
your computer to execute, you can simply use your mouse, point to
an icon (a picture representing the command), and click. These
icons basically contain a string of numerous commands that are
translated in a language the computer understands.

In reality, what the icon does is translate a visual symbol into
a series of codes and commands that only the computer
understands. Our mind works in almost the same way. It
translates -- in a matter of an instant -- what is being said or
read into something it can easily understand.

What I call UPWORDS are very effective in any conversation, sales
call, or written message in that they simply help the message to
be better understood and appreciated. It is Mark Twain who once
said that "numbers don't stick in the mind; pictures do." The
word "upwords" is actually an acronym that stands for universal
picture words or relatively descriptive sentences. In other
words, upwords are examples, analogies, metaphors, symbols,
picture words, common phrases, colloquialisms, and so on.

Use Upwords to Move Upwards

For example, the biggest challenge among cosmetic surgeons is the
fact that people will call for a price quote over the phone when
obviously the doctor needs to see the patient beforehand. Since
cosmetic surgery is an uncommon process, doctors will often use
the more common dental work as an analogy -- people rarely
undergo cosmetic surgery but most of them have had their teeth
done at some point in their lives. So, doctors will say, "Have
you ever called a dentist for an estimate over the phone without
any x-rays of your teeth or the knowledge of how many cavities
you actually have?"

Beauticians usually face the same problem. Since many customers
tend to shop around, then making a decision based on price alone
can be detrimental to both the consumer and the business. So,
using art as an analogy, beauticians will say: "A makeover is a
makeover just like a painting is a painting, but there's quite a
difference between a Rembrandt and a preschooler's
fingerpainting."

If you're a computer programmer trying to sell your services to
the plant manager of a farm equipment manufacturer, and in your
presentation you provide complex technical data in abstract
computer "technolese," you will obviously do very poorly. You
must therefore mold your message in a way that it can be easily
understood by farmers or plant workers.

We all come from different backgrounds. Our education,
experiences, and upbringing help to condition our thinking -- and
so our minds. Therefore, use analogies, metaphors, and picture
words in your presentation that will make your message easier to
understand by the other's personal set of circumstances. As Jack
Trout once said, "A word is worth a thousand pictures." So,
choose your words carefully. Use upwords.

Michel Fortin, Ph.D.
The Success Doctor(TM)

P.S.: This article has been condensed in great part from my
latest book, "101 Power Positioning Tips! How to Turn Your
Business Into a Powerful Magnet." For more details on the book,
visit http://success-doctor.com/power.htm.



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