The Four
"P" Approach:
A Persuasive Writing Structure That
Works
More than half
the battle of creating compelling content, is solid structure.
Disorganized writing inhibits understanding, and
without understanding, you're not going to get a warm reception
when you ask for action. Plus, without structural guidelines to
follow, you end up leaving out information necessary to your case
or promotion.
There are plenty of popular writing structures. One is the inverted
pyramid that some journalists favor, which is fine if your goal is
to allow the reader to leave mid-story, but not so good if you want
people to stick around while you make the case for your call to
action.
A popular writing structure is AIDA (attention, interest, desire, action),
which dates back to the early days of mass media advertising.
AIDA is a useful framework, but it leaves
some with too little understanding of what each element is intended
to include.
The 4 Ps
Approach to Persuasion
The 4 Ps
structure consists of promise, picture, proof, and
push in place of the four elements of attention, interest,
desire, and action. The 4 Ps provide more expansive elements than
AIDA. Let's look at what each element
requires you to deliver to the reader.

1.
Promise
The promise you
make is designed to catch attention, but here you're told how to
catch attention, unlike AIDA. I'm sure
we've all seen attempts to catch attention that we're easily immune
to, because it's something ridiculous instead of beneficial.
That beneficial promise is made with the headline, perhaps
elaborated in an initial subhead, and carried over into your
opening. This is the most important part of the piece, because if
the reader stops here, it's game over.
This promise is "what's in it for them." Yes you
want their attention, but the promise is the only reason the reader
is willing to give it to you.

2.
Picture
Instead of the
vague notion of "interest," here we segue into painting a
vivid picture for the reader. You're fleshing out the
promise and beneficial payoff using vibrant descriptive
language.
One way to do this is to get the reader to imagine themselves
enjoying the benefit or desired outcome. Then you get very specific
about how your proposed solution or idea makes that benefit
happen.
The Picture phase suggests using storytelling and vivid descriptive
imagery as a way to hold the reader's emotional
interest while you nudge them down the path to acceptance.
It also keeps you focused on communicating the benefits associated
with the features or facts that you need to get across.
3.
Proof
In
the preceding potion of your writing piece, you've communicated the
foundational information you want readers to accept in a
brain-friendly manner. Now you've got to back it up with
supporting proof.
Statistics, studies, graphs, charts, third-party facts,
testimonials, a demonstration that the features of your product
deliver the benefits you've promised - these are all part of the
Proof section of your piece. Now's the time to play it straight and
appeal to the reader's logical mind to support the emotional
triggers you pulled with the Picture.
Rhetorical arguments and promotional pieces fail when Proof is
missing, skimpy, or lacking in credibility. While your relationship
with the reader hopefully carries trust and authority, asking
people to accept your assertions without supporting evidence is an
easy way for your writing to fail.

4.
Push
Now we come to
the all-important action phase of the piece, which incorporates and
expands desire. While "push" can carry a negative connotation, here
we're using it as a more expansive persuasive element that
makes action more likely.
The Push phase is more than just a call to action. It's delivering
an outstanding offer in a promotion, and then asking for the
purchase. It's the grand finale where your big idea makes as much
sense to the reader as it does to you.
Persuasive writing begins with the ending in mind,
so during the push you're tying the beneficial promise and the
vivid picture to solid acceptance and concrete action. Don't be shy
about "telling them what you've told them" as a way to connect the
dots, because an assumption of understanding is an enemy to
acceptance.

Persuasion is not
about coercion or manipulation. Persuasion is about
understanding. Understanding leads to acceptance when the
product is relevant and high-quality, and when the idea is sound
and well-targeted.
Just don't assume people understand on their own. It's a noisy
world out there, so you've got to educate your readers. Good
writing materials simply educate the readers in a way that the
brain finds appealing. And a big part of brain-friendly language is
the compelling structure that people need to see things your
way.
Reference/Image Credits:
1. Eqqman
3. ~ Ladч Aчυмι
4. Twigsnapper
5. Extraverage
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