|
How
Tia Prepares For A Copywriting Assignment
"Just Sell"
Copy persuades readers by giving them
useful information about the products being advertised. The
more facts you include in your copy, the better.
When
you have a file full of facts at your fingertips, writing
good copy is easy. You simply select the most relevant facts
and describe them in a clear, concise, direct fashion.
But
when copywriters dont bother to dig for facts, they
fall back on fancy phrases and puffed-up expressions to fill
the empty space on the page. The words sound nice, but they
dont sell because the copy doesnt inform.
Heres
a four-step procedure I use to get the information I need
to write persuasive, fact-filled copy for my clients. This
technique should be helpful to copywriters, account executives,
and ad managers alike.
Step
#1: Get all previously published material on the product.
For an existing product, theres a mountain of literature
you can send to the copywriter as background information.
This material includes:
Tear-sheets
of previous ads
Brochures
Catalogs
Article reprints
Technical papers
Copies of speeches
Audio-visual scripts
Press kits
Swipe files of competitors ads and literature
Think you cant send me printed material because your
product is new? Nonsense. The birth of every new product is
accompanied by mounds of paperwork you can give your copywriter.
These papers include:
Internal
memos
Letters of technical information
Product specifications
Engineering drawings
Business and marketing plans
Reports
Proposals
By studying this material, the copywriter will have 80 percent
of the information she needs to write the copy. And she can
get the other 20 percent by picking up the phone and asking
questions. Steps #2-4 outline the questions she should ask
about the product, the audience, and the objective of the
copy.
Step
#2: Ask questions about the product.
What
are its features and benefits? (Make a complete list.)
Which benefit is the most important?
How is the product different from the competitions?
(Which features are exclusive? Which are better than the competitions?)
If the product isnt different, what attributes can be
stressed that havent been stressed by the competition?
What technologies does the product compete against?
What are the applications of the product?
What industries can use the product?
What problems does the product solve in the marketplace?
How is the product positioned in the marketplace?
How does the product work?
How reliable is the product?
How efficient?
How economical?
Who has bought the product and what do they say about it?
What materials, sizes and models is it available in?
How quickly does the manufacturer deliver the product?
What service and support does the manufacturer offer?
Is the product guaranteed?
Step #3: Ask questions about your audience.
Who
will buy the product? (What markets is it sold to?)
What is the customers main concern? (Price, delivery,
performance, reliability, service maintenance, quality efficiency)
What is the character of the buyer?
What motivates the buyer?
How many different buying influences must the copy appeal
to? Two tips on getting to know your audience:
If you are writing an ad, read issues of the magazine in which
the ad will appear.
If you are writing direct mail, find out what mailing lists
will be used and study the list descriptions.
Step #4: Determine the objective of your copy.
This objective may be one or more of the following:
To
generate inquiries
To generate sales
To answer inquiries
To qualify prospects
To transmit product information
To build brand recognition and preference
To build company image
Before you write copy, study the productits features,
benefits, past performance, applications, and markets. Digging
for the facts will pay off, because in compelling writing,
specifics sell.
|