![]() |
|
How To Write Marketing Copy That Sells Your Freelance Design ServicesWThis tutorial will help you write powerful website copy, or copy for a mailer postcard, to help you sell your freelance design services to new clients. By the end of the tutorial you will:
The tutorial is split into four activities. Each activity focuses on an achievable writing task and reveals essential tips for writing persuasively. Practice the rules revealed in this tutorial and you’ll be on your way to writing sales-boosting publicity for yourself and your clients. Ready to start? Let’s go! Activity One Now try to sell the pen in a paragraph of writing. Initial reaction: Not sure where to start? Don’t worry, the prospect of writing sales copy can be daunting without any formal sales training. Maybe that’s why so many designers are easily dissuaded from learning how to write marketing copy, to integrate into their design service. This is good news for you, because it’s really simple when you know how. Let me walk you through the process. Pick up your pen again and take a look at it. Can you identify a feature that helps you to sell the pen? A feature is a fact about the pen, an aspect that makes it useful. For example, my pen has a fine tip. It is also ¼ inch in diameter. These are examples of product features. Try to think of another feature of your pen. When you have a feature in mind, ask yourself what benefit this feature provides you with, as a user of that pen. A benefit describes what the user gains as a result of the feature. So for example, my pen has a fine tip. That means I can sketch fine drawings and write cleanly and crisply. My pen is also ¼ inch in diameter, so it’s easy to hold and comfortable to write with. Both of these sentences are examples of benefits. They show how the user benefits from the pen’s features. Feature = what the pen has (fine tip) Now try converting your feature into a benefit. If you’re stuck, use the linking phrase …which means that… to help you (i.e. It has a fine tip, which means that I can sketch fine drawings and write cleanly and crisply). Found your benefit? Then congratulations, you’re half-way to writing your own promotional materials! Activity Two Staying with the features and benefits model, let’s do the same with something a little bigger than a pen. Let’s try your computer. Identify three features that make your computer desirable. Think about the screen, the keyboard, the mouse, the general look, the hard-drive, the programmes, the price, the service package. Try to remember why you bought it. What features attracted you to this computer above all the others? Now think about the benefits of those features. What do the features mean for you? What do they allow you to do? Write your three benefits next to their respective features. If it helps, use …which means that… to link the features and benefits together. Here are the three features and benefits for my lap-top PC.
I hope you’re starting to get the idea now… that copywriting is all about identifying attractive features, and then saying how the reader benefits from those features. If you can do this, it really doesn’t matter if you’re a good writer or not; you’ve mastered the art of selling. (Copywriting is simply the art of ‘selling in writing’, or ‘salesmanship in print’.) But we’re not done yet. There are two more activities to go before you’re ready to write your own publicity material! Activity Three Take a closer look at your three computer benefit statements. For each one, ask yourself: is this the furthest I can go with that particular benefit? Can I continue, turn it into an even bigger, more general benefit statement? For example, my laser-guided mouse eliminates infuriating icon flickers and time-consuming cleaning, so the mouse is more pleasurable to use. But what does that mean? Is there a benefit to this benefit? I suppose you could say that a more pleasurable-to-use mouse means that my copywriting assignments run smoother. And if my copywriting assignments run smoother I work quicker. And if I work quicker I earn more money. So I can continue with this ‘pleasurable to use’ benefit until I reach an even more persuasive benefit: ‘I can make more money.’ Try doing the same thing with your three computer examples. Carry on using …which means that… until you have found your most attractive benefit, as I have done below. It has a laser-guided mouse The computer weighs less than 10 lbs It has 3 hours of battery life A good copywriter not only isolates key features and translates them into benefits, a good copywriter should also question whether those benefits can be taken further. Another lesson in the art of selling. This advert for Ikea proves just how far you can go with a benefit. Buying an affordable kitchen doesn’t just mean you save money, it means you can afford to work less, which means you can spend more time playing with your children, as demonstrated in the visual.
To finalize Activity 3, let’s try putting your benefits into a meaningful paragraph of copy. Take your favourite computer feature/benefit example, and try to present it in a few sentences that run together, like this: The new Dell Inspiron 1300 includes a laser-guided mouse. Now you can avoid infuriating icon flickers and time-consuming mouse cleaning. Your mouse will be more pleasurable to use, your written assignments will run smoother, and you’ll work quicker too—so you can start earning more money! Hint: Try to write the paragraph the way you would
say it aloud. Pretend you are writing to a single person—use the
word ‘you’. Activity Four You’re going to write a paragraph of copy for your own business, to use on a mailer postcard or on your website. First of all, draw up a list of features and benefits for your business services. This will be a little harder than the features and benefits you identified for your computer—now you have to think about the sort of services you offer (these are your features), and then think about what it all means for your client (these are your benefits). Here’s an example to help you:
Remember to evaluate each of your benefits as you did in Activity 2. Can you take any of them further? For example, the benefits I have identified in my list above aren’t completely final. I can continue with them like this:
Go through all your benefits and try to exploit each one. Then re-work your features and benefits into a section of copy, like this: Call on XYZ Design Services, and you will… Did you notice the three tricks I used in the copy above?
Now you can sell your freelance services by using the ideas in this tutorial to write powerful website copy, or copy for mailer postcards! ABOUT THE AUTHOR
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Click through to a specific
category for info on marketing, internet marketing, search engine optimization and more
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
![]() Home | About | Press | Contact Us | Testimonials | Advertising | Direct Marketing | Internet Marketing Market Research | Marketing Strategy | Public Relations | Search Engine Optimization Tradeshows | Service Providers | Who's Who? in Marketing | Marketing Tools | Marketing Job Search Marketing Forum | Marketing Glossary | Free Marketing Articles | Article Submission | SAFELINK Program | Careers | Terms | Privacy | Marketing Blog | Marketing Blog Directory | Link Exchange | Sitemap |
||||||||||||||||||||||
© 2009 - 2011 MarketingScoop.com | Internet marketing expert | 3 Anderson Lane | Robbinsville NJ |