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It's true, we were all taught in school to express
ourselves differently on paper, than the way we
speak. To follow rules of grammar, and inject an
artificial air of formality.
Forgetting about this training when you write
web copy is one of the best thing you can possibly
do, unless you’re selling to the academic
community. And forgetting about it may not be as
easy as you think.
Do you write like you’re speaking to a friend
across the table?
Maybe even use a little slang, now & then?
Or do you worry about your high school English
teacher committing suicide, if he or she were to
ever stumble across your stuff?
If so, do yourself a favor. Get over it.
Marketing Communications should never be about
trying to impress. Prospects should never have
to think about what the heck you’re trying
to say.
So keep your sentences short.
Avoid big words.
Keep plenty of free space around your copy, so
it looks easy.
The mind can only really think of one thing at
a time. If you want your prospect to concentrate
on something, make sure your points don’t
require more than a split second to understand.
Look at the below example, taken from an ad for
a special day care course for kids. It's put on
by a government agency that promotes apple agriculture
in their region.
The point of the text is this. “Bring your
kids here, because we’ll teach them something,
instead of just baby-sitting them”.
Read the example, and then the revision in plain
talk.
EXAMPLE
This program encourages students to conduct simple
investigations of apples. Students experiment,
observe, and keep records as they become 'immersed" in
a multi-sensory study of apples. Students will
make notes in learning logs as they investigate
and discuss the activities. In the learning logs
the students simply record what happened during
the activities and their reactions to what happened.
Students may later use their notes as the basis
for language arts activities, such as writing poems.
Writing first serves as a tool for learning and
later becomes one of the possible end-products
of the lessons.
PLAIN TALK REVISION
Hey Mom and Dad, kids love to learn about apples.
They’re naturally curious, and learn best
by tasting, smelling, squeezing, rolling, & tossing.
It’s so much fun.
They love sharing the experience with their classmates,
and can’t wait to write home about what happened.
And the feelings they express in the special diaries
we give them are priceless.
You’ll be giving your kids a head start
at putting their thoughts down on paper. One of
life’s most important skills.
And what better way to get them out of your hair
for a while?
Can you dig the difference?
I do a lot of work in the computer networking
field, and often need to read product specs & documentation.
And it drives me nuts!
Why is this stuff so full of techno babble, hyperbole,
and long-winded bafflegab? Is all of the rocket
science talk supposed to impress me into wanting
to do something with their gadgetry?
Almost every product or service imaginable has
a technical side, and you can never over educate.
But it shouldn’t feel like school.
Maybe you think you’re selling a commodity,
and there’s not much to the customer’s
decision, but price. Think again. There is always
a technical differentiator.
One of the greatest skills you can acquire is
to be able to boil the froth off complex concepts,
so that they become easy to understand.
Customers crave facts, and proof, even logic in
order to feel comfortable with their decisions,
once you’ve stirred up their emotional desire.
Inject them painlessly with web copy that comes
across as “plain talk”!
About The Author
Daniel Levis is a top marketing consultant & direct
response copywriter based in Toronto, Canada
and publisher of the world famous copywriting
anthology “Masters of Copywriting” featuring
the marketing wisdom of 42 of the world’s
greatest copywriters, including Clayton
Makepeace, Joe Sugarman, Joe Vitale, Bob
Bly and dozens more! For a FREE excerpt
visit the link http://www.Sellingtohumannature.com/Copywriting-Secrets.html or
visit his blog
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