I am pleased to announce Guest Post #3!
Mark Angus is a freelance copywriter, travel writer and speech writer based in Adelaide, South Australia. He currently runs the Cadogan and Hall copywriting service, as well as Adelaide Wedding Speeches, and clients include both small and medium enterprises in South Australia and throughout Australia.
Mark Angus is a freelance copywriter, travel writer and speech writer based in Adelaide, South Australia. He currently runs the Cadogan and Hall copywriting service, as well as Adelaide Wedding Speeches, and clients include both small and medium enterprises in South Australia and throughout Australia.
The Company Mark works with: Cadogan and Hall Australia |
Given the nature of his very varied and detailed position as a copywriter, I asked him "How do you get the details right in a freelance copywriting situation?" This is his response:
Writers in the commercial and business world
often face some fairly unique challenges. As a freelance copywriter, the
subjects that I have been asked to write about over the years have been rather
diverse—I never thought that I would become an expert on wheel loaders, or
offshore drilling, or chiropractic treatment. Nor for that matter did I ever
envisage the need to become well acquainted with how solar panels work, how
online casinos operate, or the implementation of sustainable farming practices.
But these are just some of the many topics that
I’ve been called upon to write about as a freelance—all of which, I should point out, I knew absolutely nothing about
beforehand. But the essence of being a professional copywriter is the ability
to create copy that sounds convincing, both to the layman and aficionado alike,
about industries, products and professions that are not necessarily your areas
of expertise, while at the same time being informative, engaging and even sometimes—entertaining.
All of which means you need to be able to learn
quickly. It’s sometimes necessary to absorb a great deal of technical
information in a very short space of time, and then get a significant enough
grasp of the details that you’re able to write about the subject with some confidence. Solid
research skills are therefore just as important for a copywriter as writing
ability—you need to know where to find good trade intel that is useful and
intelligible, and then to be able to extract information that is appropriate
and relevant to the task at hand. A good eye for detail is crucial.
Asking questions—or
perhaps not being afraid of asking them—is
something that a copywriter needs to learn to do. When you’re being briefed on a job, it’s
important not to leave the meeting or end the phone call without having a
crystal clear understanding of what your client is looking for. If you need to
ask a lot of questions, go right ahead. It’s
sometimes tempting, especially with a new client, to exude an air of supreme
confidence, to give them the impression that you’re
completely across the brief when in actual fact, if it’s
an industry or profession that you’re not experienced
in, you may not have grasped what they’re looking for at
all. I know that this is a mistake that I have made in the past. The thinking
goes along the lines of: “If I ask too many questions, they’ll
rumble that I really don’t know anything about how dog food is made and I’ll lose the job. Better keep quiet, take some notes, and try to look
interested.”
In the end, this does no-one any favours.
I find that most people in business actually
like to talk about their work, and enjoy sharing their knowledge and expertise.
I’ve never known a client to be put off by answering questions about
their business. And getting as much information as you can before you start a
job will make it easier, more enjoyable, and will ultimately help you to
produce better copy. Good copy equates to a happy client, which in turn may
well lead to further work, and so there’s
nothing to lose by engaging in a discussion, asking questions and getting as
much information as you can directly from the source. The ability to ask
questions is an essential part of the copywriter’s
skill set.
A professional writer needs to be able to create
copy that is right for the intended audience, and so really understanding who
that audience is, and what their expectations are, is crucial. In commercial
writing, the audiences you need to engage with will vary widely. A piece for a
company’s in-house journal, for instance, will have a very different
audience to that of a press release about a retailer’s
end of year sale. A blog for a small manufacturing company will be read by
different people and in a different way to the website content of a health
professional. Being a copywriter is all about matching tone and content to the
audience.
This involves being engaged with the wider
industry on a number of levels. Look at what successful companies, both large
and small, are doing with their written content. Subscribe to some trade
journals to see how technical and manufacturing industries write about what
they do (you’ll be amazed to find that there are trade magazines for just about
every kind of industry or business imaginable). Read business-related blogs and
social media posts, check out film and theatre reviews, keep up to date with
what’s successful and popular on online content curation sites.
Understanding how to shape your copy to suit different types of audience is one
of the copywriter’s key skills, as is understanding who will read your copy and how
they will read it. Get a feel for how different types of texts are expected to
work in different kinds of scenarios.
One of the most challenging aspects of being a
copywriter is writing about products, or businesses, or even people, that are
sometimes, quite frankly, rather dull. It can be a real struggle to come up
with lively and engaging copy on a subject in which you have no personal
interest. In this scenario, a useful approach is to read and research widely,
well beyond the immediate areas that you’re
covering. If, for instance, the brief is to write about a new piece of
machinery there may not at first glance be a lot you can say about it. It’s new, it works, it costs this much. However, it can be helpful to
look beyond the nuts and bolts into areas such as why this new and improved
piece of machinery was developed, who will it be used by and where, what will
be its benefits out in the wider world, and the other potential applications of
the technology. If you can put the product you’re
writing about into a wider context and perhaps bring in a human element or
unusual angle, that can sometimes help to enliven your copy even when that
product itself is not inherently interesting.
Commercial writing is certainly not everyone’s cup of tea, and not every writer can do it. But it's a competitive field and if you want to become a professional at it, you will need to
know what works and what doesn’t, and how to ensure that you are writing what it is your client
wants to say. In the end, you are writing for someone else, and they need to be
satisfied that what you write is accurate, relevant and does the job for which
it’s intended- not always easy and sometimes frustrating, but on the other
hand it can also be very rewarding—plus, you can learn a
whole bunch of stuff about a whole bunch of things you never imagined you’d ever need or want to know about along the way!
If you are more interested in Mark's freelance services, his Google + profile is here:
Or his work in custom Wedding Speeches here:
Thanks for reading, and a special thanks to Mark for contributing this article! Why not check out his work?
Ben Mathewson.
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