CAREERS

As an Aspiring Copywriter, Follow These Hacks to Boost Your Skillset

We’re all familiar with product ads and promotional content, which have travelled beyond print media or television. As internet users, we see countless ads every day. Scrolling through online articles or sponsored content across social media feeds—as posts/reels on Instagram or videos on YouTube—you name it. A brand’s social media page endorsing its own products and services counts too. Ever wondered who writes the eye-catching content or the relatable lines that you hear? The credit goes to those behind the scenes, whose job it is to generate captions, puns, one-liners, scripts for ad campaigns, and solid punchlines that carve a place in our memory, keeping us hooked. Their skills deserve mention, and these combined could be your stepping stone to being an impressive copywriter.


Identifying consumers and their tastes: Unless the target audience is clear, the content can’t be tailored for them. Brands spread a message about their product/service’s exclusivity or why it’s worth using words to complement visuals. Knowing consumers’ preferences broadly later comes in handy for campaigns/standalone ads, as the same group could be the intended audience for another product. Besides greater marketability, a bond is created with potential consumers.


Emotional Connect: Emotions are strong instruments of interaction as they stay with audiences. Highlighting them adds a personal touch to the promotion and helps sell the idea as potential consumers can relate to it, perhaps due to a universal emotion or a cultural component that ensures belongingness.


Lucid Language: The language used in ad copies can make or break the brand’s relationship with audiences. Not everyone will be an intellectual. Simplicity is the key to convey meaning effortlessly.


Staying Up-to-date: Remaining informed of what’s happening around you has its own benefits. This awareness is reflected in the copies, which then contain an additional ingredient-relevance.


Research Orientation: Having done some prior research on the brand they represent, as required, they successfully illustrate points that they’d like to bring to their audiences’ attention.


Openness to ideas and self-assurance: Working with a team is accompanied by a spirit to exchange healthy feedback. When ideas are presented, it becomes crucial to look at them objectively, assess their merit, and determine how far they can be accommodated. Similarly, it’s necessary to defend our own work when the need arises, staying respectful all the way. Merely absorbing every opinion does little good unless it suits the context. Understanding this fine balance makes all the difference.


Realistic Outlook: The purpose of copywriting is to create content for easy consumption. Displaying abundant knowledge is a pointless exercise. Perhaps in this field, perfection doesn’t take you far, but workable expertise does. Functioning within deadlines, it is crucial to meet the brief provided. That said, half-hearted work isn’t the solution. Efforts should be above average to bring out satisfactory results.


Multitasking Patiently: When situations call for it, the copywriter may have to shoulder greater responsibilities to fill in a gap within their department. Having workable expertise in another area proves effective. Calmness while multitasking comes with training and pays off as a bonus. When attuned to how the workplace functions and how their contribution matters, the quality of input keeps rising. To keep coming up with ideas for their presentation is an endless task. Of course, there are highs and lows. As much as we claim that lucidity, relatability, and trendy words should be the go-to, we can’t deny how a creative block impacts them. So, patience is what keeps them going in moments like these.


To sum it up, copywriting revolves around a few competencies, or C’s. Let’s see how.
Curiosity: Asking the question ‘why’ gives a sense of direction even when writing. Besides the primary research, it emphasises on thinking like a consumer, adding a constructive note to the process.
Clarity: Merely selling isn’t enough but ‘what, ‘how,’ the look of it are factors that demand thought. Being able to foresee the presentation is essential for good execution. Confused writing shows, hence the need to be sure of what’s written and how it resonates with audiences. The copywriter’s clarity lends structure to their work.
Communication: A clear thought must be transferred in an accessible way. Humour, storytelling, and recreating snapshots of life act as tools. A smart communicator knows their role as a salesman.
Conviction: A copywriter’s content should be convincing for the audiences they have in mind, to have the kind of effect brands look for. Regardless of their individual preferences, professionalism should not take a backseat.
Call-to-action: The part of an ad/promotional message containing an action-based element urges potential consumers to ‘act.’ The sense of immediacy is to nudge them towards a direction.
Consistency: An imaginative mind is a prerequisite. Consistency as an individual and as a team member indicates efficiency. Good writing needs to keep coming.
Creativity: A much-needed characteristic, this should find its place in planning, and execution as creative salesmanship brings out the maximum returns. Campaign design benefits from it too. Given social media’s increasing popularity, exploiting this gets higher reach among viewers, besides low-cost or free publicity.
Comprehensibility: The kind of language used has a direct relation with how the idea of a product/service is interpreted or remembered. Understanding influences consumer behaviour.
Connection: Establishing connect with audiences makes them feel like they own the product, know about it before making a purchase, possibly increasing their likelihood to invest in it. Additionally, the brand’s voice/image should align with what it sells.
Cross-discipline competence: The ability to perform additional tasks, say managing social media, or selecting images adds to the copywriter’s skillset whenever the opportunity presents itself. Such occasions may rarely arise but when they do, rising to them can prove useful.
Creating USP: Unique Selling Point/Proposition makes the brand and its product/service stand out from the rest. This establishes superiority and converts audiences to allies.

With these tips and tricks, all that’s left is for you to apply them and give your copywriting career the head start it deserves. Let’s get going.

Amrita Choudhuri

A Communicative English graduate, Amrita's penchant for stories began even before she turned 5. For her, reading serves the purpose of a dear friend. Through the pages of fiction, she explores the different worlds they have to offer. Writing nudges her to find her voice and makes her better. That's how she's here today, to learn and apply the nuances of the very art that shaped her style of expression.

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