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Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Effective Copywriting! Part I

1. Exploit your product’s benefits.


The first step of the copywriting outline is the foundation for your advertising campaigns. A benefit is the value of your product to a customer. In other words, a benefit is what the product can do for a customer or how the product can help a customer.
You need to put into words the reasons your product is the best available and better than your competitors’ products based on the added value it provides to your customers. The key to success is for you to fully understand all the benefits of your product. Only then can you ensure that the audience knows them and can relate to them.




2. Exploit your competition’s weaknesses.

To write compelling copy, it is essential that you know what differentiates your product from the competition. Once you know your competitors’ weaknesses, you must make sure your audience knows them and understands why buying your competitors’ products would be a terrible mistake.
Get started by thoroughly researching your competition and understanding what they offer in terms of products and services. Next, list the elements of their offerings that are inferior to your own. Feel free to tear the competition apart but be realistic in your comparisons. You want to be able to support your claims if you are challenged.

3. Know your audience.

Every person in the world is not going to see every ad in the world. Each ad has a specific audience that will see it, and it’s the marketer’s job to find the best placement to ensure the target audience will see it. For example, an ad for skateboards placed in a local senior citizen housing association newsletter is not likely to generate a lot of sales.
In fact, it would be a waste of advertising dollars. The target audience for skateboards is teenagers or young adults. The vast majority of senior citizens do not use skateboards, and it is not a product category in which they typically purchase gifts. Before you buy ad space, make sure you’re spending your money in the right place to get the biggest bang for your buck in terms of exposure and building awareness of your product or service.
First, take the time to research your customers thoroughly. In most businesses, 20 percent of customers are responsible for 80 percent of sales (this is called the 80/20 rule in case you’re curious about the official marketing terminology for this phenomenon). That 20 percent represents your best customer, and your job is to determine who that 20 percent is. Evaluate your customers and put together a demographic profile of your most valuable customer, so you can advertise in the best places to find similar people who are likely prospects.
If you’re a small business owner, you probably don’t have a budget set aside to conduct a thorough research study and analysis of your customer base, so you’ll have to improvise by using your own communication skills and visual investigation. Remember, you’re trying to develop a basic profile of your target customer, not a CIA profile of each individual who buys your product. Do your best with the information you have.
There are many attributes you can use to develop a demographic profile of your customers. Following is a list of examples of traits to help you start your own demographic profiling initiative:
* Gender
* Age
* Ethnicity
* Family Status
* Income
* Occupation
* Interests



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