Copywriting to Crush the Competition Copywriting is key to articulating your message. Writing words and copywriting are not the same. The goal of copywriting is to increase your bottom line, create brand awareness and/or deliver a strong ROI. Our consumers are bombarded with ads and have less time than ever to absorb what you are trying to say. Although there are no official figures, it is estimated the average person consumes between 6,000 to 10,000 ads every single day! Compare that to the 1970’s when consumers only encountered 500 – 1600 ads per day. The rise of technology and the internet is changing the landscape for businesses with more than 400 million active websites online and all of them vying for your attention. Copywriting is Key to Selling Headlines can make or break your campaign. Words hold a lot of power. A headline compels a viewer to read more by grabbing their attention or eliciting an emotional reaction. You are going to spend less of your budget to reach more people and be more effective in getting your desired response. The intent of the headline is to get you to read the next sentence. The purpose of that next sentence is to get you to read the following sentence and so on throughout the article. If you do not have a good headline or impactful first sentence, you do not have good copywriting and in turn your article is unfortunately not being read as you intended. Capture Attention - Immediately with Copywriting Which headline compels you to read more? Headline: Get rewarded when you shop at XX Retailer? Subhead: Dress your best and get a free gift, it’s as simple as 1-2-3! -ORHeadline: Receive a $100 Gift Card – FREE! Subhead: When you spend $500 at XX retailer November 1 – 10. Years ago, when I started working for a retailer client, I was told that gifts with purchase did not work for their brand. Baffled, I looked at the offer to determine if it was strong enough and if it had value. It did. Then I looked at the research to determine if the advertisements were being served to the target market. They were. The graphics were beautiful as well. So, what was wrong? The copy was not compelling. The $100 free offer was buried in the body of a dense paragraph and not mentioned in the headline aka the first sentence or even the second. Though the free $100 offer was highlighted in the body copy, the reader never got there because they were not compelled to keep reading.