A lot of people shy away from writing
their own ads and sales
letters when it's really not necessary.
If you have even a basic
grasp of writing skills, you can easily
write your own stuff that
really sells. You probably just need a
few pointers about format
and language.
When formatting an ad or a sales letter,
put the most important
benefits right up front. Put yourself
in the customer's shoes and
ask yourself what the customer will really
go for. Focus on
that point.
Keep your sentences short and simple.
Sales copy needs to be
crisp and clean or people lose interest.
With simple sentences
you can steer clear of confusion and get
right to the point of
the ad. Take it a step further in your
classified ads and
alternate complete sentences with catchy
two and three-word
phrases.
Break your copy into short sections.
Professional writers often
keep their paragraphs to two or three
sentences. This makes your
copy much easier to follow.
Use visual tricks to grab attention.
Use headings and sub-
headings to emphasize your most important
features, and use
bulleted lists when describing product
features.
Include a P.S. in sales letters. Most
people read the P.S. first.
Use it to restate your main offer, and
then add a special bonus.
Include a time limit to get the good deal.
This encourages
people to buy more quickly.
And finally, once you've got your sales
letter or ad set up in
this clean and simple format, make sure
you're using clean and
simple language to match, and not gobbledygook.
We all know what gobbledygook is, it's
that overcomplicated,
cliched and unnecessarily formal language
that can either totally
confuse us or just put us to sleep. Either
way it loses the
customer, and loses you the sale.
In an effort to seem smart or serious
or professional, bad
business writers often end up using gobbledygook.
I see sales
letters and emails all the time with business-speak
phrases like
"in our considered opinion" and "enclosed
please find." This
makes the seller sound stuffy and unapproachable.
Simplify these
into everyday language. Write how you
would speak: "we think"
and "here is," are much better choices.
Customers relate to
conversational language.
If you follow these pointers you should
be able to come up with
some pretty good copy. Keep plugging away
at it, and you'll find
you get pretty good. Who knows? People
might even start coming
to you for writing advice.
Kevin Nunley provides marketing advice,
copywriting, and
promotional packages. See all his tips
to help your business
or career at http://DrNunley.com
Reach Kevin at
kevin@drnunley.com,
or 801-328-9006.