Making Sales Copy Easy to Read
| by Joseph Farinaccio | February 15, 2006
You want your sales letter or ad copy to be easy to read. The following elements help make copy reading easy on the eyes. And easy to understand.
Reading your sales copy shouldnt be a chore for anyone. It must be reader-friendly.
So youll want to...
A) Break Up the Copy
This means no long paragraphs. No thick blocks of text. Using short, punchy sentences.
Think of how you read. Youre a busy person. You want information... now... fast. You dont like reading a never-ending pile of words. You like to see lots of white space on the paper or computer screen in front of you. Its easier on the eyes.
Sales letter copy must be written so it can be scanned easily. Many readers are scanners - - especially on the web.
B) Use Contractions Wherever Possible
As a general copy rule...
DO NOT use do not when you can use dont. You see what I mean?
Say things like: Ive, youve, youre, youll, well, thats, hed, wouldve, theres, theyre, youd, whos, lets, its, itll, hes, shes, arent, havent, cant, and shouldnt ... etc.
It gives your copy a conversational tone. It helps it flow.
C) Use SUBHEADINGS
Your reader will generally like Subheads (short, easy to read headlines). And put them in BOLD.
They help to effectively communicate the benefits in your sales message. It makes reading easier while the reader is scanning your sales copy.
D) Use bullet points for lists (or potential lists). Bullet points are
1) easy to read
2) easy to scan
3) easy on the eyes
4) just like this
E) Put a you-orientation in your copy. Say things like, Well help you save money, instead of, We help our clients save money.
F) Use fonts and font colors in a uniform way ... to shoot for a smooth look. These elements provide a consistent and unified presentation to your reader.
A great deal of sales material is too busy. The human brain cant process all of the information being thrown at it. That means less readership ... and less sales.
You want all sales media (including webpages, sales letters, ads and brochures) to be simply designed and visually consistent. These small things will go a long way in making your sales copy easy to read - and effective.
Copyright 2006 Joseph Farinaccio
Reading your sales copy shouldnt be a chore for anyone. It must be reader-friendly.
So youll want to...
A) Break Up the Copy
This means no long paragraphs. No thick blocks of text. Using short, punchy sentences.
Think of how you read. Youre a busy person. You want information... now... fast. You dont like reading a never-ending pile of words. You like to see lots of white space on the paper or computer screen in front of you. Its easier on the eyes.
Sales letter copy must be written so it can be scanned easily. Many readers are scanners - - especially on the web.
B) Use Contractions Wherever Possible
As a general copy rule...
DO NOT use do not when you can use dont. You see what I mean?
Say things like: Ive, youve, youre, youll, well, thats, hed, wouldve, theres, theyre, youd, whos, lets, its, itll, hes, shes, arent, havent, cant, and shouldnt ... etc.
It gives your copy a conversational tone. It helps it flow.
C) Use SUBHEADINGS
Your reader will generally like Subheads (short, easy to read headlines). And put them in BOLD.
They help to effectively communicate the benefits in your sales message. It makes reading easier while the reader is scanning your sales copy.
D) Use bullet points for lists (or potential lists). Bullet points are
1) easy to read
2) easy to scan
3) easy on the eyes
4) just like this
E) Put a you-orientation in your copy. Say things like, Well help you save money, instead of, We help our clients save money.
F) Use fonts and font colors in a uniform way ... to shoot for a smooth look. These elements provide a consistent and unified presentation to your reader.
A great deal of sales material is too busy. The human brain cant process all of the information being thrown at it. That means less readership ... and less sales.
You want all sales media (including webpages, sales letters, ads and brochures) to be simply designed and visually consistent. These small things will go a long way in making your sales copy easy to read - and effective.
Copyright 2006 Joseph Farinaccio
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