Copywriting TipsA few copywriting tips to keep your customers reading further and ultimately making a buy decision.
|
 |
Visited: 840 |
|
|
| 5.0/5.0 (3 votes total) |
|
|
|
|
by Dan Ogdon March 23, 2007
|
| Dan Ogdon |
| Dan Ogdon is the Director of Marketing for Swiftpage. Swiftpage is a Denver based software company that offers the only integrated email marketing solution. |
| Dan Ogdon
has written 1 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Dan Ogdon... |
As your customers continue to have more and more access to
content due to the 2006 surge of consumer generated content, how do you keep
them interested in what you have to say?
Here are a few copywriting tips to keep your customers reading further
and ultimately making a buy decision.
Write Strong Headlines – Write headlines for your main
topics as if you were submitting them for approval to make the front page of
the New York Times. You have less than 3
seconds to pique your readers interest after they have opened your email.
Practice – Send a test email of a template to yourself. Open it in your email application (Outlook)
and only look at it for 3 seconds. Then
look away or minimize your application.
What do you remember? Are you
excited to read on? Do you know what to
click? Do you know what the main points
are? Remember much of your content may
be below the fold. In your 3 second
snapshot, before scrollin, were you able to understand that a buy decision
could be made?
Do the Research – OK, you’ve convinced me to read on and in
fact I’m looking forward to learning what you have to say, but if the body copy
is fluffy and sales pitchy I’m pitchin’ the email. If it provides valuable, unique, original,
relevant content I’m not only going to read on and come closer to a buy
decision, I’m going to take some of the content, post it to my blog, forward
your email to my colleagues and reference it in a whitepaper I’m writing giving
you credit and exposure for providing excellent insight.
Practice – Commit to putting a graph, a chart, a matrix, a
quote, something extra in your next email that will add robustness to your
content and prove to your readers that you are willing to go the extra
mile. It’s a time commitment, but it
pays off in reader loyalty, your database will grow quicker as your thoughts
are spread by your readers and it will help you establish credibility with new
readers.
Ask for Help – A good habit to get into once you have salved
over putting together excellent email copy is to pass it off to someone else to
have a look over. Give them the complete
product, built in your template with images and all. Don’t just give to anyone either, give to
your design/advertising team to look over headlines and creative copy and give
to someone that understands moving people to buy decisions to see if your email
does just that.
More Practice – Ask to be an editor for a friends email
outside of your organization. Do the 3
second snapshot and make recommendations based on your experience. Critiquing an email that is not your own will
help you understand what works and what doesn’t and will ultimately lead you to
becoming a better copywriter. |