- Home
- Copywriting
- How To Become A Copywriter
A business engages in advertising to market and promote its ideas, products, or services. These advertisements allow the business to promote the product or service, informing people about it, and convincing people to purchase or avail of it. Advertisements can take several forms—TV or radio commercials, print ads, posters, flyers, Internet ads, or even word-of-mouth.
The words written or spoken in advertisements need to be effective to attract people’s attention. They have to be constructed or developed in a way that would catch people’s attention and work their mind. To develop this quality in an advertising concept or copy requires the maker to be creative and full of knowledge. This is where an advertisement agency’s or department’s copywriter comes in.
Copywriting entails the composing the concepts and the words that conveys a person, business, opinion, idea, product, or service. The aim of copywriting is to make a marketing copy or promotional text persuade a listener, viewer, or reader to avail of a product or service or to agree to a certain viewpoint. The words that you read in print ads, mail-order catalogs, commercials, postcards, online sites, email, letters, and many other forms of advertising are the work of copywriters.
Copywriters mostly work for advertising agencies, public relations firms, or in the advertising department of a company. They may also be employed in a media outlet such as TV stations, radio stations, or newspaper or magazine publishers.
Copywriting is an exciting job that enables you to exercise your creativity and challenges your mastery of words. Here are four great ways on how to become a copywriter.
- First you have to have a good grasp
of the English language and grammar. Style and flair of language can
develop in time, but good English grammar serves as the foundation of
a writer. Without it, you can’t expect to be a copywriter—or any
kind of writer at all.
- Reading advertisements and other
copywriters’ works is also an important way on how to become a
copywriter. Try to study their styles and how they use the words to
convince their clients and to make their copies attractive and
intriguing. From here, you will acquire tips on how to improve and
develop your own copywriting style.
You should study well-known copywriters such as David Ogilvy, William Bernbach, Robert W. Bly, and Leo Burnett. Others such as Dorothy L. Sayers, Viktor Pelevin, Eric Ambler, Joseph Heller, Terry Gilliam, Salman Rushdie, Don DeLillo, and Shigesato Ito started out as copywriters before becoming famous in their fields. - If you are an undergraduate, it
would be very advantageous in your future copywriting career to get
into advertising internship, specifically in the creative department.
Creative directors will usually hand you some assignments and
exercises in copywriting. Internship is a very good venue for
experience. Your experience will give you an edge when you are out
there in the real world.
If you do your best in your internship, there is a great possibility that a regular copywriting position will be offered to you. After all, creative directors would rather hire someone familiar with what they are doing than look for someone else out of their office. - Compile the ads you make in a
portfolio. As you advance in your internship or your probationary
period (if you are hired), you will probably have a lot of
portfolio-worthy copies.
This portfolio will be important when you apply for a copywriter position in other companies in case you’re not hired by the company where you interned. Employers would check on your capability as a copywriter, and your portfolio will speak volumes of what you can do better than any interview.
Follow these tips and be a copywriter now.


