Direct Response Copywriter Heads Off to Dan Kennedy Conference

I’m off to Atlanta next week for a Dan Kennedy conference. I’m extremely excited to learn from one of the top direct marketers on the planet. I use a lot of his copywriting techniques and they work.

I’ll blog every day from the conference and also tweet. The conference is Thursday through Saturday.

Follow me on Twitter here.

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I'm a direct response copywriter based in Charlotte, North Carolina. I specialize in providing copy and content for the direct marketing environment for clients around the world. Enter your info to the right for my free series: Seven Steps to High Converting Copy. Or contact me here.

CopyPress Wants Copywriter to Write for $3.33 an Hour.

A few weeks ago, I wrote about the extremely low pay that content farmers pay writers. I was (and am) upset for two reasons. 

  1. Writers should not accept such low pay.
  2. Companies that claim to care about writers should not offer such low pay. 

CopyPress just offered me an article and the pay is $20.

It will take me four hours to research and write the piece and conform to their style guide. Then I'll have to spend two hours satisfying, in a purely syntactical fashion, the hyper-anal editor who, to justify her fee, will obsess about 435 out of the 500 words.

So the whole gig will take around six hours and I'll get $20. That's $3.33 an hour.

Just for a bit of fun, I thought I'd make a list of things I could do for higher pay. 

  • Pick up cigarette butts outside office buildings (next to the ‘No Smoking’ signs).
  • Clean toilets in a biker bar after closing time.
  • Inspect sewers in a ‘developing’ country.
  • Work security at a death metal concert.
  • Wake up at 4 a.m. to shovel horse ‘droppings’ in a freezing barn.
  • Pack boxes in a ball bearing factory.
  • Fry hamburgers.
  • Smash my head against a wall to test helmets.
  • Shovel snow in Anchorage. In February.
  • Put diapers, toilet paper, sanitary napkins, and peanut butter on store shelves.
  • Pump gas.
  • Mow grass.
  • Rake leaves (and put them in the bags).
  • Bus tables.
  • Be a rickshaw driver in New Delhi.

Alternatively, I could find great clients who:

  • Value persuasive writing.
  • Pay accordingly.
  • Treat me like a professional.
  • Tell the truth about their compensation.
  • Pay on time and not make excuses about ‘their providers’ not getting funds in the right accounts. (Yeah, right).
  • Value great content.

Good thing I’ve been marketing myself and have plenty of these clients.

The only activity that pays less than CopyPress is jury duty.

This gem from the CopyPress website.

CopyPress writers receive competitive rates and are paid in bi-monthly installments. Writers never wait around to be paid and always know exactly when to expect their next pay check. 

Memo to CopyPress...next time, for your website, hire a copywriter who will tell the truth. Rule #1 in copywriting is to tell the truth. Telling lies will come back to haunt you. Your rates are NOT competitive and you know it. Also, based on all the emails I received last week about late payment due to a 'technical' error, writers DO NOT know when to expect their pay.

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I'm a direct response copywriter based in Charlotte, North Carolina. I specialize in providing copy and content for the direct marketing environment for clients around the world. Enter your info to the right for my free series: Seven Steps to High Converting Copy. Or contact me here.

Direct Response Copywriter on the Split Infinitive

Among writers, the split infinitive is one of the most controversial style issues.

It’s not a grammatical issue. Simple agreement is part of being grammatically correct.

We write: ‘I like you’ not ‘I likes you.’

But the grammatical rule books vacillate when it comes to the split infinitive.

‘To boldly go where no man has gone before.’

Ummmmm….

What would you write in place of the most famous split infinitive of all time?

I’m not a TV writer so I won’t venture into outer space with our friends at Star Trek but I’m a direct response copywriter so I’ll discuss the split infinitive as it relates to sales and persuasion…and conversion. To me, shunting a clause or an adverb in the middle of the infinitive is unnecessary 99.9% of the time.

If I wrote ‘to boldly go’ in copy, I would replace the split infinitive with a more vivid verb.

I might write...

 

  • To venture
  • To travel
  • To globetrot
  • To voyage
  • To explore

 

In general, a verb like ‘to go’ is weak and, even in direct response copywriting, strong verbs make for better copy.

I’m always finding ways to reduce word count in direct response copy and will always work to use two words instead of three. Yet another reason to avoid the split infinitive. 

Now, in non-commercial writing, I always avoid the split infinitive. I hate it.

BUT in direct response copywriting, if a split test shows that a headline with a split infinitive beats a headline without a split infinitive, then I’m all for the split infinitive. Even if the stylist in me is squirming a touch.

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I'm a direct response copywriter based in Charlotte, North Carolina. I specialize in providing copy and content for the direct marketing environment for clients around the world. Enter your info to the right for my free series: Seven Steps to High Converting Copy. Or contact me here.

Direct Response Copywriter on Crispness

I spent my formative years in England. There were three TV stations and two of them only broadcast 10 hours a day. So I listened to the radio and I love radio to this day.

BBC Radio 1 had a show called ‘Pick of the Pops’ and the DJ for decades was Alan ‘Fluff’ Freeman. He began each show thus:

Greetings Pop Pickers

Look no further for an example of crisp copy.

The wonderful Alan 'Fluff' Freeman on Pick of the Pops...THIS WAY to crisp copy...

I worked with one of the giants of direct response copywriting and he wrote that he admired the crispness of my copy. One of the nicest things anyone has ever said about me. I work hard to keep the copy tight and readable. Yes, direct response copy must be conversational but it must also avoid tongue-twisters.

She sells sea shells by the sea shore…

...And similar structures will not appear in my copy.

Let’s go back to our friend, Alan ‘Fluff’ Freeman. ‘Greetings pop pickers’ includes obvious alliteration: 'pop pickers' and this comes from the alliteration in the title of the show ‘Pick of the Pops.’

Alliteration, according to my dictionary, is the occurrence of the same letter or sound at the beginning of adjacent or closely connected words.

I would go one step further and describe ‘Pick of the Pops’ as consonance…alliteration with clear use of a consonant: ‘Pop Pickers.’

For the copywriter, consonance is a powerful weapon I like to use sparingly. Why? Normal conversation rarely includes alliteration.

‘Fluff’ might come up to you and say, ‘Greetings Pop Pickers’ but I won’t—at least not in regular daily conversation.

The opposite of consonance is assonance and this has nothing to do with donkeys. I avoid assonance: alliteration with vowels. I go one step further and include ‘internal’ assonance as writing to be avoided.

Some examples:

  • An interesting interlude…
  • The eternal…
  • You use…

Internal assonance trips up the reader quickly and a tripped up reader will stop reading.

Let’s take a look at some crisp writing. Martin Amis, who is stylistically all over the place and whose quality can vary, can also be supremely brilliant and his writing can be textbook crisp.

From his novel, London Fields. The novel’s main characters have crisp names.

  • Nicola Six
  • Keith Talent
  • Guy Clinch

From the book.

Keith’s account of the football match. I’ve heard many such summaries from him – of boxing matches, snooker matches, and of course darts matches. At first I thought he just memorized sections of the tabloid sports pages. Absolutely wrong.

BUT…in the previous paragraph…Amis slips into some internal assonance.

"How will we teach the children…"

I would avoid, ‘will we’ because of the double ‘whe’ sounds.

I’m glad, I think, that I never met Hunter S. Thompson but there’s no doubting the power of Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. I once made the mistake of renting a cassette featuring Thompson reading this book and it was unhearable…just pure mumbling. But let’s take a look at some crisp prose from the pages of the book.

Suddenly I felt guilty again. The shark! Where was it? I tossed the paper aside and began to pace. Losing control, I felt my whole act slipping…and then I saw the car, swooping down a ramp in the next-door garage. Deliverance! I grasped my leather satchel and moved forward to meet my wheels.

The world’s crispest writer might be copywriter Herschell Gordon Lewis. From his excellent book about copywriting, On the Art of Writing Copy.

That’s a marketing problem, not a copy problem. But copy can set the right climate. A product enclosure, properly worded, can head off arguments. For example: You sell consumer electronics. Into each box goes a neatly typed or printed piece of copy.

Gloriously crisp.

There’s no correlation between short sentences and crisp writing and it’s a mistake to turn copy into a series. Of short sentences. And phrases. Now. Kept short. Truncated.

A long sentence can be crisp even though I would typically avoid long sentences in direct response copy, and press release writing, and TV scripts, and any writing that’s striving to sell products or services—even products and services I’m trying to sell to writers who enjoy long sentences and are looking for a way to garner more information about the art and craft of constructing elongated sentences replete with adjectival clauses, adverbial clauses, and, in fact, all types of clauses but only those clauses that clarify the ultimate meaning of the sentence so the copy motivates the reader to take the next step, whether it’s handing over an email address or pulling a credit card out of their purse or wallet.

I kept that one short.

Pop pickers.

Copy cognoscenti.

I wouldn’t use the phrase ‘crisp copy’ in my copy because it’s a tongue-twister and could trip the reader.

Oh and if you want to meet the wonderful Alan ‘Fluff’ Freeman, go here. The king of all DJs.

Not arf!

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I'm a direct response copywriter based in Charlotte, North Carolina. I specialize in providing copy and content for the direct marketing environment for clients around the world. Enter your info to the right for my free series: Seven Steps to High Converting Copy. Or contact me here.

Direct Response Copywriter on Spam and Other Meaty Issues

When you're marketing by email, the subject line is extremely important. Here's a subject line for a recent, and totally unsolicited, email I received. 

This email is a DIRECT response to a resume that you posted on Career Builder, THIS IS NOT SPAM!

It IS spam and it's amateur to write 'it's not spam' when it's pure 100% spam. And I know all about spam: I live in North Carolina, the home of spam.

Proven direct response headlines work well as subject lines...with one caveat: subject lines have to be shorter.

But "How to" and "Five ways" and "WARNING:..." headlines work well. Subject lines that introduce stories are effective--as are topical subject lines. Many spam filters kick out emails with subject lines that include a question.

If you want to destroy trust with the reader, include the sentence: THIS IS NOT SPAM!

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I'm a direct response copywriter based in Charlotte, North Carolina. I specialize in providing copy and content for the direct marketing environment for clients around the world. Enter your info to the right for my free series: Seven Steps to High Converting Copy. Or contact me here.