|
Welcome to AllGoodArticles - Submit Free Articles For Massive Exposure,Publishers,Aurthors,writers !
Articles » Writing-&-Speaking » Copywriting >> View Article
|
 |
|
 |
| Words To Avoid Using In Copywriting And Advertising |
By:
Ray L. Edwards |
|
I could still recall the days of writing telegrams. That was before the fax machine, internet and email. Writing a telegram meant economy of words and so obvious verbs and needless adjectives had to be omitted.
Today, with the advent of email and other cheap sources of communication you donât have to be that paranoid about your message-except you are writing an advertisement. When writing a classified ad for example, every word must count in the small space allowed and so word choice becomes very important.
But word choice is not only about being brief.
Even when crafting a long sales letter you should try and avoid using the personal pronouns: âwe, me, I, our,usâ. The sales message should be about your prospects and not about your company. The âwe syndromeâ is a common error but it can easily be avoided. A sales message should state upfront the benefit to the customer not parade how many awards the company has received in the past ten years. Whenever possible then the copy should be written in the third person.
There are some other words that are very common in advertising but are just too vague to have any force. Great copy is always specific. âHow to make $3, 3 from your home in 30 days!â has more force than âHow to make money from home.â Here are some commonly used words that lack force because their meaning is too ethereal:
It - State what âitâ is rather than leave âitâ for the reader to figure out. This word can often be replaced by what âitâ represents or stands in place of.
Quality - This has a similar meaning to âpersonalityâ. We often hear people say that someone has personality. But everyone has a personality whether good or bad. The same holds for quality. Every product or service has some quality which the customer will be the ultimate judge of.
Superlatives such as âtastiest, best, fastest, strongest, superior, minimize, optimizeâ. The problem with these words is that they instill doubt in the readers because these claims appear unsubstantiated. These words lack power because they are not measurable. Take the word âsuperiorâ for example. What criterion or measurement was used to judge this product as superior and by how much?
Solutions - This word cannot stand on its own. If you are selling a product or service it is also obvious that you are selling the solution to a problem, so state what the solution is rather than just using the word.
Technology - This word is commonly used to suggest innovation and newness. But customers have little concern about the technology that is behind the products they buy. They are only concerned about the benefit they derive from these products and services. How many drivers are really concerned about the technology thatâs under the hoods of the vehicle they drive? They are really only concerned that the vehicle is reliable and gives them some social status.
Difference - Rather than stating that you are different from your competitors state the difference instead. Just saying âdifferentâ means little and is just filling space. The statement âWe make all the differenceâ doesnât leave the prospect more educated than before reading your sales message.
Consider the following advertiserâs blurb:
âWe make all the difference because of our superior quality and solutions we offer.â
Itâs like junk food - a lot of flavor but zero nutritional value. This statement means little because itâs not specific at all. It creates more questions than answers and leaves the reader totally confused. And this is the last thing you want to do to a customer.
Go to any website and youâll see statements such as âcan save you time and moneyâ, (well how much?) âcreates website in less timeâ (less than 2, 4, 100 hours?), âmaximize your gas mileageâ (by how much 1%, 5%, 40%?). All these statements will triple their effectiveness by using numbers (note that I gave a quantity, âtripleâ).
The more specific your message is the more believable you will appear. Using a bunch of superlatives only makes you seem self-serving. Customers are immune to this type of hype and filters out these claims like a squirrel discards peanut shells.
When making any comparison in your sales letter state the baseline, use numbers and give a time period whenever possible. In this way you donât have to use superlatives because the numbers will speak for themselves. If you follow this simple rule your sales conversion rate will increase by % within 29 days of putting this into effect.
Even though that last statement was hypothetical you can sense its power because specific numbers were used instead of just saying âyour sales will increaseâ.
I think itâs time to review your sales message and sweep away the chaff words leaving the pure wheat behind.
Youâll be % happier that you did!
About Author:
Ray L. Edwards is a master copywriter, published author and Internet Marketing Consultant. His copywriting clients have claimed up to 1,600% increase in their conversion rates just from using his services. He is an expert in writing sales copy for the web. Find more hot selling tips at
|
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
Technorati Profile
|