|
|
 |
Today's Feature Article:unable to access file snippet_path:/home/virtual/site2/fst/var/www/html/articles/search_engine_tips/snippet.txt |
Welcome
This site is
about Marketing and Advertising, but most importantly it's about ad
copy writing and the marketing strategies that come with it.
We will
discuss the power of ad copy writing and how to create persuasive and
effective ad copy. The bottom line is that it is all about producing
ad copy write that SELLS!
This web site could hold the important keys that will give you a
substantial increase in your online and offline sales. We start off
with an open mind. We will be completely honest with ourselves
and will accept the fact that perhaps our ad copy content and
style of our advertising material can be improved and may not be as
good as they could be. We will understand that no matter how
good we are at producing our ad copy write that there will always be
room for creating ad copy that will increase our sales.
unable to access file snippet_path:/home/virtual/site2/fst/var/www/html/articles/search_engine_tips/snippet.txt
|
unable to access file snippet_path:/home/virtual/site2/fst/var/www/html/articles/search_engine_tips/snippet.txt
|
unable to access file snippet_path:/home/virtual/site2/fst/var/www/html/articles/search_engine_tips/snippet.txt
|
unable to access file snippet_path:/home/virtual/site2/fst/var/www/html/articles/search_engine_tips/snippet.txt
|

Some
Tips
from the Copy Write Wizard
for
Ad Copy Write Success:
When selling through advertising,
you're faced with two options, both of which you will probably use
frequently. Those options are display and classified advertising.
We won't deal here with radio and television copy writing because it
is not something many of you will be using until you have developed a
great deal of mail order experience. Once you're dealing with that
sort of capital investment, you'll probably have an intimate
understanding of the fact that expert help is essential to the
successful launch of any campaign, and frankly, electronic media are
not our field of experience.
Classified ad copy writing is a very exacting craft, not an art in the
way that display advertising is. It involves following a few simple
guidelines and requires little skill. That's why daily newspapers hire
school and college students to take orders - and write - for their
classified section over the telephone.
The first point worth noting is that classified ads are sold by the
word or by the line. This has a bearing on how you write your ads,
because if the ad is sold by the word, you're not going to write an ad
that has a bunch of "a's" and "the's" in it. But at the same time, if
it's sold by the line, it will be worth your while to include these
words in the ad, as they'll appeal to the better educated segment of
the market.
So an ad in at so much a line might read:
"The hottest thing in years. This is a household wonder you'll cherish
for years."
The same ad at so much a word will read:
"Hottest recent development. Cherish this household innovation for
generations."
Both are about the same length. The first reads nicely in proper
English and the second used big, powerful words to make up for awkward
structure.
When you buy by the word, which will be the case in most markets, use
the biggest, most action-packed words you can think of. And while
we're on the subject of word count, the way you mark your address in a
classified is also important.
If you live on Pleasant Street, mark your address as 2 Pleasant,
unless in that subdivision, there also happens to be a Pleasant
Circle, a Pleasant Avenue and so forth, in which case Pleasantstreet
will have to do. You can usually get away with this ploy, since these
ridiculous two name streets are there to sell houses, not to please
the Post Office. If you live in Apartment 14, you can usually get away
with 14-2 Pleasantstreet, which saves you another word. Never leave
out the zip code, even a nine-digit zip code counts as one word and in
many publications doesn't count as a word at all.
The initials of your name or company will also do unless you're trying
to project an image, and this can save you from one to three words.
Even your last name will be all right.
In most magazines and a few newspapers, your first word or line of
type will be set in darker bold letters. Choose that first word or two
very carefully. If you really want good results, do exactly the
opposite of what most other advertisers are doing, or be different.
If you've got an income opportunity and CASH, MONEYMAKING or INCOME
are the usual first two words, be a bit creative, perhaps with BROKE
(no more! Try selling widgets! or DREADFUL) (budget, a thing of the
past.)
The first word or line gets your reader interested, and no matter how
large the circulation of the publication, you'll suffer terribly if
you're not attracting the reader as well as the other advertisers.
Those opening words are crucial. Like the man said, you don't get a
second chance to make a good impression.
Once you've made the hook, hold the reader by telling him exactly what
you're offering. If it's an ad for more information, let him know what
kind of information and where it leads. Then drop the cost on him, if
any and your name and address. If it's a product, in words that say a
lot. Being short, sharp and to-the-point is what sells from any ad.
One minor point or style to remember, if you're offering a bonus,
leave it to the very last. "Bonus with..." won't work. A bonus or free
gift is offered for one reason only: to hook someone who has not quite
been sold by the rest of the ad. The offer of a bonus won't work UNTIL
they know what it comes with.
Writing display ad copy is much more involved and should really not be
undertaken by even the brightest English graduate without some expert
help. As we stated earlier, ad copy writing is one of the
highest-paying of the creative professions, mainly because it is so
difficult to do.
If you must do it yourself, here's a few things you can do to make the
task a bit more successful.
Making use of the techniques we mentioned earlier, determine which
benefit your client is like to be most interested in.
Target the emotion that motivates the need for that benefit in most
people. If you can do that, you'll hook the right person for the
product. If you're selling runless pantyhose for example, you know the
anti-run characteristic motivates the buyer, and the reason why women
want to buy anti-run hose is to look better longer.
Hey, there's the lead for your copy! In big letters, you're going to
flag your ad with LOOK BETTER LONGER! You might want to bracket it top
or bottom by writing in smaller letters:
"Da-don't-run-run hose will help you "LOOK BETTER LONGER" in the Da-don't-run-run
hose." If the client is interested in runless hose, you've got her. If
not, forget it. Anything else you could use to get a client who
doesn't wear pantyhose will cost your clients who do use them, and
that's a waste.
Once you've got the initial benefit out in the open, either explain it
or be very sneaky about adding another. So say:
"These pantyhose will give you the confidence in your appearance you
won't get with other pantyhose..." or
"LONGER... and without blowing your budget. These will give you the
confidence..."
but the best way to sneak in additional benefits without looking pushy
is to say:
"LONGER! Without blowing your budget, these pantyhose will give you
the..." using the new benefit as a prefix.
And, oh, it's so much more complex than that. It's obviously a
development in synthetic fibers that allows those hose to be superior,
so that must be included too, because the customer wants to know why
they're so good.
Where do you mention it though? It might be just as effective to get
to it right after the heading, in this manner:
"LOOK BETTER LONGER! Thanks to a new development in synthetic fibers,
Da-don't-run-run panty hose will give you the confidence in your
appearance you won't get with other pantyhose."
Then the money aspect. And how do you do that? Do you make the
sentence longer or start a new sentence? YOU MUST WEIGH EVERY WORD
WITH A SURGEON'S CARE! And what about a coupon at the bottom?
Do you use a small order form or use the address of the company? How
many words do you need, and if you need a lot of words, can you afford
the space it will take to print them?
Get a word count, and fix it within fairly narrow limits or you'll
bore the reader or leave no room for graphics or blank space, which
you must have to some degree for proper esthetic effect.
Speaking of graphics, what will you have to use? Will you have to make
your own? (Clip art used by most dealers is horribly tacky.) And
heaven forbid, you design an ad based on another successful campaign
by another firm with similar products... and it works well that it
sends their sales rising! It could happen.
There are many firms, probably even in small cities, that specialize
in print media advertising, and many do excellent jobs.
You in Canada are fortunate, especially if you live in Toronto,
Vancouver, Montreal or Calgary, since talent runs cheap in Canadian
advertising firms and you can get excellent work, and we're sorry to
say this but it will generally be more creative than American agencies
of similar size.
The fact remains, though, that you know your product better than the
agency, and you probably know how you want to sell it.
You might have ideas for wording, graphical layout, any number of
things. If you truly want to make your campaign, and especially at
that crucial first campaign, as profitable as possible, use the
services of a graphics firm that composes print advertising at the
very least, and ad agency at the best.
By the way, we've discovered a lot of graphics houses have some
frustrated ad copy writers who can give you expert direction at low
cost if you'll only ask.
Be ready to take in all your ideas at the time you get your ad done.
Every bit of work you do yourself should come off the bill you'll be
paying for the job, since it cuts the time the agency or graphics
house has to take to prepare the ad.
In
Summary:
Read as much as you can about
Copywriting, Marketing, Advertising, and Selling.
And remember this. Despite what some may say about writing for the
Web, most of the winning Copywriting techniques being successfully
applied in the print media and direct response, are just as effective
on the Web. There are some important differences in presentation. But
the sales psychology is the same.
Your website may be all your
visitors know of your company and your products. Therefore, your ad
copy, the text and pictures on your website, must be effective.
Websites have to be built to rank well in search
engines, and to rank well for the keywords or phrases that your
potential customers will use to find what you have to offer. That's
where search engine friendly web design comes in.
Meta tags: "Meta tags" are
the titles and descriptions you see in search engine listings.
Book mark this page
and return frequently to read more tips as we bring them to you.
Then put them into practice.
unable to access file snippet_path:/home/virtual/site2/fst/var/www/html/articles/search_engine_tips/snippet.txt
|
unable to access file snippet_path:/home/virtual/site2/fst/var/www/html/articles/search_engine_tips/snippet.txt
|
unable to access file snippet_path:/home/virtual/site2/fst/var/www/html/articles/search_engine_tips/snippet.txt
|
unable to access file snippet_path:/home/virtual/site2/fst/var/www/html/articles/search_engine_tips/snippet.txt
|