More Effective Copywriting - Why You Should Use
Targeted Relevant Long Copy
By Andrew
Gowans
Andrew Gowans
Level: Platinum
With a background
spanning 25+ years in I.T. and manufacturing Andrew and and his wife Rose are
accomplished and successful work at home coaches. They ...
... Welcome to the eighth part of this mini series on "More
Effective Copywriting".
There have been many studies and split tests
conducted on the long copy versus short copy debate. And the clear winner is
always long copy. But that's targeted relevant long copy as opposed to
untargeted boring long copy.
Some significant research has found that
readership tends to fall off dramatically at around 300 words, but does not drop
off again until around 3,000 words.
If I'm selling an expensive set of
golf clubs and send my long copy to a person who's plays golf occasionally, or
always wanted to try golf, I am sending my sales pitch to the wrong prospect. It
is not targeted effectively. And so if a person who receives my long copy
doesn't read past the 300th word, they weren't qualified for my offer in the
first place.
It wouldn't have mattered whether they read up to the 100th
word or 10,000th word. They still wouldn't have made a purchase.
However,
if I sent my long copy to an avid die-hard golfer, who just recently purchased
other expensive golf products through the mail, painting an irresistible offer,
telling him how my clubs will knock 10 strokes off his game, he'll likely read
every word. And if I've targeted my message correctly, he will
buy.
Remember, if your prospect is 3000 miles away, it's not easy for him
to ask you a question. You must anticipate and answer all of his questions and
overcome all objections in your copy if you are to be successful.
And
make sure you don't throw everything you can think of under the sun in there.
You only need to include as much information as you need to make the sale... and
not one word more.
If it takes a 10-page sales letter, so be it. If it
takes a 16-page magalog, fine. But if the 10-page sales letter tests better than
the 16-page magalog, then by all means go with the winner.
Does that mean
every prospect must read every word of your copy before he will order your
product? Of course not.
Some will read every word and then go back and
reread it again. Some will read the headline and lead, then skim much of the
body and land on the close. Some will scan the entire body, then go back and
read it. All of those prospects may end up purchasing the offer, but they also
all may have different styles of reading and skimming. So...
Write To Be
Scanned
Your layout is very important in a sales letter, because you want
your letter to look inviting, refreshing to the eyes. In short, you want your
prospect to stop what he's doing and read your letter.
If he sees a
letter with tiny margins, no indentations, no breaks in the text, no white
space, and no subheads... if he sees a page of nothing but densely-packed words,
do you think he'll be tempted to read it? Not likely.
If you do have
ample white space and generous margins, short sentences, short paragraphs,
subheads, and an italicized or underlined word here and there for emphasis, it
will certainly look more inviting to read.
When reading your letter, some
prospects will start at the beginning and read word for word. Some will read the
headline and maybe the lead, then read the "P.S." at the end of the letter and
see who the letter is from, then start from the beginning.
And some folks
will scan through your letter, noticing the various subheads strategically
positioned by you throughout your letter, then decide if it's worth their time
to read the entire thing. Some may never read the entire letter, but order
anyways.
You must write for all of them. Interesting and compelling long
copy for the studious reader, and short paragraphs and sentences, white space,
and subheads for the skimmer.
Subheads are the smaller headlines
sprinkled throughout your copy.
Like this
When coming up with your
headline, some of the headlines that didn't make the cut can make great
subheads. A good subhead forces your prospect to keep reading, threading him
along from start to finish throughout your copy, while also providing the glue
necessary to keep skimmers skimming.
The next, and very important chapter
"The Structure of AIDA" - Attention, Interest, Desire, Action will be with you
real soon.
Andrew provides a focused problem solving approach through his
20 plus years of personal and business coaching (especially to small
businesses). This approach is linked to providing work at home businesses,
affiliates and online businesses with PROFITABLE INTEGRATED
SOLUTIONS.
His overriding goal is to provide you with the right choices
that fit your needs, solve your problems.
His website,
http://www.youraffiliatecoach.com - is content rich with useful information,
articles and resources.
Sign up for the free newsletter full of tips and
great coaching
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Andrew_Gowans