What other type of copywriting is there?
Copy exists for one reason only – to sell. Whether it appears in a brochure, email, website, case study, white paper or newsletter, its primary function is to get the reader to take an action:
- To buy
- Get in touch
- Fill out a survey
- Complete an order form
- Sign up to your newsletter/offer
If you are in a face-to-face sales situation, you have the opportunity to persuade, cajole, counter objections and physically show your potential customer your product.
When writing copy, you don’t have any of those advantages, so your words have to do all the hard work for you.
4 things to remember about your sales copy
There are 4 things you should always bear in mind when thinking about your sales copy.
Actually there are loads of things, but these 4 will help you keep your feet on the ground and your focus on your reader.
1. Your readers really do WANT to buy from you
Let’s face it, today’s searching and shopping habits are rather like the prehistoric hunter/gatherer role.
Although today, we’re more focused on finding goods and services than tonight’s dinner. Our age of consumerism has shifted our buying behaviour towards making more discretionary purchases as opposed to necessity buys.
Our spare income today is spent on holidays, cars, designer clothes and other luxury items. So when a reader lands on a website or picks up a brochure, they’re already in the mind-set to buy. Your copy just has to convince them that yours is the product they want.
2. You can’t force a sale
As a copywriter, I hate to have to admit to this, but you can’t force someone to buy something through words.
You can make the product look mighty attractive and sought after, in the hope that it will be enough to clinch the sale. But, if your reader doesn’t want to buy it, your words are unlikely to change their mind.
But all is not lost. The art of copywriting is to build on the existing want or need within the reader. If they’re interested in your product, well written, benefits laden copy, will nudge them into buying it.
3. Your copy doesn’t have to brilliant
You have no idea how hard it was to write that.
But that doesn’t mean any old thing will do. You don’t need clever concepts to sell your products, but you do need copy that shows your product will solve the problems your readers are experiencing or make their lives better.
Writing copy for products that people already want or need, will lead to success.
4. Remove barriers
People are natural consumers, which is why, if you are selling a product they already have a need for, you are more likely to be successful.
But people are naturally suspicious, so you’re going to have to create copy that overcomes their buying objections even before they’ve made them.
Think about:
- What would prevent them from buying?
- Have you sold the benefits?
- Have you given testimonials?
Over to you
Copywriting that doesn’t sell is about as much use as a chocolate teapot. Every piece of copy you write must exist for a purpose.
What steps do you take to make sure your copy works? Have you come up with any innovative techniques?
Leave a comment below and let’s see how many different ways we can come up with to make sure your copy sells.
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