Freelance Copywriter Secrets: 9 Ways To Get Big Business From Small Ads

By: Charles Brown
Submitted: 2007-01-17 16:43:24
Print this article | Tell a friend | For publisher | Social Bookmarking
Rating:
 

Inch for inch, a small ad just might be the best advertising deal around. If done right, a small space or classified ad can bring you profits far exceeding what a larger often produces. Here are some ideas to get more bang for your buck with small ads:

  1. Use small ads to test headlines and other key elements before you pay for a larger ad. Headlines are funny things, you really never know which one will take off and be your best money maker. Instead, you have to let the people who read your ad “vote” for the headline that appeals to them the most with how they respond. So it makes a lot more sense to test headlines on small ads before you spend money on a larger ad.

  2. Use small ads to generate leads. Offer a free booklet or some other free information product in your small ad. When the reader gets your information, make sure it contains far more useful information than sales message. But even then you will have much more space to sell than in a full space ad in a publication.

  3. Of course you should also make use of the leads generated by your small ad. Send these people follow up information. This way, your single small ad enables you to recontact the same interested people over and over again.

  4. Instead of using a single, large ad to tell about your wide list of services or products, use several small ads to target each niche you cover. For example, the Yellow Page ads of many law firms are little more than laundry lists of the services they provide. A more effective campaign might be to target each specialty with a single small ad. Take this one step further, and the law firms might offer different free information products or white papers on each small ad targeting each specialty.

  5. Speaking of Yellow Page ads, many businesses make the expensive mistake of putting up a year-long ad without testing. Since the Yellow Pages only come out once a year, it is not feasible to test the ad there. But you can run several small ads in local publications to see which one is most effective and choose the winner as your year-long Yellow Page ad. Running an untested Yellow Page ad is one mistake that can cost you not only in a poor return on investment, it also causes you to go a whole year with a lower sales than you might otherwise have been able to realize.

  6. If your product has multiple uses or benefits, highlight each use or benefit in separate ads. Don’t count on readers wading through a long list text to get to the single benefit that appeals to them.

  7. Test, test and then test again. Small ads give you a cost-effective way to compare many different ideas to see which ones pull in the highest response from readers.

  8. Effective headlines for small ads can be shorter and punchier than larger ads. Try to compress as much meaning as possible in five words or less. Here are some headlines that have worked very well on small ads:

    $500 a Week

    15 Minutes a Day

    Free 48 Page Booklet

    Anyone Can Learn

    Fun-Packed

    No Obligation

    Money Back If Not Delighted

    Send No Money

    Mrs. E.C. Made $65

    Learn In 6 Weeks

    (reprinted from Tested Advertising Methods, 5th Edition, by John Caples)

  9. If you are using the small ad to generate leads offering free information, give your booklet or information product a good title and experiment with using that title as your headline (but test, test, test). For example, “101 Ways To Help Your Child Get Better Grades,” or “33 Ways To Unlock The Hidden Job Market.”

It is hard to imagine any marketing plan that cannot be made better with the smart use of small ads. They are cost effective, allow you to more precisely target your intended audience and …..can be tested.

COPYRIGHT(C)2006, Charles Brown. All rights reserved.

Download your free copy of 99 Ideas For Writing Irresistible Web Content, written by Charles Brown, a Dallas, Texas based freelance copywriter who writes web copy, advertisements, white papers and direct mail. Subscribe to his "Freelance Copywriter Secrets" at http://dynamiccopywriting.blogspot.com or contact him at 817.715.3852 or **charbrow@gmail.com**.

Article source: Expert Articles

Most Recent Articles in Copywriting category

  • Know the perfect art of SEO copywriting - By: Naman Jain
    Writing is a craft but SEO copywriting is surely an art. SEO copywriting is a real professional writing that aims at increasing the ranking of a particular website.
  • To be or not to be search engine copyrighting outsourcing - By: Sudesh Kumar
    Search engine copywriting is virtually all about crafting content for your website. It has to be written in such a way that the content becomes search engine friendly.
  • SEO Copywriting - how to optimize your web site for different search engines - By: Naman Jain
    SEO copywriting helps your web sites get high ranking on various search engines in an authentic way and attract maximum surfers to search through your web sites.
  • The Essential Factors About Content Copywriting - By: Naman Jain
    Writing is considered to be one of the best ways of communication. Read some essential factors about content copywriting here.
  • The Copywriting Secrets that will Boost All Your Direct Marketing Sales! - By: Gil Carlson
    Discover my copywriting secrets and boost results from all your direct marketing!
  • Write about Real Estate for Money - By: Ed Kirkland
    Ads can come from many different sources. Google Adsense is one of the most popular, but there are many other companies that you can submit your blog to. Usually, if someone uses your blog as a portal to the ad, you can earn anywhere from a few cents to a few dollars.
  • Writing, Editing, and Proofreading - By: David Bowman
    Writing, editing, and proofreading are not the same. What are the unique skills each requires? Why is a writer often not the best person for editing and proofreading?
  • On Copyrights, the Creative Experience and Graphic Designers - By: Jessica Thomas
    The creative experience for many young designers is enough to think about. Now they must consider the global implications of copyright laws? You bet. Why is a knowledge of the legal precedence of copyright important to a young artist? Because in order to create, a good artist should know as much as possible about his tools. This means not just the origins of his fine bristle brush, or the interesting history of the chemistry of his pigments, but to examine the social and political tools that will allow him to function as an artist in the United States in 2007. Copyright laws in the United States, had, until 1989, been focused on keeping intellectual property private in order to facilitate economic growth. In other words, in the US, copyright law has historically been a monetary issue, not a creative one…
  • A Web Copywriter Should Know the Rules and How to Break Some - By: Steven Gerber
    What makes a good web copywriter? Just anyone who knows how to proofread? Of course not.
  • The Value Trap - By: Elaine Berry
    No doubt you are familiar with this scenario.You receive a sales letter trying to persuade you to buy an e-book package for $97. The letter contains a list of attractions contained in the package, but you feel sure you’ve seen it before somewhere, perhaps offered as a freebie or a bonus.