Featuring an interview with Sam Horn, author of 
 
 

 

I’m Good … Maybe Great!

You, your product, your service, your  company, is good … maybe great.

 

It’s different, unique, totally rad, awesomeroo and bloggerific.  It even (occasionally) delivers real business value; makes an authentic difference in business or life.

 

But … no one has heard of you.

 

Sui Generis

 

You’re one of a kind. You know it. You can prove it. But still, you’re one of a kind that no one knows. 

 

No one has ever heard of you.

 

You haven’t even heard of you.

 

You Haven’t Even Heard of You!

 

Not for lack of effort though.

 

You’ve tried to communicate your brilliance, your stupefying, heart-stopping differentiators, your value-laden proposition power pack, but your message gets sucked down the black hole of no return. The dreaded …. 

 

Inbox Out of Control

 

By “inbox” I’m referring to your mental inbox as well as work inbox.

 

 

You can’t seem to break through … to stand out in this infoglut world 2.0 where the speed of light has finally been surpassed (though Einstein said it wasn’t possible, he was never bombarded with electronic corporate gobbledygook) by the cumulative effect of  spam scud missiles, instant messages, BlackBerrys, mobile apps, blogging, etc.

 

Even though you know why you’re different − why you’re special − you can’t capture someone’s attention unless you communicate it so brilliantly it shines and stands out.  Everyone gets it instantly. But standing out is getting harder … and easier every day.

 

Harder because the sheer volume of marketing messages an average person sees a day is almost beyond measure.

 

It used to be that the average American was subjected to 3,000 marketing messages a day − 3,000 marketing messages a day!

 

Wow.

 

Those were the good old days.

 

 

 

These days, you see that many before noon.

 

Easier

 

Harharharhar. Just kidding. I lied. Just threw that in to obfuscate. It’s not getting easier. Sorry. And it won’t get easier. But, with the proper approach, you can reach your goals and … 

 

Capture Customers

 

Are there strategies and tactics that can help you break through and stand out?  To capture customers’ and prospects’ attention, hearts, minds and …. (ahem) money?

 

 

“Money, which represents the prose of life, and which is hardly spoken of in parlors without an apology, is, in its effects and laws, as beautiful as roses.”

 

- Ralph Waldo Emerson

 

 

We’ll find out from professional speaker and author of “POP! Stand Out in Any Crowd,” Sam Horn. Sam’s books have been endorsed by such luminaries as Stephen R. Covey (“7 Habits ...”), Jack Canfield (“Chicken Soup ...”), and Anthony Robbins (“Unleash the Power ...”). But none communicates the essence of the book with such eloquent intellectual simplicity as the testimonial below.

 

 

“As a person who once used a sparking Barbie doll

to set fire to a pair of underpants on national television,

 I can vouch for the importance of standing out from a crowd.

As a friend of Sam Horn's, I can also vouch for the excellent advice

she offers in this book.”

 

- Pulitzer-Prize-winning humor columnist, Dave Barry

 

 

But First (and it’s related) … POP!

 

Donkey quit.

 

My Donkey quit.

 

Just like that – POP – several years of collaborating and co-writing went up in smoke.

 

 

No morestories.

 

Success had gone to his

donkey head. (I won’t comment on the lipstick … but I have heard rumors.)

 

After a series of successful articles that included:

 

Shooting the Donkey in the Complex Sales Process ... Hollywood Style,

Veni, Vidi, Tiré a dos burros,” “I Came. I Saw. I Shot Two Donkeys,” and 

My Darling, Is That Manure Stick You Have on? 

 

He decided he could make it on his own.

 

A Donkey in His Own Write

 

He wanted to be his own donkey and write his own book. That’s right, his own book. He didn’t tell me about this until he was almost done.

 

I took it in stride.

But then decided I wanted (needed) to try to save our relationship. We went to counseling.

 

It didn’t work.

 

When I realized he was determined to quit no matter what, and move on with his donkey life, I decided to do the right thing. Try to help him (later I needed some help myself).

 
Donkey’s book was almost done. It was a compilation of lessons he’d learned from humans. I offered him my help in marketing the book, but Donkey said he didn’t need it.

I’d done enough already. 

Ready to Break Through, Stand Out, and Go to Market!

 

My Donkey already had the plan and his book title,

 

 

When he showed me the draft, I really didn’t know what to say without hurting his feelings. Except that as much as he’s been around corporate business-speak, he ought to know that if the book was successful, someone would turn the title into an acronym, and well … that might turn out a bit crappy.

 

Donkey discounted that and quickly pointed out that his full name was prominently featured on the cover (unlike his collaborative efforts with me where we was known only by his first name … Donkey). 

 

And why was this important?

 

Well, according to Donkey O'Tee, all great, memorable names and slogans incorporated the person’s or company’s name.

 

 

Example:

 

“Oh, I wish I were an Oscar Mayer wiener

That is what I truly wish to be.

'Cause if I were an Oscar Mayer wiener,

Everyone would be in love with me.”

 

 

He was going to use a similar strategy – though he quite hadn’t figured it out yet − to market his book.

  

 

Example:

 

Oh, I wish I were a Donkey O'Tee wiener.

That is what I truly wish to be … be … be.

 

 

I asked him if he knew what happened to weiners (hot dogs)?

 

 

Donkey was horrified. He quickly moved on to his next example, from the insurance industry. He asked me if I knew …

 

 

“You’re in Good Hands with  ...”

 

 

”Allstate, of course,” I answered. But, I didn’t think that would work for him either.

 

 

 

Didn’t ring, resonate or POP!

 

“But what,” I asked,” is your book really about?”

 

“You don’t know? You can’t tell by the title? It’s the “Idiot’s Guide to Business Survival.” It’s my elevator spiel. I mean you humans excel at making the simple complex, the complex unknowable, and the unknowable entertainingly hilarious! And, you do it was such pompous profligate proliferating panache that to succeed in business today, even to keep your job, you need to know how to excel at …

 

“Pompously Obfuscating on Purpose?”

 

Yes! You see … a bestseller in the making!” said Donkey O'Tee. “Go to any business website, read any business report, letter, brochure, advertisement or marketing message … it’s totally obvious. To survive in the human’s business world today, you have to be able to …

 

“Pompously Obfuscate on Purpose.”  I echoed with dismal dismay.

 

“Less is not more! Less is out of a job. More is less.  More is needed all of the time. More of more and less of less, more or less!” brayed Donkey O'Tee hilariously.  “And … I‘m going to get all kinds of media coverage, you know why?

 

“Why?”

 

“You heard that song by the famous female songwriter Bonnie Braitt?”

 

“You mean Bonnie Raitt?

 

“No, You having trouble hearing? Bonnie Braitt.”

 

“What song?”

 

“I’m going to give them something to bray about!”

 

For once, I was speechless. Though Donkey had made some excellent points, I still felt duty-bound, nonetheless, to seek out some expert advice on his behalf. For Donkey O'Tee to succeed, he had to stand out (and not just in a field) to capture national and international media attention.

 

   ENTER:  Sam Horn

  I Am Sam Horn I Am 
Sam is a professional speaker and author of “POP! Stand Out in Any Crowd.” Sam is also the author of several well-reviewed books from major publishers including “Tongue Fu!®,” “ConZentrate,” “What's Holding You Back?,” and “Take the Bully by the Horns.” These have been sold around the world (China, Japan, Argentina, France, and Germany); favorably reviewed in dozens of publications including Publishers Weekly, Chicago Tribune, Washington Post, Investors Business Daily, Foreign Service Journal, and Readers Digest, and endorsed by many best-selling authors including Stephen R. Covey, Anthony Robbins, Jeffrey Fox, Susan Jeffers, Dave Pelzer, Susan Forward, Rabbi Harold Kushner, Richard Carlson, and John Gray.

 

 

Steve: Welcome. I have this friend. He’s writing a book and needs to learn, well …  


Sam: To … learn how to break out instead of blend in?

 

Steve: You’ve got it. What is POP!, and why is it important?

 

Sam:  POP! is a system of 25 techniques I've developed that can help ANYONE create attention-grabbing titles, taglines, and tell 'n sell descriptions for their company, cause, campaign, and creation. It’ll let them break out instead of blend in.

 

POP! is crucial to success because people today are BB. 

 

Steve: BB?

 

Sam:  They're BUSY.  They have hundreds of things competing for their attention.  They're BORED.  They've heard and seen it all - or at least, they think they have.

 

 

“My own business always bores me to death;

I prefer other people's.”

 

- Oscar Wilde

 

 

What that means is, we have 30 seconds to get their favorable attention.  If what we have to say and sell is not Purposeful, Original, or Pithy, they're on to the next thing.

 

 

POP!


Purposeful


Original


Pithy

 

In

 

30 seconds or less

 

 

 

Steve: In 30 seconds or less?

 

Sam:  Make a long elevator speech short by Cliff Noting it into one sentence.  The more you try to explain what you do or what you have to offer, the more confused people will become.

 

 

"My grandfather invented Cliff Notes.

 It was, well, ... to make a long story short."

 

- Steven Wright

 

 

Instead of going on at length, compare your job or offering to something with which people are familiar and fond.  For example, I was in Denver, CO with my sons for a speaking engagement.  We had the night free, so I asked our hotel concierge to suggest a fun place we could go. 

 

He said, "You've got to go to D & B's."

 

We were from Maui at the time and had no idea what he was referring to.  We asked, "What's D & B's?"

 

He said, "It's a Chuck E. Cheese for adults."

 

Voila.  We knew exactly what it was and wanted to go there because of his perfect "Cliff Notes" description.

 

Steve: I get it. (See how purposeful, original, and pithy my responses are?)

 

 

"Operator! Give me the number for 911!" - Homer Simpson

 

 

Sam: In the book, this is called "The Valley Girl Technique." It provides specific ways to compare what you do to a popular movie, song, book, or person to create a tell' n sell elevator intro that gets your project's foot in people's mental door.

 

Steve: How do you come up with a memorable name or slogan?  (I didn’t tell her about “Pompously Obfuscate on Purposeyet because, though memorable it may be, it’s in an infamy kind-a-way.)

 

Sam:  One of the best ways to make your name or slogan memorable is to use alliteration.  Alliteration is when words start with the same sound.  It makes your language lyrical, makes you instantly eloquent, and gives peoples’ minds a hook on which to hang a memory. 

 

 

Say these words out loud.

 

Bed, Shower, and Toilet

Boom radio

Dirt Satan

Good Purchase

Dunkin Croissants

Rolls Jaguar

 

 

Steve: Now I’m hungry, sleepy, jiggy, and have to go …

 

Sam:  They don't POP! do they?  They sound commonplace, and they'd be difficult to remember.

 

 

Now say these words out loud.

 

Bed, Bath, and Beyond.

Boom Box

Dirt Devil

Best Buy

Dunkin Donuts

Rolls Royce

 

 

Hmm … they fit together, don't they?  Alliteration produces "ear music," which has a nice ring and resonance, which means your brand name will linger longer in peoples’ minds.

 

 

Alliterate.

 

Produce "ear music" with a nice ring and resonance and ...

your brand name will linger longer in peoples’ minds.

 

 

Steve: To stand out, you almost have to be one of a kind, or at least be perceived that way. What's one of the best ways individuals and organizations can become one of a kind instead of one of many?

 

Sam: The best way to become one of a kind is to coin a word for your business, brand, or book that belongs to you and you alone. One way to do that is to use one of the 25 POP! techniques called Alphabetizing. 

 

 

Alphabetize.

 

Mix-n-match your core words.

 

 

Write down ten words you frequently use to pitch your project, product, or program. Those are your "Core Words."  Now, run each of those words through the alphabet, changing the sound of the first syllable to match the corresponding letter. 

 

I used this technique to create the trademarked term of Tongue Fu! - the verbal form of Kung Fu! 

 

 

Tongue-Fu: Martial Arts for the Mind and Mouth

 

 

Tongue Fu! is martial arts for the mind and mouth.  If you run Tongue Fu! through the alphabet, you come up with even more variations. 

 

-        Fun Fu! is how to handle hassles with humor instead of harsh words. 

-        Run Fu! is for when Tongue Fu! doesn't work. 

-        Tongue Glue is knowing when to keep your mouth shut. 

-        Tongue Sue! is for lawyers. 

-        Young Fu! is for kids.

 

These proprietary phrases could become articles, chapters in a book, or presentations for targeted audiences.

 

See how this works?  Instead of competing with everyone else, your one-of-a-kind term turns you into the go-to resource because YOU are the sole provider of that particular item.

 

 

“If lawyers are disbarred and clergymen defrocked,

doesn't it follow that electricians can be delighted, musicians denoted?”

 

-George Carlin

 

 

Steve: What's one POP! technique anyone can use to help their ideas and offerings break out instead of blend in?

 

 

Create a Half and Half Word

 

 

Sam: Use what I call a Half and Half Word to go to the head of the class and become THE topic expert on your product or profession. 

 

That's what Dr. Francine Kaufman did by naming a cultural phenomenon that was taking place in the medical world.  She noticed that more and more children were coming into her office diagnosed with diabetes.  The link between diabetes and obesity had been known for years, however, no one had linked them in language until she did by coining the term Diabesity.  By creating a one-word name for this condition, she got an impressive book deal and quickly became THE topic expert that media called first for interviews.

 

You can create your own Half and Half Word by getting a fresh piece of paper and drawing a vertical line down the center, dividing the paper into two columns.  Now, start describing the different aspects of your cause, company, creation, or campaign − putting half the words on the left and half the words on the right.

 

For example, if you were opening a fusion restaurant that combined a mix of ethnic foods, you could write common words from one culture on the left and popular phrases from the other culture on the right.  Now, take the first half of a word on the left and match it with the last half of the words on the right.  Then take the first half of the next word on the left and match it with the last half of the words on the right, and so on.  Keep playing with different combinations until you come up with one that POP!s – ala Ciao Mein, the perfect name for an Italian-Chinese bistro.

 

Steve: Got it. Piece of cake.

 

 

“I know that you believe you understand what you think I said, 

but I'm not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant.”

 

- Robert McCloskey

 

 

Steve:  What are a couple of laugh-out-loud examples of products that POP!d off the shelf because of their catchy name?  

 

Sam: Here are a couple of my favorite examples of products that POP!d out of the pack because of their catchy names.