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How To Write A Perfect, Selling Ad: Five Easy Tips
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Angela Booth
angelazip.com.au
How To Write A Perfect, Selling Ad: Five Easy Tips
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Summary: Stop wasting money on ads which don't work. Here's a fun
and easy way to write perfect, selling ads, every time.
Total words: 750
Category: Small Business
How To Write A Perfect, Selling Ad: Five Easy Tips
Copyright (c) 2002 by Angela Booth
I lied.
There's no such animal as the perfect, works-every-time, selling
ad.
But I got you to read this far, didn't I? That was the title's
purpose --- see Tip Two: Write an attention-grabbing headline.
I didn't lie about these tips, though. They're easy and fun to
use. And they work.
= Tip One: who's the reader? (Or viewer, or listener if you're
writing for broadcast.)
Although you're writing for a crowd, it's easiest to write if you
imagine you're talking to one particular person.
You can even start writing your first draft with a salutation, as
if you were writing a letter: Start with "Dear Elli", and keep
writing.
Who is this person? Is she old, young, married? Where does she
live? What's her life like? What does she want most? What's she
scared of? Why would she be interested in your product? What
difference would it make in her life?
Professional copywriters spend a lot of time in this phase of the
writing process. You can't motivate someone if you don't know who
they are.
= Tip Two: Write an attention-grabbing headline
Your headline is vital. No one is looking for your ad. You've got
to wave and yell at them to get their attention. If you don't get
their attention, no sale.
Write a trial headline to get yourself started. This probably
won't be the headline you'll use. However, with a trial headline,
you've got a corral for your copy. You're writing to that
headline.
When you've written a draft of the ad, force yourself, with a
timer, to write another twenty headlines in five minutes. (Read
the rest of the tips and write the benefits and the response
before you write a draft.)
Don't try too hard. Who cares if they're all junk? You're writing
lots of headlines to get your subconscious mind to take you
seriously, and throw up the PERFECT headline. You'll never
achieve this perfect headline with conscious thought. It's a gift
from your subconscious, but you have to goose it into
cooperating.
You may find a headline you like more than your initial headline.
Just substitute it, if it fits. If it doesn't you can write
another version of the ad to fit that headline's concept.
= Tip Three: Write the features first, then work out what the
benefits are
Nobody buys a product (or a service) for its own sake. They buy
because it benefits them in some way. The benefits are what
you're selling.
You're not selling a German Shepherd puppy, you're selling an
intelligent, loyal companion and family protector.
You're not selling a car, you're selling travelling comfort,
prestige, and a sure-fire babe-magnet.
You're not selling a book, you're selling the adventure of a
lifetime, love, romance, and sex.
To get a handle on this, take a sheet of paper and briefly list
the features of your product or service on the left.
Then beside the feature, write the corresponding benefit that
each feature provides.
Remember --- use the benefits in your ad.
= Tip Four: Don't forget the response!
I've lost count of the number of ads I've seen everywhere from
the Yellow Pages to full display ads costing thousands in
magazines, where the copywriter and everyone else forgot the
response.
You must tell the reader what you want him to do. You must ask
for the sale. Ask the reader to do something: call a number, come
into the store, go to a Web site.
This is so important that when I'm writing an ad I always write
the required response on a sticky note and tape it to a corner of
my monitor. I tape it onto the screen itself, so I can't miss it.
(Yes, I have been guilty of forgetting the response. And very
embarrassing it was too.)
= Tip Five: Read it out loud
You've finished the final draft of your ad. Before you show it to
anyone else, read it aloud.
You'll pick up redundancies, awkward sentence construction and
other nasties when you read the copy aloud.
***Resource box: if using, please include***
Author and copywriter Angela Booth crafts words for your
business. Words to sell, educate or persuade. Contact her today
for a free quote:
http://www.digital-e.biz/
Free ezine: Creative Small Biz --- subscribe at:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Creative_Small_Biz/
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