How to Craft
Cash-Creating Climactic Copy
Have you ever picked up a book off the shelf at a local
bookstore, read the cover, opened it up and, after reading a
few pages... Couldn't put it down?
Do you remember how you flipped each page with an almost
excruciating curiosity because the story was so tantalizing,
you became increasingly riveted to the book with each
subsequent chapter?
Copy is, or should be, the same.
Good copy makes a good case. But great copy tells a good
story. A great copywriter is also a great salesperson. But all
great copywriters AND all great salespeople also
have one thing in common...
... They are also great storytellers.
The closer your copy reads like a compelling story —
keeping the reader interested and engaged, hanging on to every
word — the greater your chances she will read your copy until
the end and, of course, buy.
Your "story" should tickle the reader's curiosity and pull
her into the copy. Each new idea introduced should build on
the other, pulling the reader further and deeper into the
salesletter. The copy should almost mesmerize the reader to
the point she's in a trance-like state.
Each header, each paragraph and each word crescendos and
prepares you, step-by-step, for the climactic "twist" in the
story's plot.
The climax, of course, is the offer.
And the plot, in copywriting, is called the "platform."
Your platform is the major concept or "storyline." It's
possibly a core benefit, result or key topic that creates the
foundation upon which your entire "story" is built. It's
one powerful idea with which your entire copy will hinge.
The platform you choose to present your offer is critical
to the offer's success — hopefully the offer is good, but
getting there is the job of the platform.
The concept of the "greased chute" is one in which you keep
the reader hanging on to every word you write — up until they
buy. They simply can't leave. They're glued to your copy.
They're compelled to keep reading.
Copy is telling a good story that involves the reader so
they can see in their mind's eye the benefits of your offer,
as if they owned your product already. The platform is the
"pivot," if you will, you choose to build your story on.
It could (and often should be) be your USP. It could be
what copywriter John Carlton calls your "hook." It could be
some major advantage or benefit.
Ray McNally, a programmer and friend, offers a neat
software program that complements an affiliate marketer's
efforts by helping them capture the names and email addresses
of traffic they generate to an affiliate link.
This program sets up a doorway page (not the search engine
kind) that, before the affiliate's generated traffic is sent
to the site being promoted, it capture's their name and email
addresses for future follow-up.
Why? Because once they click on an affiliate link, they're
gone. But that affiliate has worked hard or spent money on
generating that traffic. They own that traffic. So why not
capture it in the process?
If they DIDN'T end up buying that affiliate
product, no problem. That list can now be followed-up with, or
even monetized in other ways!
What has that got to do with copy? Here's my point.
Originally, Ray had one of those hackneyed headlines:
"Discover how to explode your income... Blah, blah, blah."
Bland. Hypey. Boring.
After talking with Ray, I said, "Ray, this is your USP!
Your hook. Why not capitalize on it?" So the platform I told
him to use was this ability affiliates will gain with this
software to make far more money with the traffic they
generate.
The result is here:
http://AffiliatePageCreator.com/. Check the headline
out and you'll understand what I mean. Also, you'll notice
another strategy I used.
Before I explain it to you, let me backup a little to "set
the story."
A great way to learn how to write mouth-watering copy is to
read fiction. Take a popular book and read it through once.
Then go back, read it again and take notes. List the nuances,
twists and storylines that grabbed you. And why.
In other words, try to look beyond the story.
Pinpoint where certain characters, ideas and phrases were
introduced in specific locations of the book — and see how
they relate to the whole plot.
Look at the flow of ideas. Is there a crescendo? Are there
small "valleys" along the way (until you reach the "summit,"
i.e., the climax)?
What do I mean by "small valleys?" Copy should build on the
reader's intrinsic curiosity. But it needs to do so
multiple times throughout. In fact, incorporate what
copywriter David Garfinkel once told me are called "nested
loops."
A nested loop is when you begin on an idea but, before you
complete it, you introduce another idea. And guess what?
People will read every single word more intently and
intensely, and remember more what is being said in the
process, until you close the loop and finish the idea.
In between the nested loop is therefore a great place to
insert a key idea or critical point you want to drive home.
Why are "nested loops" so powerful?
In 1927, Bluma Zeigarnik, one of the early contributors to
Gestalt Psychology, found that people have an intrinsic
need for closure. Often called the "Zeigarnik Effect," she
discovered that we remember interrupted tasks best.
We either passionately attempt to complete something that's
incomplete, or feel a certain discomfort, uneasiness or
disconcertedness, until it is. The tension created by such an
unfinished task helps us to concentrate more.
For example, have you ever watched the news on TV or one of
those tabloid shows, where they begin with the following
introduction:
"Tonight, Hollywood superstar escapes blazing fire
while filming her new mega-budget movie. More on that later.
But first..."
That story aroused your curiosity. So you remain glued to
your TV set until... They air that particular story at the end
of the show! Now, do you think they did this intentionally? Of
course. They did so to force you to watch the entire show.
(And of course, all of the commercials in between.)
Look at all the TV shows that keep you hanging with each
show to the next. (Look at the hit show "24" as a perfect
example.) Even commercials use this strategy brilliantly.
(Remember the "Taster's Choice" soap-opera-like series?)
Once you close the loop, their concentration level goes
down somewhat, which is why you want to use multiple nested
loops, or "valleys," throughout the copy. Once they finally
"climax," there's no more "Zeigarnik Effect." And you stand a
great chance to lose your reader.
(Take, for instance, the show "Dallas" in the 80's with the
famous "Who Shot J.R.?" plot. After the show's culmination
when they finally revealed who did it, ratings dropped
dramatically. Same thing with Twin Peaks.)
In copy, include nested loops to not only keep the reader
reading but also to build on the reader's level of
concentration until the very end. And use them to introduce
new or critical ideas in between them.
Look at soap operas and cliffhangers as an example. As an
aside, even a few Internet marketers are doing exactly that.
For example, check out the "Joe And Mable Show" at
http://www.joeandmable.com/.
Michel Fortin is a direct response copywriter, author,
speaker and consultant. His specialty are long copy sales
letters and websites. Watch him rewrite copy on video each
month, and get tips and tested conversion strategies proven to
boost response in his membership site at
http://TheCopyDoctor.com/
today.