How to be a Great Copywriter

By Michael Willard

Copy is king.

This is the case even in a visual world, where the public grazes through thousands of ads each day, where messages flicker across the TV screen and dangle from or are plastered on every conceivable surface.

In my view, nothing moves the consumer to action better than copy that delivers the right messages, and in a way that educates rather than lectures or, even worse, minimalist copy that merely serves as window dressing for a visual image.

In any ad in any medium, the idea is ground zero. However, it is the copy that grabs the consumer by the collar and leads him to the car lot, the market, the event or the service.

However, there is a tendency today to minimize the importance of copy. In most cases, it appears to play second fiddle to the image. The image and the headline might grab the consumer's attention, but it is the copy that overcomes his or her objections to the sell. The copy's job is to do the heavy lifting.

While a pretty picture of a car on a country road might stir passionate feelings about buying the automobile, it is the copy that takes those passions and channels them by giving a concrete promise. After all, big ticket investments require solid sales points.

Admittedly, in a much faster-paced world than the 1960s - when an ad written by David Ogilvy might have had several hundred words of copy - it is more difficult to capture the consumer's attention for several minutes. But when you do, you have ignited a process that has a better chance of resulting in a sale.

So, how do you go about writing readable and sellable copy?

Think about words that enhance product benefits without over promising. Some words convey beauty, others workmanship, and still others a superior level of service. Think of adjectives that stir emotions. Use the active voice with strong verb and noun combinations.

Offer a solid promise - the single idea of the ad. However, stay away from hollow or pseudo-product benefits that stray from the old verities of taste, smell, convenience, and reliability. We've never met a product yet that could "carry you back to springtime", or bring you romance merely by chomping into a chocolate bar.

Add supporting planks to the promise. In other words, establish the credibility of your promise.

Write informal copy. Write the way you would talk to your neighbor on the other side of the fence. Loosen up and have fun. It will make your copy more interesting. 

Avoid listing product benefits as if you were writing your grocery list. You see this often done with bullet points. The consumer wants to be romanced. 

Make sure you have the basics - the what, when, where, how and why - in drawing consumer into your showroom or store.

Be a Hemmingway rather than a Faulkner. Use short sentences that have punch over long, convoluted sentences.

Copywriting is mostly craft and not art. Writing good copy can be learned.
Perhaps the best way to become a good copywriter is to live the life. Read more, because it stimulates good writing.  Practice writing often so that even your emails can be put to music.

That's how you become a great copywriter.

Publisher's Letter


First, there is a need for a quality, English-language marketing magazine. Secondly, we need to reach out to a larger contributor base to gain more diversified opinions. Thirdly, we need to define the purpose of the magazine more clearly.

Gadflies and Oracles:


The advent of Internet web logs, or blogs, has given thousands of people the opportunity to share their views with the world. Some bloggers find regular and loyal audiences, while most do not. Those that have attracted readers are succeeding because they offer more than opinion alone; they have relevant knowledge and timely information to share as well.

The Death of Newspapers


The important word in newspaper is not "paper" but "news", and the sooner publishers realize this, the sooner the angst over a dying industry can be brought to an end.

Tough Love


The Swami was asked the other day by the media if it were true he didn't much care for cuddly dogs, cute children, purring kittens or Bono, the saintly pop and rock singer. His reply was a quick, "Yeah, sure, I like pit bulls."

Long Live the Moniker


When I was working my way through university as a deckhand, my shipmates called me Loophole - partly to differentiate me from my father, who they called Louie, and partly as a term of affection and respect.

How to be a Great Copywriter


Copy is king.This is the case even in a visual world, where the public grazes through thousands of ads each day, where messages flicker across the TV screen and dangle from or are plastered on every conceivable surface.

Four Ways to Avoid Brand Implosion


But Maclaren, a privately held British company that makes children's strollers, attempted to trump common sense with what it obviously hoped was good business sense.

The Zombie Generation?


Guess what, mommies and papas? Little Igor is not - repeat not - becoming a social zombie by spending so much time on the computer.

People Power


Sergey Detyuk was promoted to information technology director at DTEK, a leading Ukrainian power company controlled by Rinat Akhmetov.

Thinking Small


For the average small business owner, marketing research is a personal matter. They are less likely to engage research firms or marketing consultants to conduct opinion polls and focus groups than they are to merely engage

The Great Slogan Contest


You're not going to remember that slogan. It was thought up by a clever ad person in 1929, but our publisher-who insists he wasn't around at that time-says it was the best positioning statement ever for Coca-Cola.

Hard Charger
EBA NEWS
Is The Press Release Dead?
Beyond Boundaries
Five Deadly Sins That Can Kill an Agency
We Have a Winner
Love Net: Consumers Click with Online Ads
Strategic Approaches

Previous issues

  • February 2010
  • December 2009
  • November 2009
  • October 2009
  • September 2009
  • August 2009
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