I studied hundreds of top copywriting examples with @heyblake.

Use these 30 copywriting tips to convert readers into customers 🧵
Tip from Alex: Repeat Yourself

Reason: Your main benefit shouldn’t be expressed subtly. Repeat it three times. Make it known.

Example: Apple’s M1 Chip
Tip from Blake: Start with goals for the copy.

Reason: You need to know what you are writing, for whom, and what action it should lead to. No guesswork.

Example: My content engine at swipefile.me
Tip from Alex: Use Open Loops

Reason: Open loops peak a reader's interest by presenting an unsolved mystery to the reader. Our brains are hardwired to find closure. Make your product the final closure. Example: Woody Justice
Tip from Blake: Write short, snappy sentences.

Reason: People have short attention spans. And big blocks of text are super hard to read. Make it

Example: Every blog from @Backlinko
Tip from Alex: Replace Weasel Words With Promises

Reason: Words like may, can, hope, could, leave doubt in a reader's mind. You want readers to feel confident in their decisions. Use words like will, can, and do.

Example: @HubSpot
Tip from Blake: Start with an engaging hook.

Reason: The purpose of every sentence is to get readers to check out the next. A proper hook engages the reader immediately and piques curiosity.

Example: Zippo from a fish by David Ogilvy
Tip from Alex: Use Repetition

Reason: The repetition of words puts an emphasis on your messaging. It makes the main points memorable.

Example: New York Times
Tip from Blake: Optimize for clarity.

Reason: Clear writing beats clever writing every single time. People want to understand and then be delighted, not the other way around.

Example: Be concise chart
Tip from Alex: Use Opposites

Reason: They say opposites attract. The same goes for copy. Opposites are a powerful way to get someone's attention.

Example: Stella Artois
Tip from Blake: Start in the middle of the story.

Reason: Begin with action. Don’t wait to excite and delight the reader until it’s too late.

Helper: masterclass.com/articles/tips-…
Tip from Alex: Use an active voice

Reason: Using an active voice illustrates taking action. And your goal is to make consumers take action. Writing with an active voice delivers a direct, strong, and punchy message.

Example: Nike
Tip from Blake: Talk about them, not you.

Reason: People don’t care about you. They care about what you can do for them. Make that benefit abundantly clear.

Example: @mailchimp benefits copy
Tip from Alex: Add humor

Reason: People share humorous content. The more you can make someone laugh, the more your messaging will spread. Plus, it’s memorable.

Example: Daihatsu
Tip from Blake: Write how you talk.

Reason: No one wants to read robotic language. People connect with people. The more human your writing sounds, the more humans will like it.

Example: @GoodMarketingHQ breakdown of @heyhey
Tip from Alex: Tell Stories

Reason: Stories drive attention. Take the consumer into a different world. And create an emotional connection that’s hard to break.

Example: John Caples
Tip from Blake: Don’t be guided by grammar.

Reason: Focus on clear messaging and engaging storytelling more than grammar. This will create more connection with the reader than perfect sentence structure ever will.

Example: @postmates and chill
Tip from Alex: Use power words

Reason: Power words drive emotions. Emotions inspire consumers to take action. Your copy should make the consumer feel something.

Example: Winston Churchill
Tip from Blake: Use format pattern interrupts.

Reason: Unique formatting can be a huge advantage. Words matter most, but format counts, too. Write in formats that help you stand out.

Example: RX Bars copy on product packaging
Tip from Alex: Say more with less

Reason: The more value you can pack in shorter sentences, the better. It’s easier for the brain to digest and remember.

Example: Apple (again)
Tip from Blake: Write 20% of the time, edit 80% of the time.

Reason: Vigilant editing and rewriting is the true mark of a great writer. The magic rarely happens in the first draft.

Helper: masterclass.com/articles/a-gui…
Tip from Alex: Use Analogies

Reason: Analogies help connect something complicated with something known.

Example: Dropbox
Tip from Blake: Brain dump before anything else.

Reason: Getting all ideas on paper first helps organize the whole process. Then, build an outline. Next, write the sections. Finally, put it all together.

Helper: Copy.ai’s blog ideas tool
Tip from Alex: Rhyme

Reason: Rhyming keeps the reader's eyes moving organically. Naturally, it flows. This makes it more believable.

Example: Animoto
Tip from Blake: Pass the Friend Test.

Reason: It helps you write great copy. 1) Write 10 variants of a headline. 2) Send it to some friends and just ask them to read them. 3) Wait 24 hours and follow up. 4) The variant most remembered by that group is your headline.

Example:
Tip from Alex: Use Alliteration

Reason: Alliteration uses the repeat of initial consonants to put an emphasis on a benefit. Use it to address important points.

Example: Animoto (Imagine it. Create it.)
Tip from Blake: Pass the Voice Test

Reason: You don’t want to sound like a robot. Here’s how: 1) Read your written copy out loud. 2) If it sounds robotic or boring, rewrite it

Helper: Just say it out loud! No secret sauce here.
Tip from Alex: Copy Should Have a Goal

Reason: Every piece of copy should have a goal. If it doesn’t pass Amazon’s so what test -- then cut it. It’s fluff. If you can’t notice the goal -- neither can the consumer.

Example: KFC
Tip from Blake: Focus on feeling over selling.

Reason: Refrain from pushing sales explicitly, and focus instead on helping the reader feel a strong emotion or connection

Example: Colin Kaepernick ad with @Nike
Tip from Alex: Be Honest

Reason: You want consumers to trust you. Being honest breaks the barrier between a business and a customer. Let them know it’s still people behind the words.

Example: Hyposwiss Bank
Tip from Blake: Minimize risk.

Reason: Make the requirements to get the solution seem smaller.

Example: $5 fee from Copyblogger
That’s all folks!

If you enjoyed this thread, please:

Follow us @alexgarcia_atx and @heyblake

Retweet the first tweet (it helps a ton!)

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More from @alexgarcia_atx

9 May
50 Marketing Threads That Will Teach You More Than Any Marketing Class 🧵
50. Fastest-growing companies use growth loops 🔍

49. 7 Proven growth hacking strategies (pt.1) 🔍

Read 57 tweets
9 May
What was the common denominator in the fastest growing companies like Dropbox, Netflix, Yelp, and Instagram?

Growth loops.

Not funnels.

Here are 6 examples of growth loops that will help you acquire and retain users 🧵
Here's why loops are better than funnels...

A funnel works top to bottom.

To get more out of the bottom...you need to put more in at the top.

This means more money.

Where funnels focus on linear growth.

Growth loops focus on compounding growth.
Look at the fastest growing products and you'll notice they acquire customers through loops. Not funnels.

@andrewchen defines loops as "closed systems where the inputs through some process generates more of an output that can be reinvested in the input."

6 examples 👇🏽
Read 13 tweets
7 May
I've studied hundreds of growth-hacking strategies.

These 7 are proven to work 🧵
1. Hotmail

Hotmail used an email signature to hack their way to growth.

Anytime a user would send an email — Hotmail added a signature line to the bottom.

Recipients would receive a free account when they used the link in the signature.
They hacked their way to 12 million users in 18 months.

Here’s the signature:
Read 14 tweets
7 May
How did Facebook, Zapier, and Tinder drive growth early on?

Growth-Hacking.

PayPal growth-hacked its way to 5M users in 3 months.

Tinder used sororities and frats to 3x their user base.

Steal these 7 growth-hacking strategies that led to millions of users🧵
1. Tinder

Tinder tripled its user base from 5k users to 15k users in a blink of an eye.

To make it happen, they would go to sororities and get the girls to install the app.

Then, they'd go to the bothering frat and get them to sign up after they saw their friends on Tinder.
This is how @WhitWolfeHerd got the first 15k users on Tinder.

Hustlin' on her own campus and planting the seed for growth.
Read 20 tweets
6 May
Twitter threads are the new blogs.

Over the last 5 weeks, I've 32x my Twitter following posting a thread a day.

These 15 learnings will help your threads go viral 🧵
1. Identity

Figure out what you want to be known for and create around it.

Overtime, you will form an idenity.

For ex:

@david_perell = The Writing Guy

@mrsharma = The DTC Guy

I want to be known as "The Marketing Guy."
So, 50 marketing threads over 50 days to jump start the process of forming my digital identity.
Read 26 tweets
5 May
Compelling copy with complementing visuals is a cheat code.

Together, it helps a consumer understand and visualize your product.

No one does this better than Apple.

Here are 10 examples from Apple's site 🧵
Apple announced the release of their new iMacs.

Unlike the previous editions, these come in seven "vibrant" colors.

And you get to choose the color that matches your personality.

A fun play on words + killer creative (it's actually a vid) = ENGAGED.
This headline lives over the screen.

The placement is intentional.

Your eyes shift to the headline. And automatically you see the visual and register how thin it is.

All the white space around the screen help illustrate the width even more.
Read 14 tweets

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