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Good Copywriting Is Key To Converting
Toronto Prospects into
Customers
Good copyrighting is essential to having a successful Toronto Internet
website. Just for those of you who don’t know, the “copy” is any
sort of text-based content that’s included in an advertisement. No,
a website is not an advertisement, but nonetheless, you are still
trying to sell yourself, your company, ideas, and products or
services. Not only does good copy pull the reader in and entice him
or her to conduct business with your Toronto company, but proper writing
skills are also applauded by the major search engines. If your website
has spelling mistakes or contains run on or fragmented sentences,
the search engines will not see your website as being credible and
will bury it in the search results. The 80/20 principle comes into
play here; 20% of the Internet’s websites produce 80% of the sales.
The difference between a website that sells and one that doesn’t
sell is good copywriting. Below are a number of tips to help you
improve your website’s copy.
Know Your Target Audience
Don’t assume that every member of your target market is the same.
People in different demographics think and feel differently and it
is important that you communicate with them on their level.
Therefore, it is important to do a little research to get a better
understanding of your target market. You can then start to think
like the prospect rather than the marketer.
- Focus your efforts on attaining just one goal. For most
websites, the goal should be to get the prospect to call your
office so that you can close the sale over the phone. A good
sales person is a much more effective selling tool than a one
dimensional website. By just focusing on one goal, you can
easily tailor your website to meet that specific goal
- Most people don’t actually read websites – they just scan.
Therefore, it is critical to break up large blocks of copy and
employ appropriate headlines, sub-headings, boxes, sections and
colours.
- The headline is probably the most important aspect of your
copy. Think what kind of benefit your product or service
provides and make a big promise in regards to that benefit. The
goal is to draw the reader in to read the long copy below the
headline.
- It is important to build excitement, enthusiasm and create a
sense of urgency to get the reader to take the desired action as
soon as possible.
- Put yourself in the prospect's shoes and think of the most
common objections or concerns that prospect will have in regards
to your offer. It is important that these concerns are addressed
and countered in your copy in order to alleviate any doubts the
reader may have.
- Compare your products and services to those of your
competitors. Don’t be shy – you have to toot your own horn. Give
multiple reasons why the prospect should do business with your
company. Don’t bad mouth your competitors; just tout the reasons
why your company is superior to the competition.
- Let the reader know that he or she will be missing out if
they do not take the recommended action. Fear of loss is a
terrific motivator.
Conclusion
You can’t be expected to write winning copy on your first attempt.
Copywriting should always be a work in progress, and you should
continually tweak it until you are satisfied with the results. Play
around with different headlines, make different offers or promises,
or create a sense of urgency by offering a premium if the prospect
contacts you within a certain amount of time. Testing different
versions of your copy is the only way to discover what works best.
Happy copywriting.
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