To gain more revenue, a
company needs to market and promote its products or services. This is
done through advertising. Advertising is essential for the business
to promote the product or service, informing people about it, and
convincing people to purchase or avail of it. Advertisements can be
of any form such as TV or radio commercials, print ads, posters,
flyers, Internet ads, or even word-of-mouth.
The text in
advertisements needs to be constructed or developed in a way that
would get the people’s attention to be effective. Therefore,
advertisement copies should catch the eye, provoke the thought, bend
the mind, or intensity the emotion. Having all of these qualities in
an advertising concept or copy requires an advertisement’s maker to
be very creative. This is where an advertisement agency’s or
department’s copywriter comes in.
Copywriting is the
process of composing the concepts and the words that promote a
person, business, opinion, idea, product, or service. The people who
do copywriting are aptly called copywriters.
Copywriters are a very
important element of an advertising team. Usually, copywriters are
partnered with art directors. The copywriter composes the
advertisements’ verbal and textual content, and the art director
makes visuals of the ad.
Marketing wise, the text
that copywriters write is very important in convincing people and
gaining sales. However many copywriters make mistakes in their
pieces. This copywriting mistakes are often labeled in the industry
as “deadly.” That’s because they have the potential of killing
the sales and profits of the company.
Here are five of the
deadliest copywriting mistakes.
- The biggest and
easiest mistake is for the text to be more focused on the copywriter,
or the company he represents, rather than the market the company is
trying to get. Copies with phrases such as “We’re the best in the
industry,” “we’ve been in business since 1879,” or “we have
the latest state-of-the-art facilities” do not attract at all
because these phrases focus on themselves. The market’s most likely
reaction would be “What does that mean to me and my life or my
business?”
To avoid this pitfall,
try to focus on the customers’ needs. A good rule of the thumb is
to write about the things that matter to the customer. Instead of
writing in a we, us, or our sense, try to write
in a you or yours sense. Let the customer speak praises
for the company, not the company telling of praises about itself.
- Using a weak or bad
headline is a big copywriting mistake. An attractive headline is
quite important; it is the one best chance to grab a reader’s
attention. The headline text should be strong, aggressive, and
compelling. The headline is a sales pitch that prompts the would-be
customer to be interested in the ad.
An example of a poor
headline would be “Our Experienced Staff Can Tend To Your Every
Automotive Need.” A more attention-grabbing headline would be “Is
Your Car Telling You Something With Those Squeaks? See Us.”
- Not using bullets is a
copywriting mistake. Bullets are essential because they improve the
ad’s readability. People tend to scan what they read, and bullets
increase the chances that the copy will catch the reader’s eye.
Bullets also make it
easier for the reader to pick out key words and phrases.
- Using big, complicated
words and jargon is another copywriting mistake. It may sound
impressive, but it also makes the text harder to understand. Ideally,
the copy should read as if the copywriter is conversing to the
reader; it should flow naturally and be easy to understand. Strong
words and simple, clear writing is the best way to do it.
- The last deadly
copywriting mistake a copywriter can commit is using weak or bad
subheads. Subheads should be strong and compelling just like
headlines. The difference is that they act as headlines for each
section of the copy. It is a way to stop the eye and lets the reader
slow down to read the sections in detail. Ideally, subheads should be
presented once every three to four paragraphs.
Now you can ferret these
mistakes from your copy and generate some sales.