When you see, read or hear anything aimed at advertising,
marketing or making a product look good, you experience the output of
copywriting. Compared to computer programming and website development,
copywriting as a technical profession is pretty old, dating back as
early as the 1800s when practitioners simply created ads. Copywriters
wrote materials that were meant to be printed on paper, wooden boards or
canvases to showcase the benefits of different products from
cure-it-all medicines to musical concerts; There were no radio,
television or Internet.
Over the years, copywriting evolved into a
bigger and more far-reaching field, as technology imbued the already
powerful printed word with additional energy and potential. From merely
dominating newspapers, billboards, and flyers, copywriting became the
springboard for television and radio commercials, media-rich online ads,
graphic-intensive presentation slides, stunning product brochures,
company press releases and email marketing.
Pinning Down What Copywriting Is
While
copywriting as a tool has been transformed by technological and
socio-economic changes, its essence as an art remains the same. The
printed word still lies at the heart of copywriting even when the
copy-which encapsulates the advertising, marketing or PR message-is
certain to undergo various iterations as it is articulated in different
formats for different media channels. The copy can be converted into a
dialogue for video ads, as a narration for a radio commercial or
communicated through computer-generated animation.
Strictly
speaking, copywriting is the process of writing the words that are used
in any type of publicity, sales, marketing and advertising content. It
also covers any type of communication channel, including print,
broadcast and the Internet. All the written elements of any content is a
product of copywriting, including photo captions, headlines, slogans,
and the lyrics of a jingle.
What Copywriters Do
Because
their playing field is quite broad, you'll find that copywriters write
just about everything that endorses or publicizes a product, a person,
an organization, a business, a service, or an idea. You'll find
copywriters writing the speeches of prominent politicians and dishing
out those spammy emails you get every doggone day.
You'll also
find that some of the most endearing or clever slogans were hatched in
the minds of the most ingenious copywriters. Apple's "Think Different,"
Nike's "Just Do It," Nike competitor Adidas' "Impossible is Nothing" and
Mercedes' "The Race to Perfection has no Finish Line," are just some of
the most memorable output of effective copywriting; transforming a few
words into highly influential mantras that persuade or compel people,
organizations and even generations toward a certain thought or action.
The slogan "Make Love Not War" is copywriting material that encapsulates
the turbulent '60s and '70s while the emotionally-charged "Power of
One" video, released by Earth Communications Office and originally
intended to espouse environmental causes, has been used in countless
presentations as a means to endorse other advocacies. If you want to
enjoy some of the top copies for product endorsement, read a Fast
Company article that selected some of the juiciest ad slogans nominated
by Digg users.
What really is copywriting? Given its potential and
the range of channels it can be communicated through, copywriting is
the act of writing the text that are used in direct mails, taglines,
jingles, advertising, marketing, and public relations. As long as it
serves the purpose of endorsing something, the text can take the form of
blog and social media posts, online web copies, postcards, sales
letters, tweets, white papers and press releases. Simply put, the
products of copywriting is quite ubiquitous and may be as low down and
dirty as the sleazy text in badly written email marketing or the lofty
taglines that continue to influence human and organizational decisions
long after they have first been published or broadcasted.
Top Traits for Successful Copywriters
Given
all the things they are supposed to do, you wonder why some copywriters
slack on their jobs, taking the hours breezily while others seem to
have pinned their faces on their computer displays. Well, like the
output it crunches out in the thousands every day, copywriting also has a
broad range of practitioners. This is not to say that copywriters who
are glued on their office seats and pinned to their monitors all day are
the best pros around. On the contrary, some of the top copywriters are
those that work outside the office and do their wordsmithing in scenic
Mediterranean coastal towns or in some breathtakingly beautiful Asian
beach resorts.
Regardless of their working styles, the best
copywriters generally approach their work in a similar manner. Let's
summarize the elements of good copywriting that top practitioners always
employ:
A great copy should:
· address the target audience directly
· address their problems when endorsing a product or service
· offer a solution
· focus on the positive instead of the negative
If
you ask which character traits separate bad copywriting professionals
from high-grade practitioners, experts disagree on the exact number of
traits but generally cite several traits in common. Interestingly, great
writing is rarely one of them. What? Based on what we can glean online,
most copywriting authorities including Brian Eisenberg and Gayle
Leonard nominate the following characteristics as the main traits of
winning copywriters:
· creative and imaginative
· well-read with an eagerness to do research
· high empathy
· good listener
· deadline conscious
· humble
· web savvy
· simple but excellent communicator
· disciplined
You can see these principles and more in this copywriting presentation.
Meanwhile, one of the leading content marketing companies, Copyblogger cites empathy
as the single most important trait a copywriter should posses. Sure,
topnotch copywriters should be creative and imaginative and possess
uncanny communicative abilities, but without empathy, even the
most-clever slogan will fall by the wayside. The art of copywriting is
always deployed in a communication scenario within which a message is
created and sent to an intended audience. If your message does not
resonate with your audience, then your copy fails miserably, even if it
took you days agonizing over how to perfect the words that make up your
message. Empathy with your audience helps establish which things to
include in your copy and how to get them communicated, so that your
words-however simple-will find the right emotional or psychological
string in your audience to spur them into action.
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