Tanya Brody

Copywriter | Marketing & Optimization Consultant | Customer Advocate

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6 in 6 Freelance Copywriter Report – 3 Months

June 14, 2016 by Tanya Brody 1 Comment

3Months

I’m still at it and still solvent. Both of these things are very exciting to me. It means although I’m not progressing as fast as I’d like, I’m successful and I’m making this freelance copywriter thing work.

I’ve finished 2 major contracts and 1 minor contract. I have at least 1 upcoming project and I have several proposals out that just need to be finalized. I’ve also been contacted by 2 more possible clients, so I feel like work will be coming in. I’ll be a lot happier when everything is in writing and I’m working on whatever’s next.

I’ve discovered a few things about myself in the past 3 months:

  • I’m more inclined to work on a client’s project than my own projects, like marketing. This is good, because clients pay me to get their work done. However, it does mean my own business is growing more slowly than I’d like.
  • I’ll put off writing my own blog posts to do other things. This is bad because it means I’m not keeping up a “regular conversation” with all of you. I need to get better at this.
  • I really love what I do as a freelance copywriter! I enjoy going from one subject to another. I love learning about new things. New writing techniques, new marketing ideas, new subjects, new products, I find all of it fascinating.
  • I love focusing on my work. I am the sort of person who will get going on a project and look up 5 hours later to say “Oh, I should eat something.” I try to be careful of this, but I love being “in the zone” so I stay there whenever possible.

Even though I’ve been a freelancer before, I regularly gain a new appreciation for all of the stuff that goes into running a business.

In the last couple of months, I’ve investigated time tracking software, bookkeeping software, memberships to various organizations, as well as several educational programs. I’ve sat through webinars on new products to help my freelance copywriter business. I’ve even purchased or tried a few of those products. I’ve rejected a lot more.

I think one of the hardest things about being a business owner is the day-to-day “running the business” stuff. I think many of us go into our own businesses with grandiose ideas of what it will be like to “be in charge of our own fate.” It’s all very exciting, until you remember someone has to take care of invoices and pay the taxes.

So as a fellow business owner, I would encourage you to remember the day-to-day stuff, as well as the fun stuff. For me, the fun stuff is writing my clients’ projects. But I also enjoy doing my own marketing, when I make time for it.

The day-to-day stuff is remembering to turn on my work timer so I’m keeping track of my hours. Or remembering to make out the invoice so I can get paid. It’s figuring out how many hours it will really take me to complete a client project, not just how many I think it will take.

If you can’t do the day-to-day stuff very well, maybe it’s time to delegate some of that to someone else. I don’t think I’m at that point yet, but I expect I will be soon.

So, here’s to our growing businesses. May they continue to thrive. And may we be able to get all the work done, including the day-to-day stuff.

I’m off to do the day-to-day stuff. Like pay my taxes.

Where are you with your business? How do you handle the day-to-day parts of running your business? Tell me about it in the comments.

Filed Under: 6 in 6 Tagged With: Copywriting, entrepreneur, freelance copywriter, small business owner, your business

Why Your Company Needs a Style Guide

June 2, 2016 by Tanya Brody Leave a Comment

StyleGuide

I firmly believe that every company, regardless of size, should have a style guide. This may sound like an extra layer of work that small businesses really don’t need to deal with at “this stage,” but I disagree.

It’s better to establish a style guide now, while you’re creating your voice and brand. If you wait until you’re well-known, you’ll have so many different practices in place, it might be hard to agree on a set of guidelines that everyone can follow.

So the first question you may have is…

What is a Style Guide?

A style guide is a document that sets the writing standards for everyone in your organization. It covers everything from the tone and voice of the company’s writing style to formatting and hex codes for the company’s chosen brand colors.

Please note: There is a difference between a content style guide and a design style guide. A content style guide refers specifically to anything written to promote the company. A design style guide refers to logos, brand color pallets, typography, icon sets, etc.

There are places that content and design style guides intersect, like pallet colors, formatting and whether your company uses a ™or ® in its logo or next to the company’s name in all marketing collateral.

Because I am a copywriter, I am talking about a content style guide in this article.

What Does a Style Guide Do?

A style guide acts as a reference point. New writers should review it and everyone should have a copy or a link handy. That way if they can’t remember whether the company uses the Oxford comma, they have somewhere to look.

A style guide also:

  • Keeps your company’s tone, voice and messaging consistent across all platforms.
  • Helps maintain your company’s brand identity.
  • Shows quality and professionalism.
  • Helps you write more effective content.

Why Do You Need a Style Guide?

Aside from the reasons above…

It puts your audience first

Let’s face it, everything you do in your marketing should be about communicating effectively with your audience. That includes your style guide. You should be shaping your style guide around what your audience wants from you and your products, as well as the problems you’re solving for them.

Your style guide will document the language and tone you use, your overall messaging and how and where you communicate with your audience.

It establishes your company’s voice

Every writer has their own “voice” and that will come across in your marketing. But having a style guide will give all of your writers a common voice to write in. Think of a choir. Every singer has his or her own unique sound, but when they sing together and listen to each other, you hear one overarching “voice” that carries through the whole piece.

Your audience will get used to hearing your company’s “voice” so you want to establish that early on. It will breed familiarity with your audience and consistency within your marketing.

It makes it easier on you and your employees

If everyone is held to the same standards, there will be less conflict over which way something should be written or whose concept of the “company voice” is right. It’s easy to update if company standards change.

It also acts as the “source of truth” whenever anyone has a question about how something should be written, or asks “why do we do it that way?” A good style guide can settle a lot of arguments.

Your writers will thank you. Your editors will thank you. Your entire marketing department will thank you. And most importantly, your audience will appreciate it, even though they don’t know it exists.

What Goes into a Style Guide?

Some of that will depend on your needs. I’ve seen style guides that are one page long and give basic guidelines. I’ve seen others, like MailChimp’s style guide, which is a mini-website. (Check it out, it’s really well done.)

Every style guide should contain:

Your chosen style manual

Most major media outlets use either the Chicago Manual of Style or the AP Stylebook. (There are arguments on which is better, I won’t go into any of that here.) Many companies adopt one of these style manuals as the basis for their own style guides. It gives them something to start with in terms of grammar and spelling. You can get an online subscription to both of these.

Your chosen dictionary

Why should you choose a dictionary? Because people have preferences. If you prefer the Merriam-Webster but one of your writers prefers the Oxford English Dictionary, you may have inconsistencies in your spelling. So choose one and make that the permanent reference point.

Voice and tone

I always ask my clients about their company voice. It helps me get a better feel for how they want to be represented. Here are some of the questions I typically ask:

Is your company:

  • Formal
  • Informal
  • Laid back,
  • Down-to-earth
  • Funny and cute
  • Matter-of-fact
  • Practical
  • Business like

Do you have a particular person you want to sound like? (Your CEO, a celebrity, a politician?)

Do you want me to write in:

  • The first person (I, me, I’m)?
  • The second person (you, yours)?
  • The third person (the company is, the company does)?

Would you prefer I write in an active or a passive voice? (Personally, I find this matters a lot in how your audience perceives you. I always prefer active, but I’ve written for companies that use the passive.)

Does your company use a lot of jargon? If so, does your audience understand that jargon or will I need to clarify it?

Thinking about these things can unify your writers into one company voice pretty easily.

Company branding

This section will deal with things specific to your company like:

  • How do you spell your company’s name? A lot of companies are combining two words into one these days, so this matters more than you’d think. MailChimp, FindLaw and SunEdison are all good examples.
  • Product names and how to spell them: Similar to company names, a lot of products have two words combined into one. Some companies use unique or clever spellings of common words for their product names.
  • Trademarks, Registered marks and Copyright marks: If your company or product names have been registered, you’ll want to use the ®. If they’ve been trademarked, you’ll want to use the ™ and so on. Also, some companies require that you use these symbols with every single use of the company or product name. Some only use it once per page. Establish that in your style guide so no one is confused.

Commonly troublesome words

This is where you decide whether you want to use Ebook, eBook, ebook or e-book. Do you capitalize Internet or not? (Editor’s note: Since I published this post, the AP Stylebook has changed its practice of capitalizing Internet from upper case to lower case.) Is it ecommerce or e-commerce? Go through all of the terms you use regularly and settle on one spelling.

This is also where you establish your company’s jargon. Some industries have more than one term for the same item or issue. Choose one and stick with it. Everyone will be happier.

Grammar and punctuation

To Oxford comma or not to Oxford comma? That is the question. If you choose a media style guide, this may be answered for you. If you don’t, you’ll need to answer this question.

What do you capitalize? Product names? Employee titles? Do Your Headlines Use Capitals At The Start Of Each Word? Or do You Only Capitalize the Standard Words?

Do you use abbreviations? If so, what abbreviations do you use? Do you write out the name or phrase that you’re abbreviating once somewhere on the page, then put the abbreviation in parenthesis next to it, like this: Search engine optimization (SEO)? After that, do you only use the abbreviation? Your writers will want to know.

Audience personas

Your marketing department (or your copywriter) should create fully-fledged audience personas for their own purposes. You should have the basics listed in your style guide for everyone to refer to so they have someone in mind when they write.

These can include:

  • Your target audience or archetype.
  • Persona name.
  • Where they see your message (social media, print media, radio, TV, etc.).
  • Their problems and pain points.
  • The types of solutions they may be looking for.
  • How your products solve their problems.

Formatting

This is where your content and design style guides will overlap. In many cases, your writers need to know some of your design standards. Such as:

  • Hex codes for approved colors, especially if your writers will create buttons for blog posts or landing pages.
  • Approved fonts.
  • Do images get captions?
  • Image placement.
  • Image width and height.
  • Can text wrap around images?
  • When and where should writers use bold, italics or underlining?
  • Do you use specific bullet shapes? If not, does it matter what the writers use?
  • Formatting for numbered lists.
  • Formatting for attributions and references.

Approved and unapproved content

Your writers will need to research. Where can they go? What types of sites can they use? For example, one content company I worked for insisted that we couldn’t use information from other content companies. They preferred we used professional and scientific studies whenever possible. They encouraged us to use sites with endings like .edu and .gov.

Some other examples of approved content sites might be:

  • Industry guides,
  • Market research sources,
  • Competitors

Sites you may want them to stay away from can include:

  • “Clickbait” sites
  • Taboo competitors
  • Unreliable sources within your industry
  • Controversial authors, opinions or sources

Examples of right and wrong

If there is any confusion about how to write something in any section, show a specific example.

For instance:

Our company name is FindLaw.

Please do not use Find Law, find law, Findlaw or any other variation.

How Do You Write a Style Guide?

Get input from your regular writers. (Or from the freelance copywriter you hired.) They’ll have established patterns and opinions on how things should be done. And people are more likely to follow your standards if they have a say in how they’re created.

Keep it simple. I know I listed a lot of information you should use here, but once you answer a lot of these questions, you’ll be able to distill it all down fairly easily. 4 pages is a good length.

Adjust your style guide as your company grows. This is a living document. Update it whenever changes are made so you’re always referring to the “source of truth.”

To make it easy for you, I’ve created a basic Company Style Guide template for you to follow. Just fill in the sections and you’ll be good to go.

Download the Company Style Guide Template Now

 

Does Your Company Have a Style Guide?

How do you use it? If not, why? Tell me about it in the comments.

 

Filed Under: Good Business Practices Tagged With: Copywriting, customer persona, entrepreneur, help, small business owner, Style guide, target audience, your business

Yes, You Can Collect Unemployment Benefits While Starting Your Own Business

May 20, 2016 by Tanya Brody Leave a Comment

unemployment

I know, crazy, right?

Up until last week, I thought so too. But as of last Tuesday, (as I mentioned in my last post) I am officially enrolled in the CLIMB program here in Minnesota. CLIMB stands for “Converting Layoffs Into Minnesota Businesses.” The program pays enrollees to work on their own businesses for at least 32 hours a week.

“Working on your business” can include product development, making sales, working on client projects, your own marketing, (so I’m getting part of my 32 hours in by writing this blog post) training, bookkeeping or anything else that is part of running your business.

And the best part is, none of this work counts against receiving your unemployment benefits.

Up until now, I’ve received about $300 in unemployment on one particularly slow week. That’s it. Because normally, if I work for myself while receiving unemployment, any money I make gets deducted from my benefits.

The unemployment system here in Minnesota requires you to report your earnings when you do the work, not when you’re paid for the work. They deduct the amount you’ve “earned” from your eligible benefits, whether you have money coming in or not. This means my finances have been pretty tight for the last couple of months.

But now, all of that has changed for the better.

I found out about the CLIMB program through a friend who was dealing with the unemployment system here in Minnesota about the same time I was. She mentioned it when we got together one morning for breakfast to commiserate and share resources.

I applied for unemployment benefits as soon as I was laid off (as one does). So I was well into the “must spend 30 hours a week looking for work” situation. But the more I looked, the more I realized I wanted to work for myself again. Once I found out about the CLIMB program, I jumped at the opportunity.

To get these benefits, I had to qualify for the Dislocated Workers program. I attended a session where about 30 laid-off workers were walked through filling out and submitting an application to the program. (It was a bit weird, honestly.)

The Dislocated Workers program helps people who have been laid off from highly qualified jobs get the extra training they need get their next job. The program connects them with educational opportunities and (in some cases) pays for the training.

Once I was accepted into this program, I was assigned a Dislocated Worker counselor, who enrolled me in the CLIMB program. I presented him with my progress up to that point. I had already formed an LLC and I gave him the accompanying documentation.  I also reported on my current clients.

He explained the entire program to me, then put me in contact with the CLIMB program representative. It took a couple of months, but eventually everything went through.

Last Tuesday, the CLIMB representative called to tell me I am officially enrolled and will receive my current unemployment benefits every week until they run out (sometime in October).

The great thing is, making money doesn’t affect my benefits. It’s encouraged. The CLIMB representative even gave me some “motherly advice.” She said to use my benefits to pay bills and invest everything I could back into my business.

Now, I know I can pay my bills, regardless of when my clients pay me. This is a huge weight off of my shoulders. I’ve lived on credit cards before. It’s not a fun game.

If you’ve been laid off recently and are thinking of starting your own business, find out whether your state has a Self-Employment Assistance program, or something similar to Minnesota’s CLIMB program.

According to a couple of people inside the MN Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED) program, Minnesota is a leader in innovation when it comes to unemployment benefits. Many states are following our lead.

According to the U.S Department of Commerce’s Minority Business Development Agency website, the Small Business Administration and the U.S. Department of Labor have launched a new website to support state workforce and unemployment agencies who offer Self-Employment Assistance programs. https://sea.workforcegps.org/

Several states, including Delaware, Maine, New Jersey, New York and Oregon already have Self-Employment Assistance programs. Check with your state unemployment agency to see if they have this program and whether you qualify.

According to the Small Business Association website, you must:

  • Be eligible for and be receiving unemployment benefits
  • Be unlikely to return to your previous employment
  • Have a viable business idea, be willing to work full time on developing your business and be able to start and sustain your business until it becomes self-supporting.

I expect qualifications will vary from state to state.

Are you starting your own business after being laid off? Tell me about the resources your state is offering in the comments below.

Filed Under: 6 in 6 Tagged With: entrepreneur, Follow your dreams, help, small business owner, your business

How to Identify Your Target Audience in 3 Easy Steps (And Save Yourself Thousands of Dollars on Advertising)

May 6, 2016 by Tanya Brody Leave a Comment

target-audience

Who are you talking to?

I’m completely serious here. Who are you talking to with your marketing? Do you have a target audience or are you just throwing money away trying to hit anyone and everyone you possibly can?

I am astonished by how many small business owners and entrepreneurs create a product or service and just assume that they can sell it to everyone. Whatever it is, you can’t. You’re wasting your advertising budget.

Even major retailers that sell just about everything under the sun have specific target audiences. Target and Walmart go after a totally different economic group than Nordstrom and Macy’s.

Identifying your target market is one of the most important steps in creating your marketing plan. It’s also the first thing you should do. In fact, it’s the first thing every copywriter is taught to do when writing any promotional piece.

Knowing your target audience can make your marketing campaigns less expensive and more effective. Take the time to figure out who you’re talking to. You’ll find it’s a win-win.

Here are 3 easy steps to identify your target market and make your entire marketing plan much easier.

Research Your Target Audience’s Demographics

Even if your product is so cutting edge it “solves problems you never knew you had,” you can figure out the demographics of your target audience.

Back when I was writing websites for lawyers, I would ask them about their target market demographics. A standard answer was “anyone with money and a pulse.” A very broad audience indeed.

But as we continued to talk, I’d wheedle more information out of them. For instance, some of the personal injury lawyers would tell me they didn’t want the “cheap” cases. So they were really looking for clients with injuries serious enough to need a lot of medical treatment.

I’d get some great information when I asked about the education level of their average client. Even an answer like “oh, most of them have graduated from high school and some of them have attended a couple years of college” told me a lot.

You can figure out your target audience’s basic demographics by asking yourself a couple of basic questions.

Who can afford my product?

If you’re selling your product for $19.99, you have a very different target market than if you’re selling it for $97, or even $997. Asking who can afford your product will give you a broad idea of your target audience’s income level. Once you know that, you can narrow down the income level of the customers you’re going after.

Who will find my product useful?

Some companies promote their products to anyone and everyone. I regularly get promotional postcards from the Westonka School District and Foss Swim School telling me about their children’s activities and lessons. I am a single woman living in a 1-bedroom house. I wish they would do their research and save their printing and postage.

A great demographic exercise is to ask yourself “who is this product for?” Take the time to write down your answers. Your answers can be as simple as “for mothers” or as detailed as “for working mothers who have toddlers between 18 months and 3 years.”

You can also include time and place: “For working mothers to give to their toddlers as a snack while they’re in the car or being pushed in a stroller.”

You may even find a whole new sub-set of people who would find your product useful: “For active working mothers who are pushing their toddlers in a jogging stroller while getting their daily exercise.”

The nice thing about this exercise is it helps you decide who you’re talking to and what you’re talking about.

Filling in the Gaps

From here, you can refine your customer demographics with research. You can find lots of information on the Internet about demographic groups, including generational information and basic group traits. Use these as a starting point, then drill down to find the demographics of the people who will be your best potential customers.

If you use Google Analytics, their system keeps track of a lot of demographic information. You can use this to build an audience profile based on the people who have visited your website.

Google Analytics dashboard

Google Analytics dashboard

I like to develop a full picture of my clients’ customers, including:

  • Age
  • Gender
  • Income
  • Where they live
  • The kind of car they drive
  • Where they hang out on the Internet
  • Their basic shopping habits
  • What they do for a living
  • Marital status
  • Family

You can make this list as long or as short as you’d like. My list is pretty extensive. I have a degree in creative writing and theater, so I want to get an in-depth picture of my target audience. Download my Customer Persona sheet to get ideas for researching your own target audience.

You can get great target audience information directly from your current customers by asking them to fill out a simple survey. If you’re starting a new company and launching a new product, you can survey your email list of interested customers. There are a lot of free survey tools and sites out there. My favorites are Survey Monkey and Google Forms. 

Psychographics and Behaviors

Now that you know your target audience a bit better, you should get a feel for their interests. This includes their political leanings, hobbies and their religion or spiritual beliefs. This will help you deliver your message more effectively.

Why should you delve into this information? Because you’ll have a very different conversation with a 20-something male who is in to juicing and organic farming than you will with a 50-something female who is a devout Evangelical Christian and the head of a women’s knitting and quilting club that makes blankets for needy children.

This information is going to help you shape your message, especially when you have different subsets within your target audience. You should target your marketing for each group to get the best return on investment (ROI).

Again, I tend to get pretty in-depth here. I think about what types of magazines, music and TV shows my target audience would watch. (Most of this is guesswork, but it helps me get a better picture of who I’m writing to.)

You also need to look at their emotions. This includes their hopes and fears, and what they want in the immediate and long-term. Understanding these psychographics will let you push the emotional triggers that are more likely to make your target audience opt-in or buy.

You can figure some of this out by looking at advertisements for products that are similar to yours. Are they targeting the same audience? What are they focusing on? What emotions are they trying to evoke in their ads?

Interview Someone in Your Target Audience

 Now that you’ve researched your target audience, find someone who matches that profile and ask them out for coffee. You almost certainly know someone who fits the description you’ve just created. If not, you know someone who knows someone.

Ask this person questions about their life, their concerns and their problems. Ask them what products they use now to deal with these problems:

  • Are they effective?
  • Are they happy with these products?
  • What do they like?
  • What would they change?

Talk to them about your product and see how they respond. Ask them how it would help in their daily life, how they would use it and how they would benefit. If the person is interested in trying your product, offer them a sample and ask them to give you a testimonial if they like it.

I recommend recording your conversation (with the interviewee’s permission). I always record my interviews because everyone talks faster than I can type and I don’t want to miss something important. Most smart phones have a recording app already installed. If not, there are plenty you can download.

Create Your Customer Persona

Use all of the information you’ve gathered to build a customer persona. This is a full character sketch of your target audience. Again, this can be as long or as short as you’d like. But you should include:

  • Basic demographics like age, income, profession and gender.
  • Basic psychographics, especially their motivations, hopes and fears.
  • The problem they’re facing and the pain points it causes.
  • How your product can solve that problem and ease those pain points.

When I create customer personas for my clients, I give this person a name and add a picture so I always know who I’m writing to. I feel like having a name and a face helps me to have a better “conversation” with my target audience.

Starting the Conversation

 Now that you know who you’re talking to, and what you’re talking about, you’ll have a much easier time promoting your product to the people who will actually buy it.

You can use this information when you’re writing your promotional copy and ads. You can also use it to target your online advertising, such as Facebook and Google Ads. Each of these platforms have systems that let you drill down to show your ads only to your target audience. You can get as specific as the example of the active mother with the toddler I gave above.

Most importantly, you have a much better idea of who you want your customer to be. Now your marketing campaigns will be effective and bring in the people who will spend money and increase your bottom line. Congratulations. Your hard work will save you hundreds, if not thousands of dollars every year.

Want to get into the demographics of your target audience the same way I do? Click on the button below to Download my Customer Persona sheet.

DOWNLOAD MY CUSTOMER PERSONA SHEET

Do you know your target audience? Tell me about them in the comments section below.

Filed Under: Good Business Practices Tagged With: Copywriting, customer persona, entrepreneur, freelance copywriter, small business owner, target audience, target market, your business

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