Guidance from the great David Ogilvy:
The better you write the faster you’ll be promoted. People who write well, think well.
Good writing is not a natural gift. You have to learn to write well; and practise, practise, practise. Start with these eight points:
- Write like you are in front of your readers, talking to them. Be natural.
- Keep it simple.
- Don't jump around all over the place. Keep the flow going - and keep it logical.
- Use short words, short sentences and short paragraphs.
- Avoid jargon.
- Check your quotations.
- Tell a story. People listen to stories.
- Don’t send an important email/letter on the day you write it. Read it aloud the next morning - and then edit it.
If it is very important, get a colleague to improve it.
And before you send it make sure it is crystal clear what you want the recipient to do.
- Finally if you want ACTION, don't write. Pick up the telephone.
“If you’re trying to persuade people to do something, or buy something, it seems to me you should use their language, the language they use every day, the language in which they think. We try to write in the vernacular.”
David Ogilvy
Guidance from the great Drayton Bird.
Drayton's simple, 7 step plan for writing great copy:
- Lead with your biggest benefit.
- Expand on the other benefits.
- Add specifics that prove why points 1 and 2 are believable.
- Support with testimonials.
- Tell them why they must act now.
- Your summary.
- Ask for action.
Learn how to write great headlines.
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And when you write, use as many of these 7 emotions as you can:
- Anger
- Fear
- Flattery
- Greed
- Guilt
- Salvation
- Exclusivity
This structure has been tested thousands of times, is used by copywriters everywhere - and it works. See Drayton's website for more.
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Some areas of best practice
Use www.CopyBlogger.com as a great reference guide to all areas of copywriting.
- An example of great selling copy
- Article writing
- Blog - writing
- Content marketing
- Contract - writing
- Creative Brief - writing
- CV covering letter
- Document writing skills
- Finding a copywriter
- Free trial to boost response
- Guarantees – exploiting them
- Have you written a great headline?
- Headline writing
- Long copy or short copy?
- Long sentences or short?
- Marketing plan - writing
- Newsletter - writing
- Online copywriting
- Pay-per-click ads
- Press releases
- Proofreading
- Radio ad - writing
- Risk – removing feelings of risk
- Some of the ‘rules’ of writing
- Slogans/straplines
- Testimonials
- Using ‘you’ in your copy
- Words and phrases that will keep them reading