Perceived Value of Your Copyrighting

5 Steps to Boosting the Perceived Value of Your Copywriting Content

Potential clients come to you because they need content. They know they need words, but in the same vague way the average person knows we need air to...

Copywriting is one of the most valuable and important components of successful digital marketing. It can drive traffic, increase rankings in search engine results pages (SERPs), and boost conversions. However, content creation has long been plagued by high expectations coupled with low perceived value. This has left many marketers feeling overwhelmed and uncertain about how to make their copywriting content stand out amongst the vast competition.

Steps To Improve The Value of Your Copywriting

Fortunately, there are a number of steps you can take to improve the perceived value of your copywriting content and ensure it adequately reflects your brand’s voice while also capturing readers’ attention. The following five steps can help you achieve this goal: understanding your target audience; researching top keywords; optimizing titles and headlines; focusing on quality over quantity; and utilizing visuals. By taking these actions to optimize the content you create, you’ll be well-positioned to maximize engagement, attract more visitors, and ultimately boost sales for your business.

In this article I will cover understanding customer needs, creating compelling headlines and topics, utilizing SEO best practices, adding visuals and multimedia elements, and strategically promoting your content. By taking these five steps, you can ensure that the value of your copywriting content is delivering maximum results for your business.

A Day In The Life of A Copywriter

So, how’s it feel when you find postings from someone who obviously has a full and complete understanding of how much all the talent pouring from your fingers is worth?

So, writers… call me crazy, but do you ever get the idea that brainstorming strategies, research and content creation just aren’t appreciated? Your clients don’t see the value of your copywriting skills? D you feel like you’re getting your full due for the creativity, cramped fingers and back fatigue? Let’s not forget to mention the fact that most copywriters and content creators turn into walking encyclopedias of often useless facts. It’s time to take control and change this! Any tips for us fellow copywriters? Let us know in the comments! Let’s talk about how we can connect with clients and get them excited about our work. Try reaching out to clients or prospects by offering an initial consultation that can show off your skills and demonstrate the value

“Yeah, um… I’d like some fantabulous, guaranteed-to-go-viral, optimized, reader-friendly content, right? Can’t look like it’s spun, mkay? How’s about 30 articles, 1,000 words each, and I’ll take ’em in three days. I’ll pay a ginormous, generous sum of $.50 per article. No, no, don’t be too effusive in thanking me. It’s just my duty as an entrepreneur who wants a whole lot of something for nothing. Really, I don’t value your expertise, experience, creativity and time whatsoever, so we’ll get along famously.”

Problem with Content Creation: High Expectations, Low Value

I’m not sure if there’s a writer out there that hasn’t come across at least one potential client like the one above. They want the whole kit n’ caboodle, but refuse to attach any value to it. Oh, I’m sure that, for the most part, they don’t actually intend to exploit the copywriter. In actuality, I think it’s a matter of not seeing how high their expectations are, in relation to how low they value the actual work.

High Expectations On Your Copywriting Services

Potential clients come to you because they need content. They know they need words, but in the same vague way the average person knows we need air to breathe. It’s a given. They also know why they need content, reasons that include:

Low Value = Low Cost

The average client comes to you with all this knowledge of what content is supposed to do. When you break it down, that’s a lot of pressure on words. However, they’ve been told that the above is what content does; it doesn’t seem to quite translate into “value”, so it’s not going to do well being translated into “cost”, either.

5 Steps to Boosting Content Creation’s Perceived Value

In short, it’s all about perceived value of your copywriting services. You know the amount of time, creativity and work you put into a piece of copy (any piece of copy!), and you know the potential returns for that effort. Therefore, you place a high value on the work.

The client, on the other hand, knows the potential returns for your effort, but it’s just writing. Anyone can write, can’t they. Therefore, they place low value on the work. Your job, then, is to teach them the true value of what they want.

“Teach them true value. Why didn’t I think of that? Brilliant! Say no more!”

I know – that’s like saying, “Turn the light on,” in a dark room with a broken switch. It’s a definite “duh” moment, and you’ve probably tried everything you can think of to get “true value” across to the client. However, you might find something in this short list that you haven’t thought of yet (not that you wouldn’t have, given enough time, of course):

Do Your Research –

No one can know everything there is to know about every client’s niche. Research is necessary. Unfortunately, research is part of what takes so long if you didn’t step out of your client’s industry to write.

Now, you probably can’t bring the client to your office to watch you do the research (even if you wanted to). On the other hand, you can spend a little bit of your research talents on yourself. Treat it as an assignment from your most important client.

Your job, should you choose to accept it, is a 5,000-word dissertation on the topic of writing for the Internet. Focus on the necessity of strong words. References, statistics and supporting studies are necessary.

Choose Strong Statistics –

Many business owners like to see the studies. They want to see numbers they can understand, and statistics they can believe. Therefore, Useit.com’s article, “How Long Do Users Stay on Web Pages?” is an excellent example of the research you need. You can read the article yourself, but you know the answer. Not very long. Your client may not know, however, and you can quickly tie this study into perceived value.

The content has to catch the visitor’s attention in 10 seconds. It has to hold their attention for the next 20 seconds. Most won’t read more than a quarter of what’s written during that time. BUT –easily scanned, highly valuable, highly relevant pages makes it more likely for them to stay. AND if they stay, they’re more likely to stay for two minutes or more.

Find Examples –

Nothing is more persuasive than visual, live examples, which is why it can be extremely beneficial to find examples of high and low quality content.

Low quality: “Our search engine optimization services starts with researching and recommending you the right keywords. The right baits for the right fishes always. No point achieving a high search rank with “weighing equipment” when “weighing scales” is searched far many times over.”

High quality: “If Christian Muñoz-Donoso is going to make this job pay, he’s got to move quickly. He has a list of 10 videos to shoot on this warm June morning, for which he’ll earn just $200. To get anything close to his usual rate, he’ll have to do it all in two hours.”

The differences: Proper grammar, correct punctuation, interesting opening

Of course, the low quality content is a sales page for a Malaysian SEO company, while the high quality content is an article from Wired.com magazine (The Answer Factory: Demand Media and the Fast, Disposable, and Profitable as Hell Media Model, Wired Nov 2009). However, by finding examples that are similar in topic but as extreme in quality as the above, you provide a striking visual of the possible outcome from hiring you vs. a poor (aka cheap) writer.

Create Case Studies

We’ve found case studies to be a particularly difficult creation for us, since the majority of our clients fall under non-disclosure. However, if you can’t create case studies for clients, you can, at the very least, show your own results.

For example, as evidence of the validity of using infographics, we’ve often used our Google Algorithm Dance (March 2011), which gained 79 unique domain links, over 2,400 new visitors and an (apparent) retention rate of 20% (based on average return visitors after the infographic). Minor success in terms of building traffic? It depends – for us, one of the huge benefits was the amount of links from various national and international domains, giving us (an international SEO company) global exposure. As well, most of the links were from high quality, highly relevant sites. We like that.

As you create your 5,000-word dissertation, take the time develop and add case studies. They become your portfolio of greatness, in which you can show the potential client what the real value is of your work.

Call Their Bluff

You’ll get potential clients who want to nickel and dime you to death. “$100 per page, you say? How about I grant you $50 per page, and I’ll throw in the ghostly carrot of potential work in the vague, unforeseeable future for an even lower, yet overwhelmingly magnanimous, amount.”

You may be tempted to agree, because the carrot looks so darn tasty. You may agree because you’re hungry this month and could really use the cash. But – you, also, have to see the value in what you do. The minute you start negotiating and lowering your costs is the minute you lose sight of what your work is worth.

What’s Your Perceived Value?

You have a job to do, and content creation, strategizing, developing… it’s a skilled trade. At the very least, you have to spend thousands of hours honing your talent if you aren’t formally trained. You have to spend time becoming a mini-expert on hundreds of topics across tens of niches. You have to learn the ins and outs of marketing.

Think of all the time you’ve put in learning your trade. What’s it worth to you? What’s your perceived value, and how flexible is that concept for you?

Finally, think about this. Once you go through your 5,000-word dissertation on the true value of copywriting and content development, they may say, “That’s nice, dear, but I still want to pay you a piddling for that gold you’ll give me.” You may take them on anyway, considering the idea that a return customer is better than no customer at all.

However, nickel and dime clients beget nickel and dime clients. In my experience, they’re seldom happy with the final price. They’ll be back, but they’ll complain about the cost when they come back. They’ll recommend you to equally unhappy clientele, who are equally unwilling to pay for the benefits of strong copy.

With that delightful picture of never-ending price bickering in your mind, use the tips above to boost the perceived value of your copywriting to the client. And while you’re at it, remind yourself what your time, talent and energy is worth.

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6 Responses

  1. With all my SEO clients, I stress the importance of usability’s dominant role in all web visibility work. I start by demonstrating the difficulty in engaging visitors with walls of words, discuss personas, etc.

  2. I’m really glad I have found this information. Nowadays bloggers publish just about gossips and web and this is really frustrating. A good blog with exciting content, that is what I need. Thank you for keeping this site, I will be visiting it. Do you do newsletters? Can’t find it.

  3. I totally relate to this. I have compromised my worth time and time again because 1) I am fairly new and therefore have not got very much experience and 2) I need the work I can get.

  4. Gabriella, greattttt post.

    With all my SEO clients, I stress the importance of usability’s dominant role in all web visibility work. I start by demonstrating the difficulty in engaging visitors with walls of words, discuss personas, etc.

    As content strategists and creators, we know the importance of prioritizing benefits in our copy. But adding links to ‘more details’ (at the bottom of a page, after ‘features’, perhaps) gives you the opportunity to shed some light on processes behind the work.

  5. Thanks for summing these wonderful tips to pursue giving the audience with quality content. Content writing is all about sharing valuable information and be able to meet your goals and expectations.

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Potential clients come to you because they need content. They know they need words, but in the same vague way the average person knows we need air to...

Today's Author

WHAT’S NEXT?

SUPPORT OUR AUTHOR AND SHARE
Interested in Guest Posting?
Read our guest posting guidelines.

6 Responses

  1. With all my SEO clients, I stress the importance of usability’s dominant role in all web visibility work. I start by demonstrating the difficulty in engaging visitors with walls of words, discuss personas, etc.

  2. I’m really glad I have found this information. Nowadays bloggers publish just about gossips and web and this is really frustrating. A good blog with exciting content, that is what I need. Thank you for keeping this site, I will be visiting it. Do you do newsletters? Can’t find it.

  3. I totally relate to this. I have compromised my worth time and time again because 1) I am fairly new and therefore have not got very much experience and 2) I need the work I can get.

  4. Gabriella, greattttt post.

    With all my SEO clients, I stress the importance of usability’s dominant role in all web visibility work. I start by demonstrating the difficulty in engaging visitors with walls of words, discuss personas, etc.

    As content strategists and creators, we know the importance of prioritizing benefits in our copy. But adding links to ‘more details’ (at the bottom of a page, after ‘features’, perhaps) gives you the opportunity to shed some light on processes behind the work.

  5. Thanks for summing these wonderful tips to pursue giving the audience with quality content. Content writing is all about sharing valuable information and be able to meet your goals and expectations.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

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