Website Copy Writer Or Just A Copywriter – Improve Your Copy writing Skills Now

Website copy writer or just a copywriter, what is the difference you ask? Well in todays online world not much but there is a subtle difference in that one is about writing copy, which is the text on a page online or offline and one is more about promotional copy. i.e. Advertising copy, sales letters and the like.

 

A writer of copy may be a journalist covering a story and the copy is the term used for his text that is used. A copywriter on the other hand also writes copy but it is more about selling something or promoting goods or services. From small classified ads in the back of newspapers or magazines to full page ads in your glossy magazine for perfume or sales letters online. A good copywriter can command large fee’s as a decent sales letter will bring in a fortune is it takes off.

Wikipedia has a good summary as below.

Copywriting is the use of words and ideas to promote a person, business, opinion
or idea. Although the word copy may be applied to any content intended for
printing (as in the body of a newspaper article or book), the term copywriter is
generally limited to promotional situations, regardless of the medium (as in
advertisements for print, television, radio or other media). The word
copywriting is regularly used as a noun or gerund.
The purpose of marketing copy, or promotional text, is to persuade the reader,
listener or viewer to act—for example, to buy a product or subscribe to a
certain viewpoint.

Copywriters (as writers of copy are called) are used to help create direct mail
pieces, taglines, jingle lyrics, web page content (although if the purpose is
not ultimately promotional, its author might prefer to be called a content
writer), online ads, e-mail and other Internet content, television or radio
commercial scripts, press releases, white papers, catalogs, billboards,
brochures, postcards, sales letters, and other marketing communications media.
It can also appear in social media content including blog posts, tweets, and
social-networking site posts.

Content writing on websites may include among its objectives the achievement of
higher rankings in search engines. Known as "organic" search engine optimization
(SEO), this practice involves the strategic placement and repetition of keywords
and keyword phrases on web pages, writing in a manner that human readers would
consider normal.

Copywriters

Most copywriters are employees within organizations such as advertising
agencies, public relations firms, company advertising departments, large stores,
marketing firms, broadcasters and cable providers, newspapers, book publishers
and magazines. Copywriters can also be independent contractors who freelance for
a variety of clients, at the clients' offices or working from their own, or
partners or employees in a specialized copywriting agency. Such agencies combine
copywriting services with a range of editorial and associated services that may
include positioning and messaging consulting, social media and SEO consulting,
developmental editing, and copy editing, proofreading, fact checking, layout,
and design. A copywriting agency most often serves large corporations.
A copywriter usually works as part of a creative team. Advertising agencies
partner copywriters with art directors. The copywriter has ultimate
responsibility for the advertisement's verbal or textual content, which often
includes receiving the copy information from the client. The copywriter is
responsible for telling the story, crafting it in such a way that it resonates
with the viewer/reader, ideally producing an emotional response[1]. The art
director has ultimate responsibility for visual communication and, particularly
in the case of print work, may oversee production. Although, in many instances,
either person may come up with the overall idea for the advertisement or
commercial (typically referred to as the concept or "big idea"), and the process
of collaboration often improves the work.

Copywriters are similar to technical writers and the careers may overlap.
Broadly speaking, however, technical writing is dedicated to informing readers
rather than persuading them. For example, a copywriter writes an ad to sell a
car, while a technical writer writes the operator's manual explaining how to use
it.

Because the words sound alike, copywriters are sometimes confused with people
who work in copyright law. These careers are unrelated.
The Internet has expanded the range of copywriting opportunities to include web
content, ads, emails and other online media. It has also brought new
opportunities for copywriters to learn their craft, conduct research and view
others' work. And the Internet has made it easier for employers, copywriters and
art directors to find each other.

As a consequence of these factors, along with increased use of independent
contractors and virtual commuting generally, freelancing has become a more
viable job option, particularly in certain copywriting specialties and markets.
A generation ago, professional freelance copywriters (except those between
full-time jobs) were rare.

While education may be a good start or supplement in a budding copywriter's
professional education, working as part of an advertising team arguably remains
the best way for novices to gain the experience and business sense required by
many employers, and expands the range of career opportunities.
In order to further improve your copywriting skills and learn the tricks of
the trade to be able to write the best promotional copy a course from a
 master copywriter Bob Serling will enhance your skills.

 

 

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