14 Mar 2008 02:21:36 | Glenn Murray
How to Make the Most of Your Website Copywriter By Glenn Murray
*
Many people feel uncertain when dealing with copywriters. Like
any artform, writing is subjective; instead of black and white,
most business owners and marketing managers see
indistinguishable shades of grey. But copywriting possesses one
key element that most other forms of art don't - a commercial
imperative.
Because the copywriter's audience is driven by the realities of
the business market, so too is the copywriter. Although the good
ones love to write, they don't necessarily love to write about
toilet paper and real-estate. Copywriters - in particular
website copywriters - write because it's their job. And like any
job, copywriting has very defined objectives and parameters
which determine how the copywriter works, and the kind of
material they produce.
So, if you need black and white, this is where you'll find it.
There are two primary commercial realities for a website
copywriter. Understand these realities, and you'll understand
the writer. Ignore them, and your job will take longer, be more
frustrating, be less engaging, and earn you less money.
REALITY 1 - READER-FRIENDLY AND SEARCH-ENGINE-FRIENDLY A website
copywriter needs to adhere to certain guidelines to ensure your
website is both reader-friendly and search-engine-friendly. This
is black and white.
Because most websites rely on search engines for their traffic,
your website copywriter has to write for two broad audiences:
human and computer. This introduces a number of complexities
because, quite often, these audiences want different things.
For instance, with humans, less is generally more. But with
computers, more is more. Humans need to understand, so the fewer
words the better. Search engines, on the other hand, are
programmed to think that anything important enough to be ranked
highly has to have a lot of words. A website copywriter must
balance these conflicting requirements. Your copywriter will
work faster and more efficiently if you don't demand too few
words or too many.
TIP: If your site needs both humans and search engines, try not
to set your heart on less than 100 words per page or more than
300 words. Generally speaking, somewhere in the middle is a nice
compromise for both audiences.
And it's not just the number of words used that's important.
Humans tend not to like repeated words, whereas search engines
do. Humans will understand from your heading what it is you do,
and if it's relevant. Mention it once, and they'll generally
remember. Search engines are not so smart. They need to be told
again and again. This is how they figure out how relevant your
site is.
TIP: Don't ask your website copywriter to be a minimalist. The
search engines won't like it. By the same token, don't ask them
to simply jam every page full of hundreds of your primary
keyword phrases, because your human readers won't like that (in
fact, neither will the search engines). The trick is to expect
each page to repeat one or two primary keyword phrases 5-10
times.
TIP: Remember, balancing human and computer requirements is time
consuming. Try to have a clear understanding of the objective of
each page before your writer starts. You'll get a much better
product with fewer time consuming iterations.
REALITY 2 - BENEFITS, AUDIENCES, PRODUCTS, SERVICES, FEATURES A
website copywriter deals in benefits, audiences, products,
services, and features. This is black and white.
These things may be painfully obvious to you, but they won't be
to your copywriter. And although a good copywriter will be able
to draw them out of you, they won't be able to accurately and
comprehensively identify them alone.
TIP: Before you engage a website copywriter, make a list of what
you do, who you do it for, and what benefits it gives them. Your
job will cost more if your brief consists of one line, "I want
to increase sales!"
When it comes down to it, a good website is written around
benefits. Customers are only interested in how you can benefit
them. This means benefits are the website copywriter's
inspiration. By the end of the project, you'll be sick and tired
of hearing your copywriter ask, "But what are the benefits of
that to your customer?" You'll definitely thank them for asking
though.
TIP: Don't confuse features with benefits. A feature is what you
do or how you do it. A benefit is what advantage that brings to
the customer. Your list should make a clear distinction between
the two. This will save your copywriter a LOT of time, and save
you a lot of money. Most importantly, it will MAKE you a lot of
money because your website will engage your customer.
Website copywriting is an artform. But because it's an artform
with a commercial foundation, it can be understood by anyone in
business. And when you understand the commercial realities
copywriter, the greys of the artform will begin to seem more
like the familiar black and white of the nine-to-five. Then, and
only then, will you be able to make the most of your website
copywriter.
About Author :
* Glenn Murray is an SEO copywriter and article
submission specialist. He is a director of article PR
company Article PR and also of copywriting studio Divine
Write.