Brochure
and website copywriting
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Here are our five top tips for Website Brochure
and copy writing: This applies to Websites, brochures, letters, advertising,
internet copy and emails.
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- Step into the mind and
the shoes of the person reading your copy.
Everything you write should be designed to meet their needs, wishes,
desires, hopes, fears and dreams.
- Keep it simple.
Don’t use language or sentence structure any more complicated than
you would use in conversation with someone over dinner.
- Benefits, benefits,
benefits. You must focus on the benefits
of what you are offering, rather than the product or service. When
you buy a new hi-fi, you’re probably not interested in how it was
made or how many wires it has (the product) You’re interested in how
it will sound (the benefit) If you buy a new chair, you don’t really
care if it took three years for a man in China to make it (the
product) You’re interested in how comfortable it’s going to be (the
benefit) So all of your copy should focus on the benefits.
- Remember the magic word –
YOU. By continuing to use the word ‘you’
in your copy, you are forcing yourself to have a personal
conversation with the person reading it.
- AIDA
Follow this classic rule of copy writing and you
can’t go too wrong. AIDA stands for
Attention
Interest
Desire
Action
All of your copy, whether it’s a letter,
brochure or email, should follow this simple process. First you need to
get their attention – this normally happens in a headline. Then create
some interest. You then need to turn the interest into a real desire for
your product or service. All of which is useless if the reader does not
take action. So make it very clear what action people need to take to
begin a relationship with you. |
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