Despite the drinking and shenanigans at last night's cocktail party, all the copy legends appeared fresh, rejuvenated, and ready to get down to business.
After an off-the-cuff five-minute heartfelt welcome -- telling the copy legends how grateful I am for their willingness to be here and share so openly with one another -- I dove right in to our first session.
"The first topic I want us to cover is marketplace research. I want to know what you guys and gals are doing today to know exactly what a marketplace needs to hear to buy," I said.
"Tell me how you're researching markets today, including what you're doing today you weren't doing before, to know what makes the marketplace tick and what will make them buy."
Since everything we do in marketing begins with matching our message to what our market wants, I knew we needed to begin with this topic to lay a solid foundation for the entire day of sharing.
To my surprise and joy, almost half the group of copy legends immediately shot their hands up ready to share their research techniques.
So, one by one they laid-out they're different strategies and tactics (and tools) for uncovering the wants, desires, and hot buttons of an audience.
What I immediately found interesting was the variety of research methods being used. Almost none of the copy legends were following the same research process or flow.
Some aspect of their marketplace research process was unique to each copy legend.
However, the one thing they all had in common -- none of the copy legends rely on mere intuition or assumptions about what audiences need to hear to buy. None of them.
All the copy legends rely on some research process to identify and confirm what needs to be said to an audience to produce the sale.
[Sidenote: Chris Haddad, probably the most emotionally sophisticated copy legend was the only exception. Sort of. Since his copy is known for its punch-in-the-gut emotional style, Chris explained how his "research" is more around getting himself in-tune with the deeper core emotions and drivers of an audience. He emphasized how he does this with empathy and a form of "method acting".]