Have You Got Style?
Writing Ad Copy with Style takes practice, patience and
preparation.
I can't give you the practice or the patience, but I can help
you to prepare!
Product Vocabulary List:
Start by building a "Product Vocabulary List". You may be asking
yourself, "What the heck is a Product Vocabulary List?" Well, a
Product Vocabulary, are actually the building blocks of your ad
copy. When you are preparing to write new advertising copy,
begin by creating a list, actually 4 separate lists.
Broken down, you should be compiling the following information
that describes or relates to your product:
1. Nouns, Verbs, Adjectives and Synonyms. 2. Slang, Familiar
Phrases, Cliches and Puns. 3. New Ideas and Ways to approach
your product. 4. Product Facts (positive and negative).
Write down everything you can think of. Much of this material
you will compile while creating, devising and defining your
Advertising Strategies. Once you start using these lists in this
manner on a regular basis, you'll wonder how you ever got by
without them.
Themes
What's a theme? A theme is the "Punch Line" of your ad copy.
Your theme could be conveyed by written, visual or oral means.
It's how and where you want to go with your copy. You will most
commonly notice Themes in banner advertising, but they are used
in almost every form of Advertising. Most successful advertising
campaigns have great themes. An advertising theme should focus
on one point and be "catchy" or easy to remember. The theme will
help you decide how you will get their attention and what
thought they will leave with. The key is to leave a thought
embedded with them. Whether it's one word or a slogan, don't let
them leave without planting that one thought in their mind.
When deciding upon the theme for your ad, start with one theme.
Now examine it and re-examine it. Find as many different ways to
use this theme as possible. Turn it inside out and upside down.
Play with each new idea or variation of the original theme that
you come up with. Enjoy it, have fun with it, but get it all
down on paper. Do yourself a favor, write down everything!
Got Rhythm?
Rhythm, cadence or flow; It's all the same and you have to have
it! Great ad copy is always simple. Use short simple sentences,
"active" verbs, rhyme, puns or wordplay and positive attitude.
Normally you should use only active verbs. Pay heed when using
"passive" verbs in your ad copy. Rhymes, puns, double meanings
and wordplays make for most memorable of ad copy, but remember,
keep it simple. If they don't get it, you don't get it. Get it?
Another example of good rhythm is "parallel sentence
construction". Here is an old, but good use of parallel
construction in a headline: The Quality Goes In, Before The Name
Goes On! (Sound familiar?). It doesn't matter which approach you
take, as long as the copy has rhythm and flows from one point to
the next. Don't jump from point to point, move smoothly from one
leading into the next.
I hope that this will help you write better ad copy and remember
"Do it with Style"!