Roy H. Williams quotes:

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  • Quantum Mechanics and General Relativity are both accepted as scientific fact even though they're mutually exclusive. Albert Einstein spent the second half of his life searching for a unifying truth that would reconcile the two.

  • Einstein was searching for String Theory. It not only reconciles General Relativity to Quantum Mechanics, but it reconciles Science and the Bible as well.

  • Have you heard of this new thing called the internet? It's giving people new expectations. It's allowing them to become their own expert. Knowledge lies anxious at their fingertips. Gloss over the truth in your advertising and you'll quickly be dismissed as a poser.

  • According to String Theory, what appears to be empty space is actually a tumultuous ocean of strings vibrating at the precise frequencies that create the 4 dimensions you and I call height, width, depth and time.

  • String Theory describes energy and matter as being composed of tiny, wiggling strands of energy that look like strings. And the pitch of a string's vibration determines the nature of its effect.

  • In essence, String Theory describes space and time, matter and energy, gravity and light, indeed all of God's creation... as music.

  • Human beings are creators, flinging powerful images into the minds of their fellow men. And all of these images are built of tiny particles of thought.

  • In a thousand words I can have the Lord's Prayer, the 23rd Psalm, the Hippocratic Oath, a sonnet by Shakespeare, the Preamble to the Constitution, Lincoln's Gettysburg Address and almost all of the Boy Scout Oath. Now exactly what picture were you planning to trade for all that?

  • In essence, String Theory describes space and time, matter and energy, gravity and light, indeed all of God's creation as music.

  • It appears that the media filters we carry in our heads are like computers: they've been forced to get faster in order to keep up with the demands our high-speed society puts on them.

  • Month after month, Wizard Academy equips people who want to make a difference. This is why journalists and scientists and artists and educators and business owners and advertising professionals and ministers are attracted to our little school.

  • Consequently, a young business often grows by large percentages. Mature businesses rarely do.

  • A polarizing mission statement forces the reader to choose between two sides of a line drawn in the sand. Rare is the business owner who has the courage to craft such a statement.

  • A visual image is a simple thing, a picture that enters the eyes.

  • People don't trade money for things when they value their money more highly than they value the things.

  • Contrary to popular belief, Americans don't hate advertising.

  • Strings of gravity vibrate at a different frequency than strings of light.

  • The value of an item - in the mind of a consumer - is simply the difference between the anticipated price and the price on the tag.

  • A visual image in the hand of an artist is merely a tool to trigger a mental image.

  • Writing good ads is easy when you have something to say.

  • The first step in exceeding your customer's expectations is to know those expectations.

  • One thing that hasn't changed, though, is that we still have to hear the new ad 2 or 3 times before it begins to affect us, even when we're already familiar with the advertiser in question and have a positive opinion of them.

  • Numerals are images of amounts. But the amounts they represent are real.

  • If you're not worried that you're pricing it too cheap, you're not pricing it cheap enough.

  • What this means is that the first week of every new series of ads will continue to yield softer results than you can expect to see in weeks two and three.

  • Small thoughts fit easily into a closed mind, but big thoughts require an open one.

  • A portal is a transitionary device of sight or sound that functions as a sort of third gravitating body between the this and the that, pulling us toward itself, allowing us to bridge into the unknown from the known.

  • A good story often increases the salability of an item without increasing its actual value.

  • It is a lack of commitment, not a lack of talent, that damns you to mediocrity.

  • The salability of an item can often be improved while the value itself remains unchanged."

  • Five minutes in an old book quickly reveals that most of what is being sold today as new insights into human behavior is merely the rediscovery of knowledge we have had for centuries.

  • Opportunity never knocks. It hangs thick in the air all around you. You breathe it unthinking, and dissipate it with your sighs.

  • In marketing you must choose between boredom, shouting and seduction. Which do you want?

  • A smart man makes a mistake, learns from it, and never makes that mistake again.But a wise man finds a smart man and learns from him how to avoid the mistake altogether.

  • Turning the other cheek isn't submissive. It's defiant.

  • The salability of an item can often be improved while the value itself remains unchanged.

  • A meaningless statement remains meaningless no matter how often it's heard.

  • Embarrassment, or the risk of it, accompanies all your important choices.

  • Everyone is broken a little, I think, and the most broken of all are those who pretend they are not.

  • Excitement and reward exist only outside your comfort zone. You'll experience neither of them until you make yourself do something you really don't want to do. So what is it that scares the hell out of you?

  • Follow a trail of bold mistakes and at the end of them you will find a genius.

  • Guard the secret theater of your heart. See nothing there that you do not want to see happen in reality.

  • Having the right message is what matters. It's not who you reach, it's what you say.

  • If you want the truth to prevail, you must cause people to realize the truth. This requires much more skill than is required to simply tell it.

  • Impact in advertising today is 80 percent strategy, 20 percent copy. This makes it nearly impossible for good copy to compensate for weak strategy.

  • Live and "love to be fascinated.

  • Lives, like money, are spent. What are you buying with yours?

  • Most ads are about the product or the company that makes it...the best ads are about the customer and how the product will change his life.

  • Most ads are ignored because every customer has a mental filter that evaluates and dismisses both of these languages of Ad-Speak with a single question: What are they not telling me?

  • No trade will be made unless they want the thing more than they want their money.

  • Our actions are all that separate our daydreams from our goals.

  • Passion doesn't create commitment; commitment creates passion. To what are you committed?

  • Preparation, mastery, can help you overcome your fear, but mastery alone is not enough. There has to be something you want that's worth more to you than your fear.

  • Rich Christiansen is one of the most insightful, practical and cost-conscious entrepreneurs in the world today. Listen to Rich. He won't steer you wrong.

  • Take your inspiration from wherever you find it, no matter how ridiculous.

  • The first step in persuasion is to entice your target to imagine doing the thing you want them to do.

  • The person who achieves spectacular failure has at least attempted something bold. Failure is a temporary condition. Success is likewise temporary. Life, itself, is temporary - so quit hesitating. Do something!

  • The risk of insult is the price of clarity.

  • The risk of insult is the price of clarity. To be clearly understood one must speak the simple, essential truth as plainly as he is able.

  • The value of an item"?in the mind of a consumer"?is simply the difference between the anticipated price and the price on the tag.

  • Use half as many words and they'll hit twice as hard.

  • You see a person when you look in the mirror that no one sees but you. Other people see a person when they look at you, but you're not that person, either.

  • Your heart, my friend, is the size of a stadium. If you try to fill it with small things - a new car, a vacation, a promotion at work, a bigger home, a stock portfolio - a mournful echo will fill your life. But if you fill your stadium with all of humanity and search for ways to make their lives better each day, you will find yourself in the right place at the right time, doing the right thing in the right way.

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