How to Start a Copywriting Business: Leave the Ego at the Door, PLEASE!

Wednesday, July 28, 2010 by Sharon Long
I've had an interesting email dialog this week with a freelance copywriter who started his own freelance copywriting business a couple of years ago, but would like me to send overflow work his way because he doesn't have enough work. He's only about the 20th freelance copywriter to ask that of me in the 10 years I've had We Know Words, so it wasn't a new request.

What was new was my response. I finally, after years of trying to figure out how to work with other freelance copywriters in a way that made sense but didn't make me a freelance babysitter, have come up with a way for copywriters to work for We Know Words that easy for all of us...and doesn't require any babysitting on my part.

I told this freelance copywriter about the new business model and he balked. Big time. But what about his brand (meaning his name), he asked. What about his website? Um, if you're that busy, if your name and website are working so well for you, why are you asking me to send work your way? 

And I got to thinking, this is soooooo typical of freelance copywriters! Do you realize how many of them have their name as their business and their website URL? Why is that? It's seems to ego-driven on the one hand, and so short-sighted on the other. How can you grow your business if you are just John Doe, will always be John Doe? How can you serve every copywriting need of a client if it's just you? You can't be good a good script copywriter and a good SEO blogger both. And if you are, well, are you any good as a whitepaper copywriter? You can only grow your business if you're more than you. You can only serve every copywriting need of a client if you're more than you.

When I started We Know Words as my copywriting business 10 years ago, it never even occured to me to call my business Sharon Long. (Or Sharon Baerny, my name in 2000.) I went through a huge long list of potential company names to get to We Know Words...and not one of my choices had my name in it.

What other business is as short-sighted as that of the freelance copywriter? Even my accountant has his business set up as Roland and Associates. Plus you totally lose on the SEO front when your name is your business and URL. (If I were to do it all over again, I would have named my business something SEO friendly...but I didn't know anything about SEO 10 years ago!)

So my number one advice to anyone asking how to start a copywriting business is this: Leave your ego at the door. Please. No one cares if you are John Doe or Mary Schmoe. They care if you know marketing and words. They care if your rates are fair. They care if you meet your deadlines. But they do not care about your name or your ego. And they never will.

And there's another point to this: You are dooming yourself to isolation, and you'll never be able to work with others together. If I'm building a brand for Sharon Long, and you're building a brand for Mary Schmoe, then we are missing out on the opportunity to work together to build a brand for freelance copywriters.

OK, that's what I have to say on the subject. Are you about to start a copywriting business? What do you think? 

Blogging Is Like Online Dating for Your Business: Get Out There to Get Found!

Monday, May 10, 2010 by Sharon Long

Imagine trying to find someone to date without ever leaving your house or going online. How would you meet anyone? You wouldn’t. You have to put yourself out there in order to meet potential dates and mates.

 

Same with marketing. If you don’t put yourself out there, you won’t be found by potential customers.

 

Blogging is one of the best ways to put yourself out there online…if you’re doing it right, meaning with enough of the right keywords and frequently enough.

 

As a freelance copywriter and now a Copy Coach, I’ve been promoting blogs as marketing tools for a long time now. But this report from Hubspot should convince you. If it doesn’t, I’ll think you want to “stay single” meaning you don’t want to find new customers!

 

According to Hubspot, companies that blog enjoy:

 

  • 55% more visitors
  • 97% more inbound links
  • 434% more indexed pages

 

Still not convinced? Read the article on small business blogging.

 

Ready to get your blog up and running? Or want help making your blog make more business? Drop me a line!

Cold Stone Creamery Uses Words for More Fun, More Brand...and This Copywriter Takes Note!

Wednesday, May 5, 2010 by Sharon Long

Yesterday I treated my daughter to ice cream at Cold Stone Creamery…and got my own treat as a freelance copywriter! They’ve taken just a few words and gotten creative and added that much more to their brand…without any real apparent effort or cost at all.

 

If you’ve been there, you know your portion choices aren’t small, medium and large. No, they’re “I like it,” “I love it,” and “I gotta have it.”

 

Not only is that clever. I bet it influences the consumer’s choice too! Imagine ordering the “like it” size, could you? Doesn’t that seem so sad to be ordering ice cream and say simply “I like it”? If you only like it, why are you even ordering it? I bet there are people that bump up their portion to a “love it” purely because of this subconscious feeling that they should be ordering something they love, not like.

 

Then there’s the Employees Only door…only it doesn’t say Employees Only. It says Ice Cream Makers Only. Clever, clever, clever! Cold Stone is reiterating that these employees aren’t that, just plain old employees. No, these people behind the counter are making my ice cream! How much more fun to walk into a place with ice cream makers than a place with employees!

 

Did it cost Cold Stone any more to use different words on their portion signs? Nope. Did it cost them any more to change the words on the door? I doubt it. And all those little efforts added up to much more fun, much more brand, and much confidence on my part as a consumer (and freelance copywriter!) that Cold Stone is paying attention to the details…including the Heath Bars going into my vanilla ice cream.

 

Thank you, Cold Stone, for putting your words to work! This freelance copywriter took notice! 

Does Your Website Suck? What You Can Do About It, for Cheap!

Monday, May 3, 2010 by Sharon Long

Is business slow? Maybe now is the time to figure out where your website needs improvement…and do it, before the economy picks up and you get busy again.

 

Websites prove the age-old adage, “Out of sight, out of mind.” That’s why horrid sites stay that way—we don’t see them, we don’t do anything about them.

 

Bad sites don’t sell. Bad sites don’t do anything but make you look bad. Can you live with that?

 

Now, when business is slow, is the time to take a good, hard look at your website and figure out how to make it better…so it makes you money.

 

Very few websites are the best they can be, or even close to being decent. I’ve been a website copywriter for 13 years. I’ve seen some pretty bad websites.

 

And I’ve developed a low-cost method for assessing websites and recommending simple changes that can add up to big improvement. I call them website assessments. Not a glamorous name, yet a fitting one, because the report I give clients is straightforward and easy to act upon.

 

If you’d like to take advantage of this downtime to improve your website, hire me for a website assessment. I’ll review your website. Then I’ll give you a written report and roadmap for improving it as your time and budget allow. Implement all of the suggestions or only a few. Change it yourself or hire someone else to. As long as you do something.

 

Most of these changes will be basic because people go online to find information, not to be impressed with fancy graphics. There also basic because my experience is that of a website copywriter, not designer. I’ll also give you suggestions for ranking better in the search engines, so people find your site.

 

When you hire this website copywriter to review your site, here’s what I’ll do:

 

  • I’ll interview you to figure out your target audience and their perceived problems.
  • I’ll figure out why they go to your site, how they get there, and what they want to do when they get there.
  • I’ll listen as you tell me what you want them to do there.
  • I’ll assess your website based on all this information to see how well your website is doing its job.
  • I’ll present you with a detailed report outlining recommendations for improving your site to make it a better information and sales tool.

 

A website assessment costs just $500 for up to seven web pages. A measly $500 for a detailed reporting that spells out what you can do to improve your website as a marketing tool. Best of all, with your assessment in hand, you can make the changes whenever you want, as your time and budget allow.

 

The recession will end. The economy will pick up. And customers will be back. Be ready to be busy by making your website better now while you have time.

 

Take it from this website copywriter: Your website has to be good, otherwise you’re missing out on opportunities…especially if you’re not even getting found on the Internet in the first place!

 

And when the economy does pick up again, the better your website works, the faster you’ll recover from this recession!

 

To see other assessment I’ve done, to ask questions, or to get started, call 206.459.8225 or email Sharon@weknowwords.com.

 

Marketing Is Like Dating, Proven by B2C and B2B Social Media Differences

Monday, April 26, 2010 by Sharon Long
My "Marketing Is Like Dating" book has been on the back burner as I rethink my role as a professional copywriter in 2010. But a comparison chart of the differences between B2C and B2B in social media marketing illustrates a point I simply have to include: be appropriate. 

Obviously if you're selling to consumers, Facebook, Yelp, Twitter and YouTube are channels you'll use. For B2B, the chart says blogs, LinkedIn, SlideShare and Twitter. (Interesting that Twitter is in both.) You have to be appropriate, and therefore market via appropriate channels. 

Think of dating, and how, if you're a woman, you've been approached or asked out by all kinds of men you didn't (if you're honest) think even had a right to ask you out. Yes, it sounds snobby, I know, but it happens.

Or here's a great example from last weekend: Out at the Black Bottle, a bar in downtown Seattle, a young woman came in wearing a black cocktail dress, lots of bling and high heeled shoes, with her hair and makeup all well done. She'd obviously spent a lot of time getting dolled up for this date. But the date? Gag! Not only was he wearing jeans, but also a hoodie and flip flops! Flip flops! Inappropriate all the way! I told MY date, a real gentleman would have apologized once seeing her outfit, and run home to quickly change. Sadly, she must have liked him enough to go out with him despite his clothes.

In the marketing and copywriting world, your prospects are going to have to like you enough to overlook you're being inappropriate...so better not to be in the first place.

That all said, I doubt there hard and fast rules. I've been thinking on the differences already, because although it might not be appropriate for a B2B business to have a Facebook page, their customers are consumers in their off hours, and use Facebook then...meaning their expectations and experiences are influenced by the B2C social media marketing. I don't know yet what that means, and have yet to see anyone comment on it. I think there might be potential there to sometimes win by being inappropriate, with an unexpected B2B presence on Facebook, just like in dating sometimes being different and unexpected will get you a date when you otherwise wouldn't.

Even on Facebook, Content Is King, So Hire a Professional Copywriter to Set You up Right

Saturday, April 24, 2010 by Sharon Long
Reading a SilverPop whitepaper on social media, I as the professional copywriter was drawn to section 4, called Create Content That Connects. It starts off:

"The foundation of effective marketing remains the same: content is king. For example, a company with 50,000 social media followers disseminating highly relevant, engaging content that users feel motivated to share can be more effective than a competitor with content that is not deemed valuable and is rarely shared by its fan base of 100,000." (Emphasis mine.)


Again, I see my role switching from Copy Writer to Copy Coach. In the social media marketing age, yes, customers will create content, as they use wikis, comment on blogs, post on your wall...or blog or tweet about you! But, you will set the stage for that content. Or you'd better, anyway, by getting a professional content copywriter in there to set it for you. If you don't set the stage, you won't have any say over the direction it goes.

I believe this so strongly, I'm now officially acting as a sometimes Copy Coach, helping small businesses and big companies figure out how to harness social media through great content...after figuring out if it even makes sense to do so.

Want a Copy Coach to guide your business onto the right path for social media marketing? Email me at sharon@weknowwords.com.


This Online Copywriter Finds Fun Use of Twitter. How About Your Tweets?

Friday, April 23, 2010 by Sharon Long

Although I see my role as a professional copywriter shifting as the world shifts more towards social media, taking me from Copy Writer to Copy Coach, I predict, I'm paying attention to social media, and have been for a while. 

I get Facebook and LinkedIn and, of course, blogging, since I teach people to use blogs as marketing tools.

But Twitter I continue to struggle to understand. For some businesses, it makes perfect sense. Or else, they've figured out how to make perfect use of it.

Take the Liquor Barn for example. I love their tweets! http://twitter.com/liquorbarn Every day they have a Drink 4Cast 4 2Day that's a drink suggestion tied to some historical event, or celebrity birthday, or anything noteworthy of the day. For example, the Earth Day drink forecast was for Rain Vodka.

These are clever, like little bits of trivia. They don't tell you "come to our store" so they are what I call indirect marketing, a bit of feel good that gives warm fuzzies and builds brand.

Is your online copywriter or company doing something clever with Twitter? Do tell! Post a comment! 

Do I Want to Be the Best Copywriter? Or the Happiest? This Email Made Me Happy!

Thursday, April 22, 2010 by Sharon Long
I received a wonderful gift today. One a non-copywriter might not appreciate, but one worth its weight in gold, for someone like me, a professional copywriter often working alone, struggling to make clients happy, to stay on top of changes like SEO and social media...

Wow. Sounds like I'm having a pity party! But I'm not. I'm having a joyful copywriter day, because I received the following wonderful message from a fellow freelance copywriter: 

"I’m a freelance copywriter in my spare time, and have been for 20 years.  For the last few months I’ve been in a rut, feeling generally uninspired and just plain wondering if I’m just any good at this.  Marketing is continually evolving, the social media thing can be overwhelming, clients expect miracles—you’ve been there, I’m sure.   Anyway, stumbling upon your site today I actually felt excited about what I do.  The passion you have for writing jumps off the page.  I used to feel that same passion and thought it had left me.  Now I know for sure it’s still there."



Some days being a freelance copywriter is really hard. You have to work to find work. You're often thought of last in the creative process. You're pigeon-holed and only asked for words, when you know so much more and can add so much more value. You're asked to do work beneath your abilities. And we freelance copywriters do tend to work alone! 

Add all that up, and it can be hard to keep your passion! This email did two things: It reminded me my passion for copywriting is still there, burning strong and lighting my way. And it made me ever so grateful that I was able to reignite that passion in another freelance copywriter.

What a gift this email is! I might not be the best copywriter on the planet, but as long as I'm inspiring others, I might be the happiest. Long live the freelance copywriter! 


Freelance Copywriter Finds 18 Great Tips for PPC Ads

Wednesday, March 31, 2010 by Sharon Long

Although I've been a freelance copywriter for 10 years and I've worked on all kinds of copywriting projects--websites, email, direct mail, brochures, whitepapers, and more--I've resisted doing pay-per-click (PPC) ads all this time.

Why? Probably fear. Unlike organic SEO that takes time to gain traction, PPC is immediate...so I'd know right away if my copywriting was working or not.

But change comes into the lives of all good professional copywriters, including me, and I am embarking on my first PPC ad copywriting project. (Gulp.) 

In doing research for hints and help, I came across this great article of 18 tips for copywriting PPC ads.

Whether you're a freelance copywriter doing PPC ads for clients, or a small business owner tackling that copywriting job yourself, take a look at the tips, they're good.

All right then, enough procrastinating by blogging. Time for this freelance copywriter to earn her keep with some PPC ad work! 

When Wondering How Often to Blog, Start With Your Goal

Tuesday, March 30, 2010 by Sharon Long

In an SEO newsletter the other day, I read the Twitter question of the week regarding how often should one blog. The answers were all over the place because...

It's the wrong question! 

How often one should blog depends on one's blogging goals. Even as a professional copywriter who ghost blogs for clients, I blog with different frequency depending on their goals.

Below are some of the blogging goals I've come across as a freelance copywriter. Figure out which ones applies to your blog, then you'll know how frequently to blog: 

Blog Goal #1--Internet marketing via SEO: If you're blogging to get found in search engines, then first off I'm assuming you have a great list of targeted keywords picked out. But that's not what this copywriter blog is about, so we'll just leave it at that. As far as frequency, you must blog frequently to win searches. You want to be found in Google? You'd better be blogging at least once a day, preferably more often. The more general (and popular) your keywords, the more often you must blog. For some companies this will even mean hundreds of (very short) blog posts PER WEEK. I'm not kidding. This is not simply blogging. It is Internet marketing, and like all types of marketing, you have to put something in to get something out. In this case, your time.

Blog Goal #2--Thought leadership: You're probably doing this to market yourself, not your company. If you want to build a reputation among your peers, your customers, your friends, you don't have to blog as often, and your blogs will be longer and more meaningful than those of the person pounding them out for SEO. You can blog as frequently or infrequently as you want, because it will be the content that matters, not the keyword usage.

Blog Goal #3--Meaningful blogs that also work for SEO: This is my favorite kind of goal as a ghost blogger, because the content should have real value but it also includes keywords for SEO. If this is your goal, you're less concerned with search engine results, so you don't need the frequency of hundreds of posts per week...but you still need some frequency. As a professional copywriter who ghost blogs for clients, I do one post per day for this goal, as keyword rich as I can make it and as meaningful too.

Obviously if you're using blogs as marketing tools your goals might be a mix of all these. And if you're blogging for other reasons, like to write a book, and not to blog, this copywriter blog post is irrelevant. :-) But I hope this helps you realize that when asking how often to blog, that's the wrong question to ask first. The question to ask first is, "What do I want to accomplish by blogging?" 
 

Freelance Copywriter on Why Your Business Needs a Facebook Page

Tuesday, March 23, 2010 by Sharon Long

I’ve heard this question from several small business owners lately: “Why have a Facebook page for my business?” As I re-evaluate what I do as a professional copywriter in the age of social media, i.e. the age of user generated content, where the customers create the copy, not the copywriter, I see my role shifting from Copy Writer to Copy Coach. So I take this social media marketing stuff very seriously!

 

To answer the question of “why,” I made some notes which you’ll find below. If you have anything to add, definitely post a comment! That is social media!

 

It’s Web 2.0, user generated content (UGC)…people want to talk back to you, and they want to talk to each other about you. Now that is their expectation, that they will be able to. And Facebook enables that.

 

It’s free.

 

It works for B2C companies with loyal customers who want to be engaged by the brands they believe in. If you have a ho hum product or service no one gets excited about, a Facebook page is likely a waste of time.

 

Facebook pages show up in search results, so it can help with your SEO and getting found when people search online.

 

You can have a vanity URL that’s easy to share and direct people too, like www.facebook.com/yourcompanyname.

 

Facebook (and Twitter) icons are now commonplace on websites and in emails, encouraging people to fan (or follow) your company. This is still new enough that people will.

 

For a small business, a Facebook page can replace a website. You can do all the marketing you want via your Facebook page, even solicit email signups. The only thing it can’t do is online transactions (i.e. letting customers buy from you).

 

If you go this route, your Facebook page is far easier to maintain and update than a website, and you don’t need to pay for hosting.

 

You can engage prospects and customers in a way you simply can’t with a website or even a blog.

 

It’s automatically viral. When someone becomes a fan, that shows up on their profile page. And they can easily invite others to be fans. Imagine someone doing anything like that with your website! It’s inconceivable.

 

Facebook integrates seamlessly with Twitter and blogging. I don’t want to turn this into a “why use Twitter,” but there is an SEO benefit to using Twitter, and when you have your tweets integrated with your Facebook page, you are updating your Facebook page without effort.

 

I also don’t want to turn this into a “why use blogs for Internet marketing,” but there are several benefits to blogging, among them SEO and credibility. And, like tweeting, your blog can be automatically posted to your Facebook page, keeping content fresh.

 

Maybe Facebook is going to become a bigger and more important marketing tool than websites. Facebook can be where you engage, build relationships with customers, and market. Your website might only be where business done, downloaded, bought and sold.

 

Your customers are on Facebook. It’s the third largest “country” in the world in “population.” That’s how many people use Facebook. In the age of social media marketing, guess what? You follow them. You go where the customers are. And the customers are on Facebook.

 

Still not convinced? Watch this short video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sIFYPQjYhv8.

 

And by then I hope the question is: “Why not have a Facebook page for my business?”

 

Need a Copy Coach to help you get started? Sharon@weknowwords.com standing by…

Freelance Copywriter Brochure Project Means Brains as Much as Words

Monday, March 22, 2010 by Sharon Long
Freelance Copywriter Brochure ProjectSometimes the freelance copywriter has more to offer than words. Take this brochure project, for example. It was intended as a brochure that would work for marketing Washington state to businesses in China as a place to do business. It was going to be used for one event only.

Hired as the freelance copywriter, I delved into the project asking loads of questions like i normally do. It seemed to me we could create an economic development brochure that could market the state to any tech business in the world or the rest of the country, and therefore get a lot more use out of that one brochure...and the cost of hiring the freelance copywriter and designer. 

Freelance Copywriter Brochure ProjectThat's the approach we took! Then I got to figure out the layout of the material and what to include. It worked great to break the information into three reasons for choosing Washington: people (the smart tech people who already live here, plus those who want to), place (the appeal of this state to employees), and potential (Washington state as a tech-friendly home to famous companies like Amazon.

It's always fun and satisfying when I can provide more than words!

Design by www.stardesignstudio.com.

Follow Up to Yesterday's Website Copywriting Whine: Praise!

Tuesday, March 16, 2010 by Sharon Long

Yes, this professional copywriter whined yesterday about writers pretending to be copywriters, and ripping off clients as a result. This morning I received the following praise from that client, now a happy copywriting client, and I'm happy to share it, because it tells me that although good writers are out there working as bad copywriters, people can tell the difference given the chance:

"Hi Sharon. I love all the changes and additions you made. You turned this whole project around for me. I was at such a low point about it when you came into the picture, and now I am very pleased with how it is all shaping up, thanks to your very capable interventions. There is a line in L.A. Story (I am from L.A.): Steve Martin meets the new woman in his life (in real life, his wife) and stares at her and says: 'wonderful, wonderful, and yet more wonderful'. That is the line that popped into my head when I read all that you did for this website, because it was wonderful what you accomplished. I was very impressed that you could understand so quickly and intuitively what it was that I do and what it was I wanted to convey. Thank you so much."

I guess I share this too because I don't toot my horn very often (too Catholic for that?) and this praise put a huge smile on my face, knowing I did a good job, knowing I helped someone out, and knowing she knew it too.

I hope if you're reading this, you're also taking a good hard look at the copywriting you're getting, making sure you've hired the best copywriter for the job, not simply the one wielding the pen and claiming he knows how to write.

Web Copywriter to Rescue: Trying to Salvage a Crappy Copywriting Job

Monday, March 15, 2010 by Sharon Long

Sigh...

Why is it people think anyone can be a copywriter? I just did a rush job as a website copywriter trying to save a project for a poor soul with hardly any budget or time. She had been sucked into what I think sounds like a shifty web designer deal. He hired some friend of his to write her website. She didn't like the copy. She turned to me in desperation, with little money and a hard due date of today.

I deleted 90% of the crap I was given that the supposed freelance "copywriter" had done. It wasn't poorly written. It wasn't wrong. But it wasn't doing its job. This guy had gone off on some tangents that while potentially helpful information to a prospect later in the sales cycle were totally irrelevant and useless as far as the website's job: marketing this person.

Not only did I delete most of the thousands of words, I completely redid the sitemap. None of the copy made sense, none of it, not even the structure.

In only seven hours, I did the best I could and the client now thinks I'm a goddess. (I even did some basic SEO, but very little.) But it's not going in my freelance copywriter portfolio because I know how much better it would be if I'd had the time. And this woman has to move forward with a "good enough" website, having wasted money on the schlep.

Too many freelance writers pass themselves off as freelance copy writers. They think because they can write, they can write copy. And people seem too accepting of whatever their writer gives them. So we get literally millions of bad websites, poorly written direct mail, spam instead of email copywriting, ads that do nothing but take up space in a magazine...I could go on and on.

The best copywriter is the copywriter who knows marketing as well as she knows words. And she knows her strengths. I am strong as a:
 

  • Website copywriter
  • Email copywriter
  • Whitepaper writer
  • Case study writer
  • Newslettter writer


I do not do, because I don't know how to do:
 

  • Script writing
  • Speech writing
  • Presentations (OK, I can do these, I just don't want to)
  • True journalism
  • Catalog copywriting
  • Those convoluted direct mail pieces that have letters and postcards and...

I know my strengths, I know my limitations, and I'm honest about both. Every professional copywriter should be.

People, if you are hiring a freelance copywriter, be picky! Don't assume simply because they say they are a copywriter that they are. Ask for proof. Don't be afraid to question the samples you're given. Expect more.

This is your marketing, your branding, your voice, your reputation. Do you want the best copywriter for the job? Or any ol' freelancer with a laptop?

 


Don't Use Press Releases if Your Website Sucks and Your Blog Is Nonexistent

Friday, March 12, 2010 by Sharon Long
Last of my MarketingSherpa “Marketing Wisdom for 2010” freelance copywriter insights...

Even small businesses can get a big bang from PR, and I don't mean hiring a publicist and trying to get written up in the national news. For years, the We Know Words copywriters have pushed clients to do more with press releases. Use the right freelance copywriter, and your press releases can:

*Be written with keywords and optimized for search
*Be added to your website, increasing your SEO
*Be submitted to an online press release distribution company like PRWeb.com, also increasing your SEO
*Provide blog fodder
*Be linked to in your email newsletter, taking people back to your website
*And more!

But here's a good point from the Marketing Wisdom report, submitted by Tino of ImageLight: Make sure your online presence is worth going to if your press release does intrigue a member of the media! 

We've all seen crappy websites. Heck, some of us are even guilty of having crappy websites! And if that's the case, if your website is an embarrassment and your company lacks a blog, then you'd better skip the press release. Because in this day and age, anyone looking for more info about you is going straight to the Internet. Better not to get found at all than to be found lacking! 

So hire the best copywriter you can afford, improve your website, launch your blog, and then get busy on those press releases!

That wraps up my week of recap of the MarketingSherpa Marketing Wisdom report, through the eyes of a freelance copywriter! Hope you found it useful! 

Be Emotional to Get Your Copywriting Noticed, Read and Reacted to

Thursday, March 11, 2010 by Sharon Long
Day 4 of my MarketingSherpa “Marketing Wisdom for 2010” freelance copywriter insights...

Today's topic ties in with my "marketing is like dating" philosophy. Ron Baginski of Advertising That Works (no website was listed) encourages marketers to "connect with emotions." 

One of my "marketing is like dating" points is that: You must be emotional. Think about dating, meeting someone for the first time, going out on that first date...if they were all business like and professional and, well, cold, you would either think they didn't like you (if you're a woman) or you wouldn't like them (if you're a man).

As a professional copywriter, it's my job to grab the attention of a prospect, whether the copywriting services being put to use are web copywriting, email copywriting or print.

That's why I ask about pain points. I ask what problems the prospect is trying to solve, and how they see their problems.

It is by knowing the pain that I can determine the emotion needed to get their attention. 

As a freelance copywriter, I've found some companies have a hard time with that, with being emotional. They want to keep it all business. And then you know what you get, in the opinion of this professional copywriter? Me too, generic copywriting that doesn't stand out, doesn't engage. It's just more clutter. 

Demand more from your marketing, more from your content copywriter. Demand more from yourself, if that's what it takes. But find the pains, and let your copywriter speak to it, let your copywriter be emotional in the messaging. 

Maybe you'll end up with some emotions too: the happiness you'll feel when your copywriter does her best and engages those prospects at last! 
 

You Will Always Need a Great Content Copywriter, Because Content Will Always Be King

Wednesday, March 10, 2010 by Sharon Long
Day 3 of my MarketingSherpa “Marketing Wisdom for 2010” freelance copywriter insights...

Ah, content. What a lovely word. :-) Today's favorite topic from the Marketing Wisdom report is about budgeting for content creation. I didn't pick it because I'm a content copywriter. I picked it because content often gets the short end of the marketing stick. All kinds of attention goes to design, but quite often not enough to the copywriting.

John Miller of
Marketo gets it. He understands the importance of content, especially in the age of social media. He even says, in this report, "...marketers should take some of the budget that you would normally allocate to trade shows and list purchases and allocate it to writers that can generate great content and the efforts to promote it." 

Thank you, John Miller! 

Content will always be king. Therefore, a content copywriter will always be needed.

Have you made your investment in the best copywriter possible? 

Talk to Your Customers, not at Them

Tuesday, March 9, 2010 by Sharon Long
Day 2 of my MarketingSherpa “Marketing Wisdom for 2010” freelance copywriter insights...

Here's a great example of talking to the customer, not at them, this professional copywriter's mantra: Tyler Garns of InfusionSoft submitted a great example of simplifying the marketing message. His company went from a big promise to a small one, from promising an all-in-one solution to promising an email marketing solution. They found the all-in-one message didn't resonate with their small business audience. Turned out, the small businesses were only looking for email marketing.

I've used this example before, but it is worth repeating because this comes up so often in my work as a professional copywriter: Are you selling new mattresses or a good night's sleep? If your prospect views their problem as poor sleep, and they don't know a new mattress will help, do not sell them the new mattress. Do sell them the good night's sleep.

I guarantee if you take a hard look at your current copywriting and messaging, you'll find you tend to talk at customers. You tend to assume they know they need whatever you're selling. And chances are, they don't.

Take one piece of existing marketing collateral and force yourself to reframe it in customer-centric terms. How different is it? 

Content Is Still King, so Hire the Best Copywriter and Get to Work for SEO

Monday, March 8, 2010 by Sharon Long

MarketingSherpa just rocks. They put out great reports and summaries in addition to their weekly wisdom. And speaking of wisdom, reading through their recent “Marketing Wisdom for 2010” report prompted quite a few insights for this freelance copywriter. This week, we’ll delve into one per day (since there were a total of five, I figure it was meant to be!)

 

Today, I gush over what Dean Rieck of Direct Creative had to say. Any comment that starts with "Content is king" is going to speak straight to a freelance copywriter's heart. But he gives proof, talking about a client that created more than 7,000 pages of blog posts and pages. And got results. As he says, it boosted the website in search engine rankings and it created a large pool of keywords.

Although I'm "just" a copywriter, I keep up with all things marketing...or at least as many as I can. How to increase your search engine rankings via organic SEO is one of those things. It's not rocket science, but it does take work. As this guy says, in this case, thousands of pages of work. But that's not hard! 

Over and over I am approached by company's that want to improve their SEO and over and over I tell them to consider blogging...and they do not listen. It's like me saying I want to lose weight while chowing down on chocolate chip cookies. I have a choice to make. So do they. But blogging takes commitment and they must want a magic bullet instead (which is, I think, why so many companies turn to pay per click instead).
If you want to improve your search engine rankings, add blogging to your marketing mix. Blogging is not hard, nor is it time-consuming! In addition to blogging, your company has ample opportunities to be creating content that can go on your website: press releases, tip sheets, whitepapers, how to guides, FAQs...

Content is king, especially in the world of search. The way to win search is to have great, keyword rich, relevant content. It's that simple. Hire the best copywriter you can find, and let her get to work creating your content so you can get the rankings you want.

It's not rocket science, but great content might take your SEO to the moon.

Copywriter Says "Whew!" My Marketing Tips eBook Is Still Relevant!

Thursday, March 4, 2010 by Sharon Long

The marketing tips in my free ebook are from many years ago. More years than I want to admit to! Let's just say, my office has been moved twice since I wrote those tips.

This morning, I started wondering if the ebook was out of date. Maybe I am being an irresponsible copywriter for continuing to offer it to people. One of my biggest pet peeves as a professional copywriters is marketers who give clients out-of-date advice! Was I doing that? 

Literally minutes after I was pondering this, I received a request for the marketing tips ebook from a potential client. I unabashedly asked her to give me her honest opinion about how helpful or not it is given how long ago it was written. I sent her the ebook, and very soon after received this good news:

"I went through all the statements of tips and a number of the paragraphs. I can't wait to read the whole thing through, with my highlighter in my hand! I think it is a wonderful booklet, and it is very generous of you to give it away. I think the ideas are definitely relevant, not only for marketing but for daily life with others. Thanks."

That was a relief and a pleasure to read. I guess it proves too that sound marketing advice is just that: Sound.

If you'd like 104 marketing tips pulled together over the course of two plus years by a professional copywriter, drop an email to info@weknowwords.com or leave a comment on this blog post.