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You've got a
great product or service. Now, how do you make buyers sit up and
take notice? How do you get them excited about what you're offering?
You have to pull the trigger.
There is at
least one trigger for every product or service on the market today.
Finding it is the hard part. Once you determine what will set your
customers in motion, you've won half the battle. This was the case
with ForecastWatch.com.
With a new site,
the owner of ForecastWatch.com (Jeff) was unsure of what to do with
the copy in order to connect with his site visitors and cause them
to take the action he wanted them to take. Not to mention, Jeff
wanted to rank highly with the engines as well, so search engine
optimization (SEO) had to be taken into consideration, along with
the selling aspects of the copy.
The
Problem
The only real
problem was finding the right trigger. The original site had little
to no usable copy. That's not an insult; it's the truth. You can
see the original home page here: http://www.copywritingcourse.com/forecastwatch-original.pdf.
Jeff knew he needed help from a professional copywriter, so he spent
little time on the site content.
The
Solution
To determine
the most powerful trigger, I took a look at all the segments of
ForecastWatch.com's audience. It was broken down into three distinct
types of customers. They were all interested in the most reliable
weather forecasts possible, but for three very different reasons.
One group was
made up of meteorologists. Their obvious interest was in being able
to provide the most accurate forecasts to their viewers and listeners.
A second group was compiled of weather risk managers. It is the
job of these professionals to accurately assess weather for industries
such as the stock exchange, construction, transportation, national
defense and more. The last group needed weather forecast accuracy
for personal reasons, usually as a hobby or for sports reasons (coaches,
etc.).
While the last
group was primarily interested in the weather as amateurs, the first
two segments (meteorologists and weather-risk managers) have a lot
on the line when it comes to weather forecast accuracy. Their reputations
and their jobs are on the line.
And that's the
trigger! I put it right up front in the headline, which read:
ForecastWatch.com
Because Your Reputation Depends on
Being Right About the Weather
The headline
hit the nail on the head. It got the attention of weather professionals,
was of great interest to hobbyists and included part of one of Jeff's
keyphrases. The last word in the headline (weather) tied into the
first sentence of the copy and, thus, created a keyphrase.
Keep in mind
that engines don't read spaces or line breaks or punctuation within
the copy, so having one word of a keyphrase in the headline and
the remainder of the keyphrase in the first sentence of the copy
is an excellent way to make the copy flow and keep in line with
SEO protocol.
Now, the task
would be to keep that same emotional twist and energy throughout
the copy. With the old copy, Jeff had no rankings with the engines
for his chosen keyphrases, so the optimization of the copy needed
to give him a presence.
The
Rewrite
In the opening
paragraph, I touted the praises of weather professionals, letting
them know their expertise was recognized and appreciated. I also
used one keyphrase twice and the second keyphrase once. In addition,
I used the individual word "weather" and substituted "specialist"
for "risk manager" in some instances to add to the flow
and give a well-rounded environment for the spiders and bots.
Next, I provided
a good overview of what ForecastWatch.com offered. Again, a keyphrase
was used in the headline (because it worked for both the visitors
and the engines, not strictly for SEO purposes), and a keyphrase
was used in the paragraph.
Finally, the
copy was broken out into segments that targeted specific individuals.
This gave them precise information on what benefits ForecastWatch.com
offered them. Boxes for meteorologists, weather risk managers and
weather enthusiasts were created. Within the copy for each block
and again in the anchor text for links to internal pages, keyphrases
were used where appropriate. These boxes lead each visitor to information
that was most relevant to him/her.
You can see
the new copy here: http://www.copywritingcourse.com/forecastwatch-rewrite.pdf.
The
Results
I always like
to let the customer take over in this section. Here's what Jeff
had to say about the rewrite of his home-page copy.
"Traffic
has steadily increased, and I've gotten a lot of leads and my largest
non-weather-company business customer from Internet search. The
rewrite helped me with more than just the website. It helped me
to define my business goals and to articulate them in other marketing
materials as well." In addition, rankings continue to rise
with current positioning in the top five for one of his keyphrases.
Take the time
to do a little research. Put yourself in your customers’ place.
Uncover what's most important to them, and you'll be rewarded with
greater conversions in the long run.
Copy not getting
results? Let Karon teach you how to write SEO copy that impresses
the engines and your visitors at http://www.copywritingcourse.com.
Having trouble working keyphrases into your copy? Check out “How
To Increase Keyword Saturation (Without Destroying the Flow of Your
Copy)” at http://www.copywritingcourse.com/keyword.
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