![]() |
Copywriting Information |
|
|
Three Tips For Magnetizing Your Copy
The difference between good copy and great copy is the number of actions it generates. The more actions the copy drives, the greater the copy is. My friend John Reese, a master at simplifying what we often tend to unnecessarily complicate, says it best. He says the only metric you should ever really count on is this: "Yes" or "No." That's it. Now, what makes great copy nudge people into action requires a variety of different things -- things I often find missing with most of the copy I critique. So let me share with you three powerful elements that can help you turn your not-so-good copy into good copy, and your good copy into outstanding copy. 1. Give Reasons Why. Great copy proposes a series of benefits that the prospect will enjoy once they respond. But this is the area most people struggle with. What makes a good benefit? Heck, what makes a benefit in the first place? A feature is what the product has. An advantage is what that features does. But a benefit is what that advantage means to the reader specifically. It's the specific motive to which that feature caters. In other words, a benefit is the reason why the feature exists and why it's important to the reader. Look at it this way: a benefit is what a person intimately gains from a specific feature -- not what YOU think the customer will gain from it. Granted, trying to figure this out can be a little challenging. So here's a tip: whenever you describe a feature (or what you may think may be a benefit), say this: "What this means to you is this," followed by a more personal benefit your reader gets from the feature. Keep asking until there are no further reasons to give. Here's an example (and keep in mind that I'm repeating myself, here, for the sake of illustration only): "This stereo has a 14-band equalizer. What this means to you is, you can adjust the frequencies of the sound to your liking. What this means to you is, you can add depth and dimension to your music. What this means to you is, you can make your music sound as rich and lively as if you were at the concert listening to your favorite band. What this means to you is..." Tell readers why they must read, why the product is important and why they must buy (and buy now). The more reasons you give, and the more specific and personal those reasons are, the more compelling your copy will be. 2. Tell a Good Story. Good copy makes a good case. But great copy tells a good story. Keep this in mind: a great copywriter is also a great salesperson. However, all great copywriters AND all great salespeople also have one thing in common... ... They are also great storytellers. I just returned from Ken McCarthy's System Seminar in San Francisco. And one of the surprise speakers was Gary Halbert. Now Gary, on a topic that at the time seemed totally unrelated to copy, sales or Internet marketing, began to talk about this newfangled anti-wrinkle cream he came across. He went on to talk about how the product came about, how it was made and even how the product worked. While all these things seemed irrelevant, he did make a great point: he told a great story that captivated the audience. He translated features into benefits, such as the fact that the cream contained special hydroxies formed during the crystallization process. The analogy was that these hydroxies were like millions of microscopic prisms that reflect light. He went on to describe that it was those "prisms" that helped to make your wrinkles invisible. It was a terrific story -- and while some people missed it, Gary indirectly provided the greatest lesson of the entire seminar. Because in his story, Gary provided several powerful lessons. A key component of telling great stories is to relate them to the reader. Often, this can accomplished with the help of analogies, examples, metaphors and case studies. Why? Because the mind thinks in relative terms. Here's an example (of both stories and analogies). When people object to long copy, I often argue that long copy is like a good Stephen King novel. If you were a diehard Stephen Kind fanatic, and if his latest book was, say, over 600 pages, would you stop reading it because it was too long? No. In fact, most Stephen King lovers I know often read his books in one sitting. They tell me they simply can't seem to put the book down. Dan Kennedy calls this "message-to-market match." Like a Stephen King fanatic, when your copy is targeted and your audience is interested in your offer, they will read it. All of it. No matter how long it may seem to you. 3. Think For The Reader. Sales are largely based on faith. Faith in the company, faith in the product and faith in the delivery of the promised benefits. And sales trainers often tell you that, like a good fiction story, you must temporarily suspend all disbelief. And belief requires the suspension of critical thinking. It is important to understand that people first buy on emotion and then justify their decisions with logic. Even the most analytical types buy on emotion, whether they express (or are aware) of their emotions or not. Conversely, critical thinking causes the suspension of feelings. If your reader starts to think too much, then fundamental fears, doubts and concerns take over, eventually leading to the greatest killer of sales: procrastination. Why? Because if we focus on logic first, we tend to think about other needs, concerns and preoccupations at that time. And more important, we may think about other, more important things we can do with our money. YOU must do the thinking for your prospect. Don't stop short of describing the benefits, offering reasons why and telling stories simply because you're afraid of insulting your audience's intelligence. You're not. Clients often say, "My clients are not idiots," "the benefits are obvious," "they can think for themselves" or "they can figure it out on their own." Technically, that's true. But leaving the copy to the reader's own devices will also open up a can of worms, since they will also think of all the other things that may be irrelevant, untrue or unnecessary, which will negate the sale. And unlike a face-to-face sales presentation, you're not there to answer any questions or objections. So your copy must do that for them. In fact, my friend and copywriter David Garfinkel says it best: "You must do the thinking for your reader and tell them why your offer is so valuable. Of course, they may 'get it' in the abstract. But going from the abstract to the reader's specific situation requires thinking on their part. A prospect considering your offer wouldn't dare do that thinking. You have to do it for them." So here's a tip: use the "so-what" acid test. If at any point in your copy your reader asks "so what," then that part needs to be more personal. It needs to be more specific to the reader. And it needs to give more reasons why. Otherwise, delete it because it's irrelevant. If you don't, your copy will not speak to your reader. It will make your long copy seem long. And above all, it simply will not drive your reader to act. About the Author Michel Fortin is a direct response copywriter, author, speaker and consultant. His specialty are long copy sales letters and websites. Watch him rewrite copy on video each month, and get tips and tested conversion strategies proven to boost response in his membership site at http://TheCopyDoctor.com/ today.
MORE RESOURCES: Why copywriting is the new superpower in 2026 Search Engine Land The Perennial Predicament of the Artist with an Office Job The New Yorker Doom Spiral: Is AI Creating a Copywriting Feedback Loop? Little Black Book | LBBOnline Best AI Copywriting Tools for Marketers & Creators Analytics Insight Help! It’s the First Trump Presidency and This Poet’s Life Is Spiraling. The New York Times Despite Moments of Wit and Ingenuity, ‘The Copywriter’ Is a Tough Read Highbrow Magazine The Copywriter Book Marks Kicker Vet Launches 12V Digital Marketing Agency CEoutlook.com Copywriting Lessons from Poets, Playwrights and Novelists Little Black Book | LBBOnline Google Ads copywriting with AI: Getting the prompt right Search Engine Land SEO copywriting in 2025: 5 pillars for ranking and relevance Search Engine Land Why 2026 Is the Golden Year for Copywriters vocal.media World Creative Rankings 2026: Serviceplan’s Javier Granados named most-awarded copywriter - The Drum Meet Gabrielle Eloy | Copywriter & Creative Strategist shoutout atlanta How AI Copywriting Is Changing Marketing: From Bots to Brilliant Ads Eye On Annapolis Tristin Vaccaro, Mission 500 and Vaccaro Copywriting: Best Advice Security Sales & Integration Will AI make copywriters extinct? dentsu.co.jp Meet Eva Lopez | Copywriter SHOUTOUT LA 7 Best AI Copywriting Tools To Boost Your Sales Undetectable AI Meet Yula Ryoo | Copywriter shoutout atlanta ‘Lit’ Lessons for Copywriting Little Black Book | LBBOnline The copywriter’s new brief EdexLive QA/ Copywriter - South Africa - Johannesburg Bizcommunity How I Taught Myself Copywriting and Created a $974,000 Business Business Insider How Copywriter Ali Alshehri Sharpens His Creative Capacities Little Black Book | LBBOnline Will copywriters now write for TV and films too? Exchange4Media In Her Own Words: Copywriter Caroline Duggan honors Shakespeare’s art The Business Journals Creative Minds: The copywriter who turned a cookware brief into a tribute to street chefs Campaign Asia It’s not your imagination. Advertising is getting worse – and it might be deliberate The Independent AdSchool Copywriting returns with revamped course led by ATime&Place's Charles Baylis and Anthologie's Josh Edge Campaign Brief Is Copywriting Really a Skill?. “You’re not really a writer then; you… | by Michael Stover DataDrivenInvestor What Piyush Pandey meant to an advertising newbie manifest-media.in In Her Own Words: Copywriter Caroline Duggan honors Shakespeare’s art The Business Journals Hidden Gems: Meet Aaron Whipple of Copywriter Aaron Voyage Jacksonville Magazine Race to the (Liquid) Death: Copywriter Challenges Canned-Water VP to an Ultramarathon - Muse by Clio 12 Best Copywriting Books for Aspiring Marketers [2026] Simplilearn.com How to Start a Freelance Career Without Using Upwork and Fiverr Business Insider “There’s No Such Thing as a Boring Brief, Just a Lazy Copywriter” Little Black Book | LBBOnline Meet Nicole Brena | Personal Wellness Copywriter shoutout atlanta How I Made $175K in a Year From Home As a Freelancer on Fiverr Business Insider Margate copywriting business scoops awards The Isle of Thanet News Soon To Be Automated Copywriter Commits To Existential Crisis And Adds ‘Proficient In ChatGPT’ On Resume The Betoota Advocate Copywriting Services Market to reach $42.22 Billion by 2030, with a Projected CAGR of 7.6%, says Coherent Market Insights Yahoo Finance 12 Copywriting Tools for Effective Content Creation in 2026 Simplilearn.com Author Liani Kotcher on Copywriting and Her Latest Novel, Ski Weekend Montecito Journal How I Make up to $9,000 a Month As a Freelance Copywriter Business Insider Employee rejected for a Copywriter role, but the rejection email went viral and filled his heart The Economic Times Can (or will) AI Replace Copywriters? Browser Media The lost art of creative copywriting in advertising The Guardian I'm a freelance editor who's embraced working with AI content. Here's how I do it and what I charge. Business Insider I'm a single mom who quit social work to pursue copywriting. My business brought in 6 figures last year. Business Insider Meet Julia Angel | Copywriter shoutout miami How to Make 6 Figures a Month on Fiverr As a Freelance Copywriter Business Insider Can AI replace copywriters? The future of AI in content writing Techpoint Africa |
RELATED ARTICLES
How To Ethically Use A Swipe File For Your Ad Copy Did you ever wish you could afford to hire one of those professional copy writers who charge $5000 or more to write a simple sales letter? Or worse, have you laid down your hard-earned cash for a self-proclaimed "professional" writer, and gotten back something your 3rd grader could have written?If you spend countless hours staring at a blank page trying to come up with compelling ad copy for that "killer" sales letter (you know, the one that's going to make you rich beyond your wildest dreams?).. Headlines That Pull, Persuade and Propel! When writing direct response copy, there are a few things that can maximize the responsiveness of your message. The first and most important element that can turn any website, salesletter or ad into an action-generating mechanism is the headline. Grammatical Mistakes DONT Sell When you receive a sales letter with typos or grammar mistakes in it, do you take it seriously? Probably not. As soon as I see a few eighth-grade English blunders in any marketing effort, I quickly decide the author's product or service is not deserving of my time. Five Sections of Your Copy Guaranteed To Get Read Only about 20% of your copy is going to get read. The rest will simply be scanned. Engage Your Customer - Write About Benefits Think quick. In 10 seconds, can you list the 5 key benefits you offer your customers?I bet you said "Yes". Discover Your Creativity You have a choice. Do you want to be constructive and positive in a unique way? Or do you want to be destructive and negative in a unique way? History has proven the futility of the latter goal. Copywriting 101: Exclamation Point, Friend or Foe? My name is Ann and I'm a grammar geek. There, it's out and I'm relieved. More Insider Secrets to Great Copywriting - Judging Your Target Market This week we're going to reinforce the training that Recruits of my Red Hot Copywriting Bootcamp are drilled on. In case you didn't read my last article we covered what you MUST do before you write a single word of copy. No-Holds-Barred Conversation with Dan Lok - Part 1 Question: If you were starting out and had no references or a substantial resume, how would you go about finding paying customers for your services?To answer your question, I'll assume you're a junior copywriter or marketing consultant.When I first started out and didn't know a soul, I'd open the yellow pages and cold-call the business owners. Help, Help, Help, Sell Here's a fundamental difference between copywriting offline and copywriting for the web.. Four Simple Steps to Improve Your Sales Copy You know what it's like, you're reading the sales material about a product you're considering buying, but, as you read, all these questions seem to pop into your mind, but there's no-one there to answer them, so you shelve your plans to purchase.If it happens to you, you can guarantee it also happens to your customers when they read your sales copy. Sticky Homepage Copy in 30 Seconds Yes indeed, that's all you've got, 30 seconds to make your website visitors decide to stick around.. Working on the Internet: Role of Proofreading and Copy editing OnLine When one is in a creative state, rarely can one also be in a detail state. Thus, mistakes in correct grammar, spelling and continuity of all details, may happen. Are You Asking the Right Questions in Your Copy? It's a common approach to writing copy. You begin by asking questions. Write Hard-Hitting Headlines With Magic Words That Sell Writing a killer headline for your copy is simple! You just need to follow simple dos and donts that make or break a headline respectively. If you think you have tried them all, check this out. 3 Steps To Better Sales Copywriting Whether you're wet-behind-the-ears or a seasoned copywriter, your craft will benefit by remembering one thing:You're nothing more than a salesperson.There's an old saying in the "business" that, "a copywriter is a salesperson sitting in front of a typewriter. 12 Copywriting Tips to Make Your Advertising More Profitable Year after year people make the same mistakes in direct-response copy and advertising. You can avoid the most common and costly blunders by following these profit-enhancing tips. What A Ghostwriter Needs To Do To Earn Top Dollar The huge demand for writers online is really for ghostwriters. A vast majority of the available online writing jobs for an online writer are for ghost writing projects. How to Start and Sustain a Career as a Freelance Writer Have you wondered how you can make a career writing books or articles for various publications? Or are you seeking a viable second income opportunity but do not know where to start? Well, freelance writing may be the right career for you and it can open a world of lucrative opportunities for you.You do not need to have special qualifications to be a freelance writer and make money. Getting Over Copy Shock A few weeks ago I wrote some copy for a business owner "Marvin." My copy was hard-hitting but honest and down-to-earth. |
| home | site map |
| © 2006 |