Start with your clients. They know their business and their customers better than you do. (If they don't, they should. You can help them learn more.)
How? Use a marketing/creative brief to get the information you need to ace the copywriting (and marketing) assignment. (A marketing/creative brief is a tool used by ad agencies and corporate marketing and creative departments.)
Following is a marketing/creative brief adapted from one I used during my stint at a Seattle ad agency. Even though I now work solo, I still use it today.
(Begin form)
Marketing/Creative Brief
(Note: Designed for B2B much of this brief is also applicable to B2C.)
Good input is key to a successful project, campaign, or marketing program. This marketing/creative brief is designed to elicit good input. But it takes thorough and thoughtful answers on your part. Please answer the following questions carefully.
1. What is the description of the piece(s)? (Ad, Web site, brochure, radio script, direct mail, etc.)
2. What is the marketing focus? (What products or services are we telling about?)
3. What is the communications problem that the piece(s) must solve? (Awareness, positioning or repositioning, product introduction, category introduction, etc.)
4. Who is the audience? (Demographics, title, function, responsibility, etc.)
5. What is their point of view about the product, service, category?
6. Who is the secondary audience(s), if any?
7. What business problems or issues does the product(s)/service(s) solve for the audience(s)? (Efficiency issues, profitability issues, operations issues, technology issues, etc.)
8. What effect do we want the piece(s) to have on the target audience(s)? (Purchase, phone call, visit Web site, request more information, increase their awareness, etc.)
9. What can we offer to achieve the desired response? (Demos, situation evaluation, sales collateral, personal visit, white paper, etc.)
10. What is the single essential message we must tell the target audience(s) to achieve the desired effect? (Be as concise as possible.)
11. What evidence is there to support our claims? (Features and benefits, testimonials, case studies, etc.)
12. Can anyone else make a similar promise?
13. Are there any technology issues to address? (Compatibility, operating systems, hardware requirements, etc.)
14. What specific industry issues must be addressed? (Trends, etc.)
15. Are there any industry, product or competitive issues to be avoided?
16. What tone should the piece employ? (Hardhitting/serious, educational/informative, humorous, etc.)
17. What do you like about your current piece(s)? (Look and feel, tone, messaging, functionality, etc.)
18. What don't you like about your current piece(s)? (Look and feel, tone, messaging, functionality, etc.)
19. What overall impressions (look and feel, etc.) would you like the piece(s) to make?
20. Will this piece(s) be used with any other pieces? (proposals, collateral, letters, etc.)
21. How will the piece(s) be used (online, leave behind, trade shows, mailed, etc.) and at what point in the sales cycle?
22. Any other comments?
(End form)
Admittedly, getting clients to answer these questions isn't always easy.
That's why it's best to be flexible with the use of a marketing/creative brief. You can ask the client to fill it out. You can use it to interview the client. You can fill it out yourself for the client's review. Any sort of collaborative approach works well.
In the end, stress to your clients that if they want more clicks, more leads and more sales, they need to actively participate in the input process.
One you have all the information you need, you're ready to write a winner.
(c) 2005 Neil Sagebiel
Neil Sagebiel is a veteran copywriter, urban escapee and proud publisher of Headlines from Floyd, a FREE monthly ezine of proven copywriting and marketing tips for generating more business. Regular ezine features include his popular "marketing magic" and "copywriting gem" sections. To sign up and also get a FREE valuable bonus report, Close More Sales with Testimonials, take a few seconds right now to visit .
Questions To Ask A Boyfriend
First let me explain auto-trading. Auto-trading is when the newsletter service has an agreement with a broker to allow them to send a signal to the brokerage and it automatically enters or exits trades for each person signed up for auto-trading. Auto-trading seems like an easy way to make money because you don't have anything to do but set up money allocations of how you want your trades handled during set-up. But if the newsletter service has a poor performance record, you can lose your money without even trying. The other services send trade signals directly to you and you place the order manually.
Before you sign up with a newsletter service, ask these 4 questions:
1.What is their credibility? You can determine this simply by checking to see if they have an email address, business address, and phone number. If they don't post their business address, they should give it to you over the phone. If not, that is a deal breaker.
Try sending an email and see how long it takes to answer you. It is imperative in this kind of service to have a quick response time. Better yet, give the company a phone call and see if you can talk with one of the trading staff and not just an operator or customer service representative.
2.Are they trading their own signals? Ask them for proof that they are trading their signals. They can fax you a copy of their brokerage account with personal parts blacked out. Or in the alternative, ask for a detailed transaction report. Every broker shows details of every trade, so it is a matter of seconds for them to produce this report.
3.Do they have an easy way to cancel the membership? Ask for their cancellation policy and procedure. You will be amazed at how some will make you jump through hoops to cancel. Some insist on a phone call where you then have to deal with a high pressure sales person on the phone trying to talk you out of the cancellation. Some want written notice by a certain day each month or you will be charged for another period.
4.Do they explain their trading strategy and specifically discuss their reasoning for getting into a trade? A good service will provide a short video discussing the trade set up. At the least, make sure they disclose why they are recommending the trade with the target and stop loss. Review their trading strategy and see if it fits you. It can either be technical data, like using moving averages and a myriad of other indicators, news based trading, or fundamental trading where they look at the economic data, news reports and political events of the country.
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