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What makes a great copywriter?

What makes a great copywriter?

What great copywriters do

A broad vocabulary and a clever way with English language, combined with an almost pedantic penchant for precise punctuation? In my eyes, they’re the makings of a distinctly average copywriter.

If you’re going to charge someone a professional copywriter’s fee for your words, expect people to want a lot more. A knack for saying things nicely and unwavering loyalty to grammatical etiquette isn’t enough. You need to think about copywriting as a business.

It takes more than words to be a great copywriter

The thought process for this blog post started about a month ago, when I found myself working through a pesky crisis of confidence. They commonly afflict creative types I’m led to believe. Even the (generally) less sensitive ones like myself. 

It was on a day when I had a touch of writer’s block. Words weren’t flowing with the velocity I’m used to. (Cue frustration and impatience). Sentences felt forced and unnatural. (Take a seat in my self-conscience insecurity and paranoia). Everyone on social media was being so much more brilliant than me (why didn’t I simply switch Instagram off?) 

It was pretty glum. Put it this way, I was only a misplaced apostrophe away from pouring a a mid-afternoon glass of merlot. 

I held it together. And had a coffee.

Yet still, by the time I was desperately firing up my trusty Tassimo for an afternoon hit of caffeine-fuelled clarity, I was convinced my writing career was over and was considering retraining as a barista. It was all very melodramatic (another creative tendency I believe.)

Fortunately, once the caffeine kicked in and I emerged from the self-indulgent wallowing, I realised something important. I’m actually a great copywriter (apologies for the lack of modesty for a moment) and it’s not just because of the words I write.

My afternoon coffee didn’t cure the bad day of writing, but it reminded me something very important about my work. It’s easy to think of content as a neat little package of words you hand over to a client. But words, whether they come packaged as a script or a series of blogs aren’t products. 

Copywriters provide a professional service. And the words are only one part of this.

Five things great copywriters do (on top of being excellent writers)

Let’s put SEO, tone of voice and conversion copy techniques to one side and for a moment. Instead, let’s focus on what it means to deliver a truly outstanding professional copywriting service.

  1. They have the awkward pricing conversations up front

I for one would rather run 10K up a hill in a torrential rain shower than talk about money. But I make myself do it. Trust is so important, and it comes from being clear and completely open about what I offer and how I work.

I nail the scope of the work. I explain how I charge, the amount I charge and anything that could impact on this. It’s uncomfortable for me, it’s difficult, and I’ll probably break out into an unattractive cold sweat, however, it has to be done. I also reinforce my terms and conditions.

  1. They like a brief raw, uncensored and without boundaries

To understand you as a client, I need to understand the ‘real grit’ driving your business. This is the secret to creating the authentic voice and high impact content you’re craving. 

Before I start writing, I want to know the niggles playing on your mind. The qualms that you’re not sure whether to mention. Basically all of the things that get edited out of an email exchange or won’t neatly fit in an allocated space in a formulaic briefing questionnaire. 

This is why I insist on talking to a client (face to face or Skype) as part of the briefing process.

  1. You won’t hear from them all that much

I hear a similar story from most of my clients when they first ask me to write their content. “We just don’t have the time.” “We don’t have the internal resource for this.” “It’s been on my to-do list for six months and it’s still nowhere near the top.” 

Therefore, the last thing you need is a needy freelance copywriter to manage as well, right? 

I always close a briefing meeting with some variation of, “I’ll be in touch if I have questions”. But if the brief goes to plan, this won’t be required. A great copywriter just gets on with it.

  1. But they’ll give you confidence that it’s in hand and deliver on time

After agreeing a brief, my next step is always to set a project timeline. I’ll share these mini milestones with you. As a result, you know exactly what needs to be done and by when in order to deliver a project on time and within budget. These deadlines are set in stone. 

copywriter running
  1. When it comes to reviewing, they make it pain-free (for both sides)

I include up to two rounds of amends in my fee quote. This sets a clear benchmark and keeps things simple for you, as well as for me. Who wants to review thousands of words of text multiple times?

I also use a tried and tested template that makes content clear and easy to review. Simple things like line spacing make a difference when you have 4,000 words plus of web copy to scrutinise. Finally, I encourage clients to use track changes to ensure any revisions are captured effectively.

In short, listening, being easy to work with, inspiring confidence and delivering on time. Every single time. That’s what makes a great copywriter.

Finally, if you’re wondering if I ever got over the writer’s block on that painful day back in August, I did. The solution was a run across the fields. Half an hour of sweat and fresh air never fails. 

Obviously I spent the evening working to catch up after a day of procrastination (gotta meet a deadline) and kicking myself for not going on a run sooner. 

Next time, I’ll remember. Hopefully.

great copywriter infographic

 

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