The Secret to Writing Memorable Sales Copy by Michele
Pariza Wacek
Want to know the secret to creating MEMORABLE promotional copy? Sales
copy that actually stays with your customers long after they've finished
reading it?
Then master the art of using words to create pictures
in your customers' heads.
If you can describe your products or
services in such a way that it forms images in your customers' heads,
well, then you've just created something that will last long after the
marketing is over.
Why else do novels stay with us for so long?
Those "pictures" we see draw us into the world of the novel, and those
pictures stay with us long after we've closed the book. If you can create
that kind of staying power with your marketing materials, think about how
much ahead of your competition you'll be.
So, how do you get
started? Below are three tips. (Note how all three tips have the word
"specific" in common. Be specific whenever you can. We don't think in
generalities, we think in details. The more specific you are, the stronger
the pictures.)
1. Use specific nouns. Quick -- what springs to mind
when I say the word "bird"? Now erase that image. What pops into your head
when I say "cardinal"?
When I said bird, you could have pictured
any number of bird species or maybe even some sort of generic bird
(something brown with wings and feathers). When I said cardinal, I bet you
saw a bright red bird with that distinctive triangle head.
See the
difference? Cardinal is specific and it brings a specific picture to mind.
Bird is generic, and it brings a generic picture to mind.
Whenever
possible, use the most specific noun you can. (However, if the most
specific noun is something most people wouldn't know, say some rare exotic
insect only found in the Amazon jungle, then make sure you describe it as
well.)
2. Use specific verbs. Verbs breathe life into your copy.
They're the difference between words lying flat and comatose on the page
or jumping up and dancing a jig.
Verbs bring movement to your copy.
They tell your readers if someone is walking, jogging, sauntering,
skipping or crawling. Or maybe that someone is exhausted and has decided
to lie down for a bit.
Now, when I say verbs, what I'm NOT talking
about are "to be" verbs -- am, is, are, was, were, etc. Those verbs don't
paint a picture. Not like hug, skate, sail, run, fall, spin, flip, etc.
See the difference?
While "to be" verbs are necessary, the idea is
to use them as little as possible. In fact, I have a fiction-writing
friend who has a "was/were" rule. Only three "wases/weres" per page.
Yep, you heard me right. Per page.
Yes, it can be done. I
didn't think I could do it either in my novels. And let me tell you, when
you start pruning those "wases/weres" out of your prose, it's amazing how
strong your writing becomes.
3. Describe specific situations.
Compare:
"Our bookkeeping service is the best in the area. We can
take care of all your bookkeeping needs, from invoices to paying bills to
reconciling your bank statements."
To this:
"Do your
invoices go out late because you can't stand the idea of sitting down to
do them? Does your cash flow suffer droughts each month because no checks
arrive in the mail (because your invoices went out late)? How much hair
have you pulled out over the years because of accounting mistakes? Never
fear, those days are over when you hire us to do your
bookkeeping."
The first example is generic (take care of
bookkeeping needs). The second example shows you HOW the business does it.
(In fiction we call it "show, don't tell." Good advice, even for
copywriters.) You can actually "feel" those business problems -- late
invoices, cash flow droughts, loss of hair. It's the difference between
something cold and impersonal that really has nothing to do with you and
something that wakes you up with a spark of recognition ("Hey, that's me.
I need that.")
Creativity Exercises -- See what others are
doing
Pick a piece of copy. Something with meat -- at least 300
words or so. No, it doesn't have to be something you wrote either. In
fact, this exercise might be easier if it isn't yours.
Now analyze
it. Look at the nouns. Are they specific? Or are they a bit too generic?
What about the verbs? Could they be stronger? And does it describe a
specific situation, something that you can actually feel and
touch?
Try this with a variety of writings -- novels, nonfiction
books, newspaper articles, Web sites, sales letters, etc. Look at both
"good" and "bad" examples. (Although good and bad are somewhat subjective,
follow your gut.) See what trends you discover.
By analyzing what
others are doing, you're better able to see the strengths and weaknesses
in your own writing.
About the Author
Michele Pariza Wacek owns Creative Concepts and Copywriting, a writing,
marketing and creativity agency. She offers two free e-newsletters that
help subscribers combine their creativity with hard-hitting marketing and
copywriting principles to become more successful at attracting new
clients, selling products and services and boosting business. She can be
reached at http://www.writingusa.com
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