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Browsing Posts in Sales Copy Writing

An excellent ebook on copy writing with full, unrestricted private label rights…

“Discover The Simple And Proven Step-By-Step Methods And Techniques To Creating Hypnotic Sales Copy That Turns Visitors Into Eager To Buy Paying Customers!”

All you have to do is follow the easy to follow methods and techniques outlined in this straight to the point, no BS guide and your visitors will go from suspicious readers to trusting, eager to buy customers at the blink of an eye…

Dear Friend,

Does your sales copy suck? I mean, does it really, really suck so bad that you can barely squeeze out a sale from 1000 visitors to your website? If it does, don’t worry – this is why you’re here, and I’m happy to tell you your problems can be fixed because you came to the right place…

First of all, let’s talk about the extreme importance of good sales copy…

Now, let’s say you have a $97 product and a decent sales letter up on your website that converts visitors to buyers at 1%. Let’s also say that you drive 3000 unique visits to your website a month, so at 1% you would be making $2910 (minus advertising costs and expenses).

That’s not bad! But after a while you get bored with that number and decide you want to double your income. Now there’s three ways  you can do that:

1. You can double the price of your product from $97 to $194 (this will probably kill your 1% conversion and your overall profits would drop)

2. You could try driving double the traffic to your website and see what happens (this is not always easy, as traffic does not come on demand – it can also be a costly choice)

3. Or, you could work on improving your sales copy and increase your conversion rate to 2% (if you have a good product this is a very possible)

That is how powerful good sales copy is. Just by tweaking and improving your sales letter you can go from 3000 visitors a month with a $97 product converting at 1% for a total of $2910 in sales to: 3000 visitors a month with a $97 product converting at 2% for a total of $5820 in sales!

That’s Right, You Can Easily Double
Or Sometimes Even Triple Your Profits
Just By Improving Your Sales Letter!

continue reading…

Here is an article I wrote back in 2006, but it is just as relevant today as it was then…

1) Try to make the sales letter personal. Be very graphic and descriptive and whenever you can relate personal stories and get the reader involved.  This is the hardest thing to do. People are getting bombarded every single day, with ads, ads, and more ads.  I don’t know the real figure but I read somewhere that the average American and I’m sure this may be similar for my overseas readers, is EXPOSED to more than 2000 ads a day!  So when he sits down to his computer, he wants to be entertained and educated, not SOLD SOMETHING!  Try to make your copy fun to read.   Try to keep a “you” attitude throughout the copy.  Write all your copy from you personally – companies don’t write letters, people do, use “I” instead of “we”.  In fact when you have finished your letter, go through it and highlight anywhere that you have used “I’d” or “We’d” and see if you can re-write those sentences with a “you” attitude.  Also when you are done, read the copy out loud and see if it comes across how you intended it to.

2) Don’t sell the product, sell what it will do for them.  People don’t buy desktop publishing software – they buy great looking, professional documents that are easy to produce.  Before you start writing your copy, sit and make a list of features and benefits, you will find it much easier to write the sales copy once you have this in front of you.

3) Keep your paragraphs SHORT!  This is very important, so I will repeat myself – keep your paragraphs short! Also try to keep your sentences plain and simple, avoid the use of words that could even remotely confuse your average reader.  I Know that people who can log onto and use the Internet should be able to read at a higher level, but we’ve all  seen posts on various newsgroups where it looked like the person hadn’t passed fifth grade so don’t assume anything about your readers. continue reading…