The 8 Persuasive Words That Instantly Help You Sell More

Bonus Material: Persuasive Words Placement Checklist

There are 8 intoxicatingly persuasive words in the English language that are more effective than any other words for convincing a person to take action. 

These are words the most effective copywriters in the world have been using for decades to convince you to buy their product. 

Wait -- am I talking about power words?

Nope. 

Power words: Words that strengthen your copy to pique interest and get people to click. The hook

Persuasive words: Words that convince people to buy. The sell

There are 8 persuasive words:

Let’s get into it. 

Click here for your free placement checklist!

Persuasive Word #1: The Novel Word that Sells 

This word is one of the easiest ways to increase your traffic and conversions significantly.

It’s “new”

Humans love novelty. We love being on the cutting edge of things. We love new things and love hearing about things first. 

That’s why this word works. 

Research has shown that perceived newness increases sales for a product, but brands do better if they’re more established. 

We tested using the word “New” on Twitter, and it was our most drastic experiment yet:

Screenshot of a tweet by Sumo promoting a piece of content

Screenshot of a tweet by Sumo promoting a piece of content

Just by including the one word before the headline of the article we were promoting, the post with the word “new” performed 422% better in terms of clicks than the control.

New #ftw.

Takeaway: When something is new (for example, a product, webinar, or piece of content), say so, unless the new thing is your brand, in which case don’t mention it.

Persuasive Word #2: This Word That Makes People Act Like Fools

There’s one word you can use in your sales copy that’s almost guaranteed to convert. It’s been proven to work time and time again… 

And it’s free

No, seriously, the word is “free” (pardon the pun), and it’s one of the most intoxicatingly convincing words in the human language.  

In one experiment, Dan Ariely, researcher at Duke University surveyed 76 people in a lineup to get a free tattoo. 

It turns out that 68% of the people in that lineup wouldn’t have even gotten a tattoo if it weren’t free.

In another study by the same dude, students were offered two types of chocolate:

  • A Lindt Truffle for $0.26 or
  • A Hershey’s Kiss for $0.01. 

Initially, 60% of buyers chose the Truffle for $.26 and 40% chose the Kiss. Ariely then reduced the prices of each by $0.01:

  • The Truffle was $0.25
  • The Kiss was free

Suddenly 90% of students chose the Kiss, even though the relative prices remained the same. 

We tested the word “Free” on our opt-in for our marketing psychology article and we increased the conversion rate by 15.02%.

Screenshot of two different email popups and how one performs better than the other

Screenshot of two different campaigns being A/B tested

Keep in mind that this was on an article about marketing psychology, where the readers were educated about the power of free. 

#micdrop. 

Takeaway: Use the word free. It’s a “free” way of increasing your sales.

Persuasive Word #3: The Surprising Word That Quietly and Senselessly Persuades

This next word is one that you must be using, because it’s so powerful. 

The word?

“Because”

In a study done at Harvard University, a researcher tested different wording to ask students standing in a line for a copy machine whether she could cut the line. 

Ask #1: “Excuse me, I have 5 pages. May I use the xerox machine?” 

Ask #2: “Excuse me, I have 5 pages. May I use the xerox machine, because I have to make copies?”

Ask #3: “Excuse me, I have 5 pages. May I use the xerox machine, because I’m in a rush?”

Screenshot of a graph that shows compliance levels for different queries

60% of the people allowed the researcher to cut the line with Ask #1. Ask #3 elicited a 94% compliance rate (the researcher’s reasoning was “because I’m in a rush”). 

The interesting part? When the researcher used the word “because” but with no valid reasoning behind it (“because I have to make copies” -- keep in mind, everyone else in line also had to make copies!) she still had a 93% compliance rate. 

Takeaway: People like to think they’ve been given a reason for something, even if the “reason” is akin to your mom saying “because I said so”. Use the word “because” in your copy when you’re showing why something works.

Persuasive Word #4: The Word That Uncovers How Selfish We Really Are

Which of these sentences is more likely to persuade you?

a) “You need Sumo to make more money in your business”

b) “Entrepreneurs need Sumo to make more money in their businesses”?

Trick question. 

The answer is A. 

Why?

Because A uses the word “you”, and B uses the formal third person. We tested “you” against the third person on a social media post: 

Screenshot of a tweet by Sumo promoting a piece of content

Screenshot of a tweet by Sumo promoting a piece of content

The post that addressed you rather than bloggers got 37% more clicks.

In a nutshell, you’re obsessed with yourself and so am I. Research proves it.[*]

Hearing your own name makes your brain activity light up like a Christmas tree. In short, it makes you pay attention. To persuade anyone to do anything (like buy your product), they have to pay attention. 

But you can’t always use your target customer’s names in your marketing, unless you’re a wizard. So this persuasive word is “you”. 

“You” acts as a placeholder for your name. 

Check out how Shopify uses “You” five times in just one CTA on their homepage:  

Screenshot showing how shopify uses the word "you" a lot in their copy

Shopify grew their revenue by $184.1 million in 365 days, making them the perfect model of good copywriting.

Takeaway: The formal third person shouldn’t have a place in your copy. Address the customer directly by using “you”. Where possible, use the person’s name (like in email).

Protip: Use your subscriber’s name in email subject lines to increase your open rate. Almost all email service providers allow for that:

Screenshot showing an email being written with automated personalization

Persuasive Word #5: The Word That Screams Urgency

Urgency sells. 

In 2016, we sent a sales email without any urgency or scarcity in it. It converted at a sad 0.41%. 

But when we sent out a recap email for that sales email, that was time bound and stoked urgency, we increased sales to 3.38%: 

Screenshot of a spreadsheet showing stats for a campaign

We’re not the only ones who have discovered the power of urgency. 

One ecommerce store A/B tested a limited offer on shipping vs. a control (no shipping offer). They included a countdown timer to elicit urgency on the limited offer:

Screenshot showing an ecommerce product being ab tested, with one having an extra piece fo copy

That limited offer on shipping increased sales on the product by 226%.

So urgency works. Check. But how can you use persuasive words to elicit urgency in your copy where countdown timers won’t work?

Use the word “now”. 

Marcus Taylor on ConversionXL added the word “now” and increased the clickthrough rate from 1.71% to 3.76%:[*]

Screenshot of a test on different titles having different clicks and CTRs

And it’s persuasive on your product pages, too.

Check out how BestSelf Co. uses the word “Now” on their call to action button to elicit urgency: 

Screenshot showing Best Self

Even their product pages use the word “now” on button copy:

Screenshot showing different products on best self

Takeaway: Urgency sells. Command your visitors do something “now” to get a higher conversion rate.

Persuasive Word #6: The Word That Makes You Daydream

Ever been told a story about an accident or injury that made your toes curl? You almost feel pain on behalf of the victims. 

That’s not just empathy. Those feelings there are “mirror neurons”. 

“A mirror neuron is a neuron that fires both when an animal acts and when the animal observes the same action performed by another”[*]

Therein lies the power of this next persuasive word:

“Imagine”

Mirror neurons mean that feelings can be transferred without having to experience them first hand. And if you can make people feel things, you can make people act

For example, let’s say you were a life coach helping your customer get more work/life balance in their lives. You knew the psychographics of your customer so you knew they struggle with feelings of guilt about not spending enough time with their kids.

You could use mirror neurons to paint a picture in their minds about what their life would be like after using you as their coach (solving their problem).

Imagine leaving work at work. 

Imagine being fully present with your children. 

Imagine being able to eat a quiet meal with your family, together, enjoying each other’s presence. 

Imagine rocking your baby to sleep without worrying about the deadline your boss just set for you that day.” 

You don’t have to be over-the-top with this persuasive word, either. Check out how Amy Porterfield uses “imagine” subtly in her sales page for her course:

Screenshot of a page on Webinars That Convert

Simple and effective.

Takeaway: Use persuasive words in your copy like “imagine” to make your customers picture their lives with the solution you sell (or, picture what will happen if they don’t buy!)

Persuasive Word #7: The Word That Triggers Prestige

The Tesla Model S starts at around $72,000. 

Yet it’s the best selling luxury sedan in North America. 

Why would anybody buy a Tesla for nearly 1.5x the median national annual income when a $20,000 Toyota Rav-4 would do the trick?

Because of prestige

And you can communicate prestige by using this one persuasive word: 

Limited

Limiting inventory or accessibility to product is why: 

  • Nike can release limited edition sneakers for hundreds of dollars and sell out almost instantly
  • Apple has lineups that span several city blocks starting 24 hours before they release a new product
  • An Hermès Birkin bag sold for over $300,000 at an auction in 2016. 

This persuasive word works for high-priced products or services. 

Check out how Tony Robbins uses “limited” to trigger exclusivity and prestige for his platinum partnership product: 

Screenshot of a powerful scarcity word being used on Tony Robbins

We tested using the word “limited” on Twitter

Screenshot showing a tweet by Sumo promoting a piece of content
Screenshot showing a twitter post by Sumo promoting an article

The Tweet with the word “Limited” in it outperformed the control in number of clicks by 100%

Persuasive Word #8: The Instant Conversion Booster

If this page took longer than a few seconds to load, you wouldn’t have made it this far down the page.

In fact, you would have left almost right away.[*] 

That’s because you (and everyone around you) are used to instant gratification.

Over 80% of people will abandon a video if they have to wait for more than 30 seconds for it to load...[*]

Screenshot showing a graph of video start delays and abandonment rates

So it’s no surprise that instant gratification sells.

Which is why this next word is so persuasive: 

Instantly

When we tested the word on social media, the Tweet with the word “instantly” got 3x more clicks than the one without: 

Screenshot of a tweet by Sumo promoting a piece of content

Screenshot of a tweet by Sumo promoting a piece of content

Proving that “instant” isn’t just the type of ramen you ate in college. It’s also an incredibly persuasive word that can help you convert.

Takeaway: Don’t lie and say something happens instantly if it doesn’t (for example, you can’t get a physical product instantly like you can a digital product), but use this word to increase your conversions on your freebies, opt-ins, and digital goods.

Instantly Increase Your Sales (For Free) With Persuasive Words

Persuasive words work. 

Research proves it.

If you’re not using persuasive words you could be leaving 400% more conversions on the table

A/B test them NOW and watch your conversions soar. 

Click here for your free placement checklist!