8 Top Tips for writing successful copy
Stephen Rumbelow
Fractional CMO | Brand & Marketing Consultant | I do Proper Marketing that Works.
Make the reader your hero.
Your headline has to arouse curiosity, impart some news, and appeal to your reader’s self-interest, e.g. what needs it will fill, what advantage it will give them etc.
Focus on the problem they’re facing right now and the solution you’re selling. Then, be single-minded about choosing the problem/solution.?
Make the reader your hero and have a beginning, middle, and end.?
Think of the brief.
Go back to your brief and answer these questions:
Think about features in terms of their benefits to the reader; facts beat flannel every time, and simple can be more challenging than complex.?
Get the message in the correct order.
Think about the reader's problem, the solution and the resolution.
Then think "AIDA". The opening headline wins the reader's attention and prompts them to go further. The description and explanation that gains interest by picturing the proposition in mind. The argument or proof creates the desire for the product by showing its value and advantages. Then finally, the climax, which makes it easy for the reader to act at once
Also, try to anticipate your reader's resistance, e.g. what obstacles do you have to overcome to make them say yes?
Obsess your Headline.
“On average, five times as many people read the headline as read the body copy. So when you have written your headline, you have spent eighty cents of your dollar.” David Ogilvy.
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Get your body in top shape.
When writing your body copy, write as you speak. Make your first paragraph track from your headline, and start where the reader is, e.g. try to understand what they think as they read the copy, and remember that the reader's favourite subject is the reader.
Use your own experience to understand their emotional needs - seeing the world through your reader's eyes blossoms into empathy - the story's hero is the reader. Finally, give them the facts - empathy wins hearts, facts win minds and turns interest into desire.
Appeal to their self-interest and anxiety levels surrounding the purchase - use awards, endorsements, new/breakthrough technology, testimonials etc. Always have a clear call to action - how they can get the solution.
The second draft - put these in.
The third draft - cut these out.
Cut out jargon; otherwise, people will think you’re hiding something and come across as insecure.
Avoid cliches and make sure your subheaders are clear.
Cut the extra - in most cases, you can remove up to 25% of the text and not lose one iota of meaning.
Read your work out loud - does it sound natural and conversational?
Lay it out properly.