You have to keep spiking the buying temperature of your subscribers
Assume your reader doesn't know what you know, nor does your listener
Each box is meant to high spike their buying temp
Strong Email Triggers
You need a very strong email trigger, "Uh Oh Your prescription is expiring"
Transactional Emails - auto sent after you commit a certain action in the website
Feature: McDonald’s has drive-up windows.
Benefit: You can get a tasty, hot breakfast fast, on the way to work -- without getting out of your car.
See how the feature was void of any emotion, while the benefit tapped into desires? Maybe the reader doesn’t want to make breakfast. Or maybe the time-saving element hit a hot button. It might have been the “tasty hot” part that appealed to the desire for comfort.
The process of selling requires overcoming objections, so your benefit statement will need support. As a copywriter, you’ll hold the aces when you know your product and customer and find where the two meet in the form of a human need.
Social proof comes in many forms: testimonials, statistics, accolades, endorsements, customer lists or examples, reviews, and so forth.
Weave social proof into your copy to build credibility. It need not be heavy handed or forced. Just play a card that works for your company and, of course, is true. It might be something like … “twenty of the Fortune 100 companies rely on …” or something less lofty such as … “… is enjoying a 20% annual growth rate.” Both approaches help overcome the reader’s fear of betting on an unknown commodity.
I could tell you I have kids. It’s true, but not all that conversational. Now, when I tell you I have twelve and fifteen year old daughters that both love to sing and dance, I suspect you’ll respond to that with a question or comment. That’s engagement, a good thing, and the result of me offering specific details.
Are you familiar with the term “call-to-action?” It’s the written version of asking for the sale, a must in almost any form of marketing copy you’ll compose. The object is to get your reader to take action. Your success rate will increase when you tell the reader exactly what to do next, where to go, how to order, and when to act (which tends to be NOW!).
I’ll offer some tips for your call-to-action. You won’t always be able to play these cards, but consider them when appropriate.
- Include urgency: Limited time frames, deadlines, reasons to be prompt.
- Make an offer: Discount, bonus, free information.
- Highlight value: Get your informative report, join our exclusive community.
- Overcome objections: Eliminate or reduce risks with free trials or money back guarantees.
A few great headline tactics include:
- The useful headline: Often a "how to."
- A curiosity builder: This tactic has a teaser element that capitalizes on suspense and mystery. (Read “How Do You Write the Powerful Headlines?”)
- The urgent headline: Why? Why not? Why now?
- The list headline: Proven winners such as (X) secrets, tips, ways, shortcuts, etc.
- The news hack: Attach your piece to something topical or someone famous.
- The contrarian: Mistakes, dangers, lies. I find negatives positively irresistible.
Easy! Start using dynamic tags in your lead nurturing emails so you can address recipients by name. You could also greet returning customers by name on your home page. With smart content, the sky's the limit.
Sources:http://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/copywriting-101-content-principles-ht
http://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/email-marketing-examples-list
I could tell you I have kids. It’s true, but not all that conversational. Now, when I tell you I have twelve and fifteen year old daughters that both love to sing and dance, I suspect you’ll respond to that with a question or comment. That’s engagement, a good thing, and the result of me offering specific details.
Are you familiar with the term “call-to-action?” It’s the written version of asking for the sale, a must in almost any form of marketing copy you’ll compose. The object is to get your reader to take action. Your success rate will increase when you tell the reader exactly what to do next, where to go, how to order, and when to act (which tends to be NOW!).
I’ll offer some tips for your call-to-action. You won’t always be able to play these cards, but consider them when appropriate.
- Include urgency: Limited time frames, deadlines, reasons to be prompt.
- Make an offer: Discount, bonus, free information.
- Highlight value: Get your informative report, join our exclusive community.
- Overcome objections: Eliminate or reduce risks with free trials or money back guarantees.A few great headline tactics include:
- The useful headline: Often a "how to."
- A curiosity builder: This tactic has a teaser element that capitalizes on suspense and mystery. (Read “How Do You Write the Powerful Headlines?”)
- The urgent headline: Why? Why not? Why now?
- The list headline: Proven winners such as (X) secrets, tips, ways, shortcuts, etc.
- The news hack: Attach your piece to something topical or someone famous.
- The contrarian: Mistakes, dangers, lies. I find negatives positively irresistible.















