From the monthly archives:

October 2008

Do These 3 Common Copywriting Mistakes Keep Your Readers from Buying?

by Sonia Simone on October 31, 2008

Talk to the Hand

Congratulations! You’ve built a great blog with high-quality content. You’re getting decent traffic, and your readers might even be using social media tools to recommend your stuff. Life should be good.

But no one’s buying. Or barely anyone, which is no fun.

So why isn’t that great content translating into more sales? Let’s look at three common copy mistakes that keep your readers from becoming customers, and how you can turn that around.

Mistake #1: You haven’t asked them

Recently I was looking at a blogger’s promotion of a big project. He’s mobilized a great community to help spread the word, the project is getting decent buzz, and he’s demonstrated an ability to get folks to take action when he asks them to. From a social Web standpoint, he’s doing a terrific job.

But the sales of the product still aren’t stellar.

When I visit his blog, I notice that I have to hunt around to figure out how to buy the product. There’s no attention-dominating ad that clearly says BUY THE PRODUCT HERE. There are no hyperlinks in his posts that say Click here to buy the product. His email signature doesn’t include a link to buy the product. He hasn’t asked his community to Twitter the TinyURL (which he, of course, could conveniently provide them) for the product.

It’s such a small, simple thing, and it’s very easy to forget. If you have something to sell (or an email list to opt in for, or an RSS feed to subscribe to), you have to ask. Explicitly. In every communication.

Don’t even think of making your readers hunt for the link. They won’t.

If you’re not making calls to action so often and so clearly it’s a little embarrassing, you aren’t making enough calls to action and they’re not clear enough.

Mistake #2: You’re solving a problem they don’t care about

You’re promoting a technique that boosts PageRank (feature), when what your readers want is more traffic (benefit). You’re promoting a supplement that enhances blood flow in the brain (feature), when what your readers want is to remember where they put their damned keys (benefit).

You might be caught up in describing all of your features and how cool you find them, instead of showing your readers the benefits of your offering (in other words, all the fantastic goodies they get by ordering from you).

Or you might be doing a great job of describing your product benefits, but they’re what Clayton Makepeace calls “fake benefits”: benefits no one actually cares about getting.

Either way, your reader doesn’t care about what you’re promoting. Thus, no sale.

Mistake #3: You haven’t given them reason to believe you

One great advantage of a content net strategy over single-shot marketing is that you create an incredible opportunity to build trust. By providing lots of value, you demonstrate that you have your audience’s best interests at heart.

But that trust doesn’t fully translate to your offer. You still have to prove that your product or service will perform as promised.

Tell interesting stories about how the product has already delivered on the promise that you make. (If it’s a brand-new product, give it away for free to some friends to generate a few compelling success stories.)

Show how similar (perhaps more expensive) products have delivered exceptional results. For example, you can describe the amazing benefits clients have gained from your private coaching service, which happens to be the basis of your much less expensive information product.

If your product can be physically demonstrated in a memorable way (Will it Blend being the canonical example), do it. What we see will always be more convincing than what we read.

Pair your proof with a slightly cocky guarantee. Offer “more than your money back,” a 100% refund plus some nominal additional sum for the customer’s trouble. Not only does a powerhouse guarantee remove worry and risk for your customer, it also demonstrates your complete confidence. And confidence is contagious.

When you’re proving your offer, you’ve got to show, not tell. It’s not enough to say it’s great. Show us why we should believe you.

You’ve already done the hard part

Creating valuable content and attracting an audience is a lot of work. (It’s fun work, but it’s still work.) After you’ve put significant time and attention into your content, don’t let a few common copy mistakes keep you from closing the sale.

Correct these three mistakes whenever you make an offer to your blog or email list, and you’ll make the most of the success you’ve worked so hard for.

About the Author: Sonia Simone is an Associate Editor of Copyblogger and the founder of Remarkable Communication.


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10 Ways to Find Readers for Your Blog By Leveraging Other Online Presence

by Darren Rowse on October 31, 2008

One of the simplest ways to grow your blog’s readership is to leverage other places that you have an online presence.

Leveraging places that you have presence online could include:

1. Twitter Background Image:

I’ve been using a background image on Twitter that has URLs of other places that I’m online and it’s gotten a lot of interest. While the links are not clickable they do highlight other places that you hangout online - including your blog.

Twitter-Background

It is impossible to track how many people are impacted by background images but I do know of a number of people who have found my blogs through mine.

2. Profile Pages on Social Media

The other obvious place on Twitter to promote your blog (apart from your tweets themselves) is your profile section which enables you to say a few things about yourself (160 characters) as well as leaving a link.

Twitter-Profile

Almost every social media site going around has an opportunity like this to add a link to other places of online presence in a profile page. The sky is really the limit - do it on Facebook, LinkedIn, FriendFeed, MySpace, StubmleUpon, Digg, Flickr, YouTube…. the list could go on and on.

3. Social Media Sites (eg - Facebook)

There are numerous ways to leverage social networking sites and to drive traffic back to your blog. I’ve already mentioned how you can do this using the ‘profile’ area above but there are often other ways also.

Sites like Facebook also allow you to pull in RSS feeds so that you can have your wall updated every time you post something new on your blog. Look out for opportunities to import RSS feeds - these are increasingly popular and can be really effective.

There are also lots of applications that allow you to promote your content - one that many bloggers us is BlogNetworks.

Blog-Networks

4. Email Signature

One of the most common ways that website and blog owners have used to promote their blog is to use the ’signature’ area at the bottom of emails.

Email-Signature

It makes sense to use this - if you’re anything like me you are emailing hundreds of people a week (or day) and could potentially be reaching a lot of new readers or reinforcing your brand with older ones.

Note: Feedburner even offer a service that allows you to show your latest posts from your blog in your email signature.

5. Forum Signatures

This is another fairly common one but one that I’ve seen can be quite powerful at times (if used well with a good forum strategy).

The signature alone won’t always drive traffic but as we covered here recently on ProBlogger if you use it in conjunction with being a useful contributer it can be highly effective at driving traffic.

Many forums also allow you to add links to profile pages.

6. Blog Comments

Many bloggers spend a lot of time reading and commenting upon other blogs in their niche.

Every time you comment on another blog you can be potentially adding to or taking away from your blog’s brand. Every comment is an opportunity to connect with both the blogger behind the blog and their readers.

The best way to drive traffic from blog comments is to leave helpful, useful, stimulating, insightful, controversial comments. Do this over time and people will want to know more of who you are and what else you do.

7. LinkedIn ‘Questions and Answers’

One great social networking site that many bloggers have profiles on is LinkedIn (my profile is here). Just being a part of LinkedIn can help promote your blog but their Question and Answer tool is another opportunity that many bloggers fail to use.

Linked-In-Questions-Answers

You don’t want to make your use of the feature too self promotional but good questions can be effective at reinforcing your brand and even stimulating people to visit your blog (if well written). Also answering other people’s questions can get you on their radar - there are lots of ‘open’ questions which give you opportunity to do this.

8. YouTube (and other Video and Photosharing sites)

Many bloggers create videos and upload them to sites like YouTube. There are numerous opportunities to leverage this. For starters you can add links in your profile page, you can add links to the video description of every video you upload (they work best if they are at the start of the description) and you can add your URL into your video (as a pre roll or post-roll ‘credit’).

Similarly sites like Flickr allow some linking within your profile pages and the pages where you show photos.

9. Your Other Blogs

Many bloggers have more than one blog. While they could be on diverse topics and not really suitable to regularly cross promote within your content there are still opportunities for interlinking them.

One such place is in the ‘about page’ of your blogs. People often go to these pages to find out more about the author - as a result it’s appropriate to include links to other projects/blogs that you’re working on here.

If your blogs are related in topic and it is relevant to mention them in your post then you should be doing so.

10. Guest Posting

I’ve written a lot about the power of guest posts so won’t go on about it again here - however it’s another great opportunity to develop an online presence that can be powerfully leveraged to draw readers back to your blog (and to build your brand).

Read more about guest posting at:

Final Thoughts

The above techniques can potentially drive traffic to your blog but as I’ve written this post I’m reminded of a post I wrote some time back on building your personal brand - one straw at a time. All of the above activities don’t just drive traffic - they collectively build your brand.

The other thing I’ll finish by saying is that ‘relevancy’ is the key to all of the above driving traffic to your blog.

For example - if your YouTube account just has personal videos it’s less likely to drive traffic to your blog if it’s on a topic similar to your actual blog. The same is true for each of the 10 points above.

What other ways do you drive traffic to your blog from other places that you have an online presence? What works best for you?

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Google, Yahoo Prepare To Abandon Paid Search Deal?

by Greg Sterling on October 31, 2008

Despite public pronouncements of confidence by Google and Yahoo about the future of their paid search deal, which was partly set up to fend off Microsoft and hostile Yahoo shareholders who wanted a Microsoft takeover, the emerging consensus is that it’s not going to happen. The Wall Street...

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Google Now Allowing Ads For Beer, Wine & Champagne

by Barry Schwartz on October 31, 2008

Taylor Pratt discovered a very quiet change made to Google AdWords policy for handling alcohol ads. Now, Google is allowing search ads for beer, wine and champagne to show up on Google.com. Google’s policy says they allow these ads, “since we consider beer, wine, and champagne to be...

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Google Updates AdWords Quality Score To Be “Fairer”

by Barry Schwartz on October 31, 2008

The Google AdWords Blog announced that two new changes to the quality score is coming in the next few days. The first change is to make the quality score calculation score an ad’s CTR based on the ad’s position. The second change is to help enable certain ads to be promoted to the top...

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