Copywriting for the Unsophisticated
Buyer
No matter where your prospects are in the buying process,
your copywriting must reflect the appropriate level of
sophistication to be effective.
Sophistication here doesn't mean refined versus
redneck. Though your copywriting should appropriately reflect
this characteristic of your market. In Breakthrough
Advertising Gene Schwartz used sophistication in copywriting
to reflect the level of experience your market has with the type of
product or service you offer. In other words, how often have
they been sold in the past.
The unsophisticated buyer hasn't heard or seen much
advertising for your type of product or service. This occurs
in relatively new markets. Possibly you have a product that
is new because of a technology-related advance. Also, you
could be introducing a product or service to a new group of
prospects -- a cross-over sale.
For the unsophisticated prospect, the claims in your
copywriting still need to contain a big promise. You need to
know your prospects' motivating emotions and can't forget to
provide proof. Your copywriting must still be focused on
benefits. You need to include all the nuts and bolts of a
complete package.
Copywriting for the unsophisticated buyer though doesn't
need to be complicated. It doesn't need to be elaborate or
mysterious. Make your claim or identify the desire for your
product or service in your headline. Show your prospect the
claim in the copy. Introduce your product. Provide
reasonable proof that your product works. Make the
offer. Request the action. Simple. Direct.
Straight-forward.
Of course once you start marketing to these new prospects,
you will track response and do testing. This information
tells you when your market has moved on to the next level of
sophistication. When this happens, your copywriting needs to
change to keep sales up.
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