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Ancient Rhetoric for the Modern Persuader: How to Argue for Conversions

How to Argue

Here’s a common phrase that perhaps you’re familiar with: “Don’t raise your voice, improve your argument.”

As an optimizer, you’re in the business of arguing. You’re constantly arguing with your visitors about whether they should leave their email or not, buy something or not.

Improving your argument, even just a little bit, can have a huge impact on your conversion rate. That’s where rhetoric and persuasion come in.

What is rhetoric and persuasion?

Plato once described rhetoric as “the art of ruling the minds of men”.

It is, formally, “the art of discourse, wherein a writer or speaker strives to inform, persuade or motivate particular audiences in specific situations”. Much of what the ancient Greeks (like Isocrates, Plato and Aristotle) taught about rhetoric is the basis for modern persuasion techniques.

Rhetoric is, essentially, the art of arguing. Not fighting, arguing. The goal of a fight is to win, the goal of an argument is to change someone’s mind.

As Ray Comfort of Living Waters explains, rhetoric is a powerful tool…

Ray Comfort, Living Waters:

“Rhetoric, which is the use of language to inform or persuade, is very important in shaping public opinion. We are very easily fooled by language and how it is used by others.” (via Lifehack)

But why does all of this matter to optimizers?

Because whether you realize it or not, every page of your site is an argument. The other side of the argument is simply taking place inside your visitor’s mind.

The better you argue your side, the more likely the conversion.

Modern Persuasion Techniques to Try

1. Set Your Goal and Your Audience Goal

Buckley’s cough medicine concedes to the belief that cough medicine tastes bad…

Also, Elle Magazine uses some unfavorable opt-out copy…

These types of passive aggressive popups are fairly common now, but rhetorical theory suggests the conversion rate might increase if the unfavorable extreme were positioned first.

Shipping and pricing pages are often another good example. Here, American Apparel positions “Two-Day” shipping as the reasonable middle option…

2. Be Aware of and Take Control of the Tense

Dove, for example, uses the future tense to promise a payoff (“softer, smoother skin after just one shower”)…

This type of deliberative argument keeps visitors focused on the mutual goal.

3. Show Sympathy, Reluctancy and Sacrifice

Uber needs qualified drivers to remain in business, right? But look at how they use personal sacrifice in their recruitment copy…

The copy reads: “Drive when you want. Make what you need. Driving with Uber is flexible and rewarding, helping drivers meet their career and financial goals.”

Becoming a driver seems to help the visitor more than it helps Uber.

4. Do the Audience Research to Find Commonplaces

One of my favorite online examples of commonplace language is 17hats

When you’re reading the copy, it almost feels like a customer herself is making the argument. That’s because they’ve done the research and really understand their customers’ commonplaces.

5. Be Aware of and Take Control of the Words

6. Avoid All Logical Fallacies

It’s no secret that logical fallacies exist and can easily throw a wrench into the plans of an optimizer…

According to Jay Heinrichs, author of Thank You for Arguing: What Aristotle, Lincoln, and Homer Simpson Can Teach Us About the Art of Persuasion, there are “seven logical sins”…

  1. False comparison: two things are similar, so they must be the same.
  2. Bad example: the example used is false, unbelievable, irrelevant or wrongly interpreted.
  3. Ignorance as proof: the lack of a concrete example proves that something doesn’t exist.
  4. Tautology: the proof and the actual conclusion are the same.
  5. False choice: the number of choices given is not equal to the actual number of choices that exist.
  6. Red herring: distracts the audience from the main issue.
  7. Wrong ending: the proof fails to lead to a concrete conclusion.

Jay boils the seven sins down to just three core mistakes: bad proof, bad conclusion, and disconnect between the proof and the conclusion.

7. Make the Old New, Correct Yourself and Repeat Yourself

Moosejaw, for example, puts a clever twist on the famous phrase “carpe diem”…

8. Commonplace Words Make the Heart Grow Fonder

9. Sorry, Not Sorry: Don’t Apologize

Last year, Sarah Bird of Moz announced that they’d be doubling down on search, which meant laying off 28% of their team. Unfortunate news for many, but the rhetoric Sarah used to position the news was flawless…

I really encourage you to read the entire article.

10. Identify and Even Create Persuadable Moments

A great recent example of major change is the U.S. election. From President Obama to President Trump… the past few months have been full of related persuadable moments.

Cards Against Humanity wasn’t afraid to capitalize on them…

Of course, that’s not to say that the changing circumstance or mood needs to be presidential to be useful.

Ancient Rhetoric 101

Aristotle once said…

Of the modes of persuasion furnished by the spoken word there are three kinds. The first kind depends on the personal character of the speaker; the second on putting the audience into a certain frame of mind; the third on the proof, provided by the words of the speech itself.

Those three modes are known as ethos, logos and pathos. They can be combined to make the techniques above even more persuasive.

Ethos: Your Character, Who You Are

In Thank You for Arguing, Jay wrote…

“A person’s life persuades better than his word,” said one of Aristotle’s contemporaries.

Here’s what you need to know about ethos…

Here’s a product review from Moosejaw, which demonstrates a real world application of “get someone to brag for you”…

It sends a message to others about the ethos of the Moosejaw brand: you can trust them, they make quality products.

Logos: Logic, Reasoning

Here’s what you need to know about logos…

Pathos: Sympathy, Emotions

Here’s what you need to know about pathos…

We’ve written an entire article on emotional persuasion, which I recommend taking the time to read as well.

Conclusion

Every page of your site is a different argument and every single person who visits your site engages you in at least one argument.

It just makes sense to arm yourself with an understanding of ancient rhetoric and modern persuasion techniques. The optimizers who do so will quickly pull ahead of the optimizers who aren’t even aware the argument is taking place.

When in doubt, just remember the three modes…

  1. Ethos (character). Prove that you’re trustworthy and share values with your audience.
  1. Logos (logic). Demonstrate good reasoning and provide valuable examples.
  2. Pathos (emotion). Create and guide emotions to inspire action.

The modes do not work in silos. For the best results, combine them into one flawless argument that your visitors can’t refuse.

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