Entries Tagged 'marketing' ↓
November 20th, 2009 — copywriter, email copywriting, freelance copywriting, marketing

Most emails sent today are HTML which carries an extra benefit – the hyperlink. This little fella allows you to direct your reader to a website for further information or an opportunity to immediately buy or sign up to an offer.
But if your email is to be interesting you will need to make sure it is appealing to your reader.
- Be friendly
Write as you would a letter – use a salutation, if you can, personalise it with the recipient’s name. This adds a personal touch and begins to build a relationship. Always remember to close it in a professional way too.
- Communicate in a glance
A solid wall of text isn’t going to be very appealing. Use headings and subheadings to allow the reader to see at a glance what information the email holds.
- Don’t make them wait to the end
You will want to include within your email a link to your offer, but don’t leave it until the end. Buy incorporating it within the email several times you are allowing your reader to click through to it as soon as they have made their buying decision.
- Short and sweet
There are times when you’ll want to communicate a lot of information to your reader, but sending an incredibly long email is a no no. Give them a taster of what you want them to know and then ask them to click for more information. That link can them take them through to your website or blog where the full article is shown.
- Benefits and features
As in your website copy and sales letters, make sure you add in your features and benefits. You don’t have to include everything, just the most important ones in relation to what you are writing about.
- Don’t forget the opt-out
Always, always, always include your opt-out link in all your email communications.
Don’t forget, your emails don’t always have to sell. To enhance your relationship with your customers use them to also share information that might be useful to them. By giving away free hints and tips you’ll help build trust and credibility and strengthen your relationship.
Read also:
Is EMail Marketing Right For You?
Email Marketing – It’s All In The Subject Line
Sally Ormond – freelance copywriter
November 16th, 2009 — building newsletter subscriber list, email copywriting, freelance copywriting, marketing

Email marketing provides businesses with a quick and inexpensive way to reach hundreds of customers instantly. It has revolutionised marketing – but its impact has also been lessened by the spammers out there.
Spammers are email marketers who fill millions of inboxes with unsolicited messages. The problem is their abuse of the system has made in increasingly difficult for genuine businesses to use this method.
You used to only have to worry about having a strong message to make sure your email got read. Now you have to prove it’s not spam.
What is a spam email?
Spam is unwanted email that is delivered to thousands of recipient simultaneously. Obviously you could argue what constitutes ‘unwanted’ email until the cows come home but as a general rule if the email comes from someone you don’t know it is perceived as spam.
When you should use email…
- To tell your customers about new offers
- When sending advice, useful information to enhance your customer service
- Keeping leads warm by staying in touch
- Following up contacts in a sales campaign (e.g. to encourage sign-ups etc).
All of these have one thing in common – they are concerned with building relationships with your customers and keeping them up to date.
…and when you shouldn’t
- Prospecting – this can be seen as an annoying and impersonal method of initial contact
- Generating leads – again this is impersonal and your email will be deleted
- Using rented lists – you have no relationship with these contacts so you’ll be seen as a spammer
If you want to market through email your best bet would be to develop your own opt-in list – if you have the recipient’s agreement for you to send information to them they are more likely to buy from you at some point.
Build your own list
Building your own opt-in list is fairly straightforward but it can take time. Therefore you should start immediately rather than wait until you have a campaign in mind.
You can attract opt-ins through your website (give away a free report in exchange for their details), your reply devices and your order forms.
Your request doesn’t have to be complicated, simply:
- Ask for their email address
- Ask for permission to send emails to them
- Tell them exactly what kind of emails you will send them
- Assure them you won’t share their contact details with anyone else
Of course, one thing to remember is that you must create an opt-out. This should consist of a reminder of why they are receiving the emails (i.e. they requested updates) and an opt-out link which will take them through to a webpage which automatically removes them from your mailing list.
Before you know it, you’ll have an in-house marketing list.
Further reading:
Email Marketing – It’s All In The Subject Line
Work You Way Towards The Perfect Email Body
Sally Ormond – Freelance Copywriter
October 1st, 2009 — copywriting, freelance copywriting, marketing

Adjectives and adverbs – they have their place but not in your sales copy.
When writing to sell, be to the point, clear and precise. Littering your copy with qualifiers detracts from your message. They will turn an excellent piece of copy into a lame, unexplosive whimper.
To make an impact your copy should be littered with high impact verbs – powerful language that will make your reader sit up and take notice. This isn’t always easy to attain and may take several drafts before you are anywhere near close.
Ali Hale has written a great post about these vampire words sucking the life out of your writing on Copyblogger. If you want your writing to stand out and be noticed grab that garlic and stake and banish the little critters from your headlines and body text.
September 23rd, 2009 — copywriting, freelance copywriting, marketing
“What am I doing wrong?”
This is a question that most new business (even some established ones) ask at one time or another.
Nothing seems to be going right. Your latest sales letter bombed, your newsletter isn’t even being opened, and your brochures are just being ignored.
So what do you have to do to get noticed?
It all basically boils down to understanding your audience – they are your customers, if you fail to get to grips with what they want you don’t stand a chance.
Whether you write your own copy or you use a freelance copywriter, if you don’t do your research into what your target market wants, you’ll never know.
Sonia Simone of Copyblogger has written a great post outlining a complete newbie’s guide to marketing which illustrates that you don’t need to spend thousands of pounds on the latest marketing eBook that promises the universe (and probably won’t deliver) – the only thing you need to know is your customer.
Research, research, research (and test, test, test) – no one said marketing was easy. It takes time and understanding – but you’ll get there in the end.