37
Copywriting for geeks An introduction to the science of selling with words by Marc-André Cournoyer http://macournoyer.com

Copywriting for geeks - Amazon Web Servicesmacournoyer.s3.amazonaws.com/copywriting_for_geeks.pdf · Copywriting for geeks An introduction to the science of selling with words by

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Copywriting for geeksAn introduction to the science of selling with words

by Marc-André Cournoyerhttp://macournoyer.com

A few years ago, I remember being more than doubtful about long copy and various sales techniques. I used to think being funny and making cool things was all it took to persuade people to use my stuff. I was right about the latter, but wrong about not believing in sales techniques that have been used for years.

The most common argument geeks have against copywriting is that it’s deceptive. We’ve all seen diet pills and get rich quick scams. Those have given copywriting a pretty bad name. But the core problem with geeks is that we are geeks. We are used to finding information for free and diving deeply into problems. So, comparing sales speech to our standards of knowledge, can be sometimes… deceptive.

My perception towards copywriting started to change after I sold a few copies of my first ebook. Although I saw quite a few complaints about my sales page from geeks, I sold a lot more copies than I expected.I started A/B testing elements on my sales page and noticed that what most sales “experts” recommended worked and stuff geeks told me about sales, didn’t.

I knew there was a giant gap in my knowledge. I studied everything I could find about sales, copywriting, advertising, marketing and started to apply what I was learning. A year later, I quit my job as a programmer and I’m now making a living selling my own products online. I know for a fact that my copywriting skills have something to do with this.

This book is based on the eight principles of persuasion as described in “Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion” by Robert B. Cialdini. Those principles have been extracted from psychological experiments and used (and abused) in various sales and marketing departments.

Later in this book you will also see various tips I’ve compiled and successfully used in my own copy.

Warning: powerful words ahead

There is one rule that you must follow when using the knowledge in this book. You must honour every promise you make in your copy. If you promise your product is the best in his category, work your ass off and make it so. If you promise it solves a need in an incredible way, test it and make sure it does. Selling is building a relationship with your customers, and starting that relationship with a lie is a sure way to fail.

Not all of the eight principles of persuasion presented in the following pages should be used in your copy. Some can be downright evil. But you must be aware of them all to understand how people will react and how much copywriting can be powerful.

If you believe you have an incredible product and are solving a real need, then you are doing a disservice to the world by not promoting it properly, nothing less! Lets fix that.

“ Every sale has five basic obstacles:- no need- no money- no hurry- no desire- no trust “

- Zig Ziglar

The Eight Principles

of Persuasion

Derived from the excellent book Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert B. Cialdini

Contrast

• Offer your most expensive product first, your following product will look less expensive.

• Compare your product with a more expensive alternative. Also known as “price anchoring”.

Principle of

http://www.mint.com/blog/how-to/price-anchoring/

That 16GB WiFi iPad looks a lot less expensive now, doesn’t it?

Concession

• Combined with contrast principle: “request-then-retreat” technique.

• Offer more expensive item first (request), then a less expensive one (retreat) to make the last one look less expensive (contrast) and force concession from the buyer.

Principle of

http://basecamphq.com/signup

By contrasting the more expensive plan with the two other ones, they make them look less expensive.$99 is a lot of money, but not as much compared to $149.

Additionally, using the request-then-retreat technique, they promote the Premium, mid-price plan (request) then force a concession by suggesting the Plus plan (retreat).

Reciprocity

• Give a gift (even unwanted), the receiver will feel pressure to give back.

• Give something for free.

Principle of

Like this book:)

FREE

Consistency

• “foot-in-the-door technique”: sell any small item to turn a prospect into a customer.

• Make a small commitment and use pressure to be consistent to build up to bigger commitments.

• Written commitments are more effective.

• Offer small rewards so receiver feels responsible for it.

Principle of

CommitmentPressure to be consistent with

commitment

Small

Bigger

People feel social pressure to be consistent with the image other people have of them. Making a commitment is a form of social affirmation, taking a stand, expressing who you are.

Once that sort of commitment is made, people will feel pressure to stay consistent with that commitment, to be true to the image they feel they are projecting.

A common use of this principle if the “free trial”. Whenever a product has a free aspect to it, it is based on this principle. The idea is to get prospects to commit to using your product. The more they use it, the more pressure they’ll feel to use it more and use you other products.

This is why it’s hard to get people to switch from your competitors to you.

Social Proof

• The more people believe something, the more likely we are to believe it.

• Even more important when there is a lot of uncertainty.

Principle of

Highlighted in red are the elements of social proof. Customer showcase, number of people using your product, testimonials, are all proofs that other people are using and liking your product.

http://basecamphq.com/

Social Proof

Social Proof is the most important thing to add to your copy. But it is a chicken-or-the-egg type of problem. When you’re launching, you could need some social proof, but since you just launched and nobody actually used your product, you can’t get anyone to testify for it.

Here are a few tricks:- Get testimonials for something else you did.- Get testimonials from current customers about how awesome you are.- Collect nice things people have said about you on the web.- Send emails to people you interacted with to get a short testimonial.

You’d be surprised how far simply asking for a testimonial can get you.

Once you start selling. Make sure to gather social proof wherever you can. As soon as someone mentions your product (positively) put it on your sales page. Anything that proves other people are using your product, put it on your sales page.

A sales page can never have too much social proof.

Association

• Bring bad news, people will dislike you.

• Associate your product with things people like, to make people like your product.

• Combined with social proof: show companies people like that use your product.

Principle of

Go Daddy has nothing to do with nice looking girls. But since quite a few people like nice looking girls, the principle of association will make some people like Go Daddy.

This principle has been abused in beer ads too for quite some time.http://www.godaddy.com/default.aspx

Scarcity

• Opportunities seem more valuable when their availability is limited.

• Show how much would be lost instead of how much could be saved.

Principle of

http://sendgrid.com/

Scarcity Principle:Show what is lost without your product instead of how much could be saved.

Urgency

• Force people to take action now instead of deferring and forgetting about your product.

• Make a time-based offer, eg.: a one week sale.

• Combine with scarcity principle by limiting quantities.

Principle of

http://owningrails.com/

Limit time

Limit quantity

• The most important decision: how to position your product?

Eg.: Position Schweppes as a soft drink or a mixer?

• Promise one large, unique and competitive benefit.

• Build on big ideas.Take customers out of their indifference.

• Long copy sells.Headline: 8-12 words.Body: 50-500 words or more.

• Don’t be a bore.

A few tips from

DavidOgilvy

David Ogilvy was known as "The Father of Advertising." In 1962, Time called him "the most sought-after wizard in today's advertising industry.

Source: http://todaysadvisor.com/images/david_ogilvy_how_to_create_advertising_that_sells_big.jpg

A few more tips ...

Benefits

notFeatures

• Do not present features of your products. Present the benefits those features offer.

• Answer: “what’s in it for me?”

• Present the benefits as if the person already had them. Make them see the end result.

Remarkability

• Make your copy stand out by making it remarkable.

• Remarkable: “Something worth making a remark about” - Seth Godin.

• Add personality and break the rules.

Risk reversal

• Eliminate any risk the person could see when buying.

• Present a generous refund policy: “100% money back guarantee”.

• Offer a trial period.

• Answer all objections a buyer might have.

Remove All Risks

Remember the quote from Zig Ziglar at the beginning of the book? “Every sale has five basic obstacles: no need, no money, no hurry, no desire, no trust.”

Those are risks to your customer. Your job is to eliminate those risks.

Think about the person that lands on your sales page for the first time, never heard about you or your product, but has the need you’re fulfilling. How can you eliminate any risk for that person in buying your product?

The obvious answer is to offer a guarantee. “100% money back guarantee “ is starting to sound like an old song. But it works. The idea that anyone can ask for his money back can be quite scary too. What if everyone asks for it? From my experience, every product I’ve launched has a 2% refund rate, and that seems to be pretty standard. I used to be upset and concerned each time someone asked for a refund. But the more products I sold the more I started to understand that this was inevitable.

Offering a refund can be quite powerful when doing customer support. Each time I’ve had people complain about my products, simply offering a refund turned them into a happy customers. Most people don’t like to get their money back.

List all the risks any prospect could see in taking your offer, and then try to remove all those risks. I guarantee you’ll have a killer offer... or I’ll give you your money back!

Master headlinesafter reading this pageor I write yours for free

Define need{

AnswerObjection{

Uniqueproposition}

Designing a headline is a good exercise in defining what needs your product is solving. To write a good headline you must understand what your customers want.

There are several techniques to structure a headline, here’s one that worked for me and is derived from the now famous Domino’s campaign: “You get fresh, hot pizza delivered to your door in 30 minutes or less - or it's free.” Probably the best headline in history. This single sentence allowed Domino’s to enter and dominate the already crowded space of pizza delivery.

The headline is divided into three parts. First, define the need your product is solving. What do people want to achieve when buying your product? Then, make a unique and bold proposition. For example in the Domino’s tagline, nobody was delivering in 30 minutes at that time. Your proposition must be unique, you must be the only one saying this and it must be bold. So bold it will make people doubt. Yes! Finally, and here is the magic trick, you conclude your headline by answering the doubts you’ve just put in their heads. Using Domino’s again: “delivered in 30 minutes? Yeah right… or it’s free? Holy burrito, count me in!”.

Swipe fileA swipe file is a collection of tested and proven advertising and sales letters. Keeping a swipe file (templates) is a common practice used by advertising copywriters and creative directors as a ready reference of ideas for projects.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swipe_file

Keeping a swipe file is a good way to improve your copywriting skills. Whenever you see a sales page that convinces you, looks nice and is successful, take note!

Here are the best examples I could find in my own swipe file, also a few of my own pages. Annotated with my comments.

http://basecamphq.com/

http://basecamphq.com/

http://www.appsumo.com/startup-copywriting/

Urgency Contrast

Large promise

Product position

The secret to copywritingThere you go, I've told you all of my copywriting secrets. That's all there is to know to get started, really.

But there is one last tip that will not only make you trust and learn copywriting but will also make you earn more money, and it's A/B testing.

You’ve probably heard about A/B testing too many times already. Everybody is talking about it. But so very few people actually do it.

When I was originally doubtful about the techniques I’ve showed you, a few A/B tests convinced me while putting a few more dollars in my pocket.

Although copywriting can be backed by some psychological facts, it is also an art. You have to develop your own style and adapt it to your market.

The only secret is to practice. And it won’t cost you a dime, it will actually make you some.

A/B Testing

A/B testing is a method which allows you to test several versions of a web page or email. You measure which version performs best by tracking actions performed.

Get the full video version & more

http://copywritingforgeeks.com/