Explore the key differences between traditional writing styles and effective copywriting techniques. Discover why conventional prose may inform but fails to inspire immediate action. Learn how to blend creativity with factual information for persuasive impact. Dive into the art of crafting compelling product descriptions using storytelling to enhance sales. Understand the importance of engaging language over formalities in copy, and master the balance of various writing styles to motivate and captivate your audience.
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insights INSIGHT
School Writing Vs Copywriting
School writing aims to clarify ideas but does not drive immediate action.
Copywriting pushes readers to act now, breaking away from descriptive habits.
insights INSIGHT
Content Vs Copywriting Style
Journalism and blogs inform or entertain but don't prompt immediate action.
Effective copy clearly shows readers what to do next, moving them from knowledge to action.
insights INSIGHT
Technical Writing Limitations
Technical writing gives clear, factual instructions but lacks motivation or urgency.
Copywriters must assemble facts with emotional appeal to inspire immediate buying action.
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It happens to all of us, and can you remember a time where you wondered:
“Is this really good copywriting? It seems like what I should write, but somehow it’s not clicking.”
Here’s why you wonder.
There’s a well-known saying from the Navy SEALs:
"Under pressure, you don't rise to the level of your expectations, you sink to the level of your training".
That goes far beyond the world of the Navy SEALs, of course.
It’s true in all of life.
Well, one thing I don’t think we’ve taken a good enough look at it:
As copywriters, how were we trained?
I don’t mean for copywriting specifically. I mean for writing at all.
See, how you were ORIGINALLY trained to write can easily override what you know you SHOULD do as a copywriter.
We’re going to take a good look at that today, and see what we can do about it.
What we cover in today’s show:
School-style prose clearly informs readers but doesn’t motivate immediate action. Remember: your goal isn’t to describe things—it’s to prompt your readers to act now.
Journalism, blogs, and content writing focus on entertaining or informing readers without directly driving immediate responses. Don't just guide your reader through the facts; clearly show them exactly what to do next.
Technical and scientific writing deliver clear, factual instructions but lack urgency. Don’t simply explain—combine facts with emotional appeal to inspire immediate action.
Corporate or military writing provides structured, formal information but rarely persuades readers to take quick action. Drop the formalities; clearly invite your readers and give them a reason to act immediately.
Traditional advertising-agency writing builds emotional connections and brands but often delays immediate response. Remember John E. Kennedy’s words: “Advertising is salesmanship in print.” Keep your copy action-oriented, clearly instructing your readers exactly how and when to respond.
Download.