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Great Web &
email copywriting tips from an offline pro [from
Oct. 9, 2002 issue of WordBiz Report] By
Debbie Weil Picture growing
up in a family steeped in direct marketing (DM). Instead of dont stay
out too late, Donna Baier Steins
father exhorted, Benefits, Donna, benefits." Did
he teach her AIDA (attention, interest, desire, action) instead of the ABCs?
It seems likely. Her father, Martin Baier, was the inventor in the late 1960s
of zip code marketing. Stein
herself is a highly regarded direct response copywriter with clients like Time-Life
and IBM. She teaches several
copywriting seminars for the Direct Marketing Association. Shes also
the author of the classic guide to DM copywriting, Write
on Target. I
asked her to distill for WordBiz readers - from her seminars and her book - how
offline DM best practices can be translated to writing sales copy for the Web
and email. Stein said she starts an assignment, offline or on, by posing four
questions. - What am I selling - To whom am I selling it? - Why
am I selling this now? - What do I want the reader to do? Sounds
straightforward, but wait till you hear her answers... Donna
Baier Stein's definition of a direct response copywriter: "A
good copywriter has to be two people in one: 1.
A skillful writer who can weave words in a way that seduces and sustains interest. 2.
A salesperson who sticks his or her foot in the door, keeps it there despite difficulty,
and won't leave without an order or strong expression of interest." From
Write on Target: the Direct
Marketer's Copywriting Handbook, page 3. The
good news No
need to reinvent the wheel. The process you go through to create an effective
Web page or email promotion is similar to what's required for a direct mail package
or print ad. The
bad news It's
a lot of work. On
or offline, you have to answer Stein's four key questions before writing copy
that persuades: Question
#1 - What am I selling? Stein
explains, you have to understand everything about the product or service you are
selling. You have to be able to turn features into benefits. She offers the example
of a plant nursery. "People don't care how great the grass seed is. They
care about how beautiful their lawn will be." Question
#2 - To whom am I selling it? You've
really got to understand your target reader. This means studying list data if
you're renting a list of names, doing surveys, interviewing current customers,
getting testimonials. Question
#3 - Why am I selling this now? Setting
a deadline is key to getting a response, Stein reminded. Timeliness can be related
to a dollar discount, a new product, being the first, a holiday, an emergency
crisis. That
sense of urgency is not something we usually associate with a home page. But it
makes a lot of sense. Without it, what will prompt a site visitor to click through,
sign up or take another desired action? Question
#4 - What do I want the reader to do? "This
is something a lot of online copywriters forget," Stein said. If you put
on the hat of a direct marketer, your key objective is to get a response - buy,
subscribe, join, click to sign up, etc. And
make this prominent, she advises. It's identical to "making the ask"
in direct marketing speak. Some
think using the words "click here" is redundant. She disagrees. People
read 20 percent slower online than off, she says. Make the click here benefit
oriented. "Click here for dramatic savings" or "Click here to save
now." Other
online copywriting tips Stein
offers more useful tips that apply to online copywriting: -
Use active verbs like delight, explore, discover, learn, understand, enjoy, experience.
- Sentence
fragments, one or two-word sentences, are OK. -
Use the bucket brigade. Phrases and words like "That's why... " and
"Since..." and "So..." to keep the reader moving from one
sentence to the next. -
Watch out for stop signs in your copy, i.e. words people don't understand. Too
much industry jargon makes it hard to read. Keep it simple. -
Never end a page with a period. (Pub note: Online, use a phrase like "Find
out more" as a text link.) Make every sentence, including headlines, a cliff-hangar
- so the reader has to read on. She
concludes, "The whole point, online and on paper, is to use words to engage
your prospect/customer and to keep the dialogue going without the benefit of seeing
facial expressions of boredom or disinterest. Remember,
they're looking for any excuse they can find to stop reading. Old-time vacuum
salesmen sat across from the lady of the house and could switch tactics when she
looked at her watch. Today's copywriters are looking at a screen... " Useful
Link: Click
here to read a sample chapter from Write on Target: the Direct Marketer's
Copywriting Handbook
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