Is Your Web Copy "Plain Talk"?
by Daniel Levis
Published on this site: April 12th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

It's true, we were all taught in school to express ourselves differently
on paper, than the way we speak. To follow rules of grammar, and
inject an artificial air of formality.
Forgetting about this training when you write web copy is one of
the best thing you can possibly do, unless youre selling to
the academic community. And forgetting about itmay not be as easy
as you think.
Do you write like youre speaking to a friend across the table?
Maybe even use a little slang, now & then?
Or do you worry about your high school English teacher committing
suicide, if he or she were to ever stumble across your stuff?
If so, do yourself a favor. Get over it.
Marketing Communications should never be about trying to impress.
Prospects should never have to think about what the heck youre
trying to say.
So keep your sentences short.
Avoid big words.
Keep plenty of free space around your copy, so it looks easy.
The mind can only really think of one thing at a time. If you want
your prospect to concentrate on something, make sure your points
dont require more than a split second to understand.
Look at the below example, taken from an ad for a special day care
course for kids. It's put on by a government agency that promotes
apple agriculture in their region.
The point of the text is this. Bring your kids here, because
well teach them something, instead of just baby-sitting them.
Read the example, and then the revision in plain talk.
EXAMPLE
This program encourages students to conduct simple investigations
of apples. Students experiment, observe, and keep records as they
become 'immersed" in a multi-sensory study of apples. Students
will make notes in learning logs as they investigate and discuss
the activities. In the learning logs the students simply record
what happened during the activities and their reactions to what
happened.
Students may later use their notes as the basis for language arts
activities, such as writing poems. Writing first serves as a tool
for learning and later becomes one of the possible end-products
of the lessons.
PLAIN TALK REVISION
Hey Mom and Dad, kids love to learn about apples. Theyre
naturally curious, and learn best by tasting, smelling, squeezing,
rolling, & tossing.
Its so much fun.
They love sharing the experience with their classmates, and cant
wait to write home about what happened. And the feelings they express
in the special diaries we give them are priceless.
Youll be giving your kids a head start at putting their thoughts
down on paper. One of lifes most important skills.
And what better way to get them out of your hair for a while?
Can you dig the difference?
I do a lot of work in the computer networking field, and often
need to read product specs & documentation. And it drives me
nuts!
Why is this stuff so full of techno babble, hyperbole, and long-winded
bafflegab? Is all of the rocket science talk supposed to impress
me into wanting to do something with their gadgetry?
Almost every product or service imaginable has a technical side,
and you can never over educate. But it shouldnt feel like
school.
Maybe you think youre selling a commodity, and theres
not much to the customers decision, but price. Think again.
There is always a technical differentiator.
One of the greatest skills you can acquire is to be able to boil
the froth off complex concepts, so that they become easy to understand.
Customers crave facts, and proof, even logic in order to feel comfortable
with their decisions, once youve stirred up their emotional
desire.
Inject them painlessly with web copy that comes across as plain
talk!

Daniel Levis is a top marketing consultant & direct
response copywriter based in Toronto Canada. Recently, Daniel &
world-renowned publicist & copywriter Joe Vitale teamed up to
co author Million Dollar Online Advertising Strategies
From The Greatest Letter Writer Of The 20th Century!, a tribute
to the late, great Robert Collier. Let the legendary Robert Collier
show you how to write
words that sell...Visit the below site & get 3 FREE Chapters!
http://www.Advertising-Online-Strategies.com/ad-strategies.html

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