Want to make great money from your writing skills?
Become a copywriter (a writer for business).
How come there's so much writing in the world, but
most writers are poor? It's because writers are writing the stuff that
makes other people rich. If you're writing novels for major publishers
for example, you're pouring money into the bank accounts of giant
corporations, but the stream of money, by the time it reaches you, is a
slow drip, not a river.
If you want to make money from your writing, you
need to write the words that sell. In other words, you need to become a
copywriter.
Copywriters write everyday words, the words you see
and hear around you every day -- advertising, press releases, catalogs,
newsletters, and radio spots. I've been a writer, and a successful one
if you count publication credits, for 20+ years, but it wasn't until I
made copywriting the foundation of my business that I started to feel
relaxed about paying my bills.
If you're an experienced writer, you can add
copywriting to the writing you do, and start making money without much
effort. The skills of both fiction and non-fiction are necessary when
writing copy. If you're a new writer, just starting out, the skills you
learn when writing copy are easily transferable to other kinds of
writing.
The brilliant news about copywriting is that
copywriters can make excellent money, with the most experienced,
enterprising, and productive copywriters scooping in a comfortable six
figures annually.
You don't have to be a great writer to be an
excellent copywriter, but you do need to recognize and be able to use
the attributes of both fiction (evoke emotion) and non fiction (be
clear) in your writing. Of all the writing I do, I love copywriting
most. It's fun, it's easy, it's creative -- and the biggest plus of all,
it's usually short.
Here's the successful freelance copywriter's mindset.
You:
* know that you're surrounded by copy every day,
everywhere you look.
Radio, TV, the Internet, newspapers, food product
labels, signs: they all contain words, and a copywriter wrote them. To
most people, copy is so ubiquitous it's invisible. To you, copy signals
a market. You're observant and aware, and every time a message catches
your eye, even if it's only a street sign, you're thinking: "Hmmm... a
potential market";
* are interested in getting your client's message
across;
* are prepared to market, and then market your
services some more.
Kick-start your freelance copywriting services
business
You can kick-start your freelance copywriting
services today, in three steps:
1. Become aware of all the copy around you, and start
thinking about the kinds of copy you could write and have fun with;
2. Develop a prospective clients database;
3. Write your first direct mail letter advertising
your services.
Copy is everywhere
Copywriters write for businesses. They write to sell.
Your first step is some market research, and when it comes to market
research, copywriting is a doddle. Unlike novelists who have to slog to
the library or the bookstore to read the latest bestsellers, and
magazine writers who keep themselves poor by buying dozens of magazines,
you get your market research for free, delivered to your door. If you
have a little "No Junk Mail" notice on your letterbox, scrape it off.
On my desk right now, I have six flyers from six
local real estate agents. The flyers were stuffed into my letterbox over
the past two weeks. Here's a taste of the copy: "Don't buy a home until
you see our exclusive range". Another one's headed: "Do you want the
best price when selling?" Their copy is obviously being written by
someone in-house, so they're not getting the ROI (Return on Investment)
they should be getting.
My calls to local printers established that they're
paying around $1500 for 15 000 flyers. Not a lot of money. On the other
hand, what results are they getting? If they invest in an hour of my
services, charged at my base rate, I'm positive I can substantially
increase their response rate from their flyers. I haven't entered these
six real estate agents into my Prospective Clients database yet, but I
will.
That's how I started copywriting. I rewrote
advertising, because I thought I could do better. You can do the same
thing to start your own copywriting business. Become aware of all the
copy around you. Just for fun, and to get some writing samples, rewrite
some of it. If this gives you a real buzz, and you find it easy, you've
just found yourself a new profession. Here's a newsflash: most copy is
basic and uninspired. Display creativity in the copy you write, and
clients will line up to hire you.
Develop a prospective clients database
Your prospective clients fall into two groups:
businesses which write their own marketing communications material
in-house, and the advertising industry -- agencies for advertising,
public relations, graphic design, and marketing.
Start out by targeting the local companies stuffing
your letterbox. The competition will be minimal. Chances are you'll be
the first copywriter to approach them. The writing experience and
confidence you gain from doing this work will encourage you to move on
to bigger businesses.
Here's your business prospecting process in a
nutshell:
* find a prospect;
* enter the prospect into your Prospective Clients database;
* brainstorm how you can offer the prospect a better ROI;
* phone and/ or send a letter to the prospect outlining what you can do
for him;
* follow up.
You need a way to keep track of your prospects, so
create a prospects database. Your Prospective Clients database doesn't
have to be fancy. I use a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet. You can keep your
database in a word processor, if that's what's easiest for you.
Write your first direct mail letter advertising
your services
The easiest and cheapest way to get clients for your
new business is to write personalized letters. In the future, when your
business is well established, you may want to invest in a commercial
list, and send your letters to a few thousand advertising or PR agencies
at once. When you're starting out however, sending personalized letters
is cost effective, and you won't find yourself with more work than you
can handle.
Each letter you send out addresses a specific need
you perceive the business has. When I send out a letter to the real
estate agents I mentioned earlier, for example, I'll be using the copy
from their flyers, and making suggestions as to how the copy could be
improved. (I'll be doing this extremely diplomatically, of course.) I'll
be emphasizing "retain-ability", how to get the people receiving the
flyers to keep them.
Each letter I write will take me around half an hour.
Why? After all, I could just do a mail merge, and send out 100 letters
in that time. The reason I don't do that is because when you're writing
a direct mail letter, you need to think like the person who's receiving
your letter. Everyone in the world has a single mindset: "What's in it
for me"? Therefore, you need to show what you can do for their
particular business. You have to provide something of value, up front.
A week or so after I've sent out the letters, I'll
call the businesses to follow up. Not every business I target will use
my services. However, a number will. They'll either have work for me
immediately, or within a few months.
Get started today. Give copywriting a try. Although
you don't get a byline for your work, you do get the gratitude of your
clients, and real money for your writing.