Conversion copywriters — the people who write landing page copy that converts readers and delivers sales — are wonderful human beings. Their writing pulls in readers, generates conversions, and ultimately produces buckets of cash.
Wouldn’t you like to have that skill?
There’s good news here: It’s only partly skill. The rest is just technique — technique that you can learn and master. You — yes, you! — can unleash the same wizard-like conversion copy powers, as long as you understand the techniques that are at play.
You see, conversion is very much a science of the mind — how your prospect’s mind processes information, makes decisions, and decides to convert. In this post, I’ll describe eight writing techniques that are proven to work. After putting your time and resources into generating traffic, here’s how you can turn traffic into revenue by creating copy like a conversion pro.
Here are the tips we’ll cover:
- Use customer testimonials
- Emphasize the benefits, not the product/service
- Spend time writing a killer headline
- Keep your writing simple
- Write like a human
- Use numbers and get specific
- Ask for readers to take action
- A/B test your copy
8 Tips for Writing Great Landing Page Copy
1) Use customer testimonials.
One of the most powerful conversion copy techniques is not about writing at all; it’s about letting happy customers write your copy for you.
Testimonials produce conversions like nothing else can. It’s impossible to write copy as good as your customer. Why? Because good copy depends on the source, not just the style and substance. Testimonials are compelling because they show the customer what she will experience if she uses your product or service.
HighriseHQ’s landing pages are great use cases of these customer testimonials. A key to their successful, high-converting landing pages is that they place testimonials front and center, featuring a picture of the customer alongside a quote.
Now, take a look at one of Zoosk’s landing pages, where most of the copy is testimonials:
2) Emphasize the benefits, not the product/service.
One of the most important lessons I’ve learned in online marketing is that customers don’t really care about your products or services — in other words, they don’t care about the “solution” you’re trying to sell to them. A group of Harvard researchers conducted a study of 1,400 B2B customers in a variety of different fields, and concluded we’ve reached “the end of solution sales.”
3) Spend time writing a killer headline.
HubSpot’s Campaign Assistant can help you generate copy
So, what’s a copywriter to do? Go find a job where someone actually appreciates our hard work?
After that, customers may or may not read the following:
- Make your headline big, strong, and clear.
- Use a compelling subheadline that pushes your product’s benefits.
- Show large pictures that demonstrate the benefits of your products and explain your message.
- Use strong copy in your CTA.
- Break your copy up into major sections, led by a headline with large type.
- Use bullet points to discuss benefits of your product. Short bullet points. Not long ones.
- Use short paragraphs, rather than long blocks of text. Any paragraph over five lines long can be hard to digest.
- Use captions on your images.
4) Keep your writing simple.
The best conversion copy you’re going to read will come in the next two words: Be simple.
Nope. They just wrote the simplest, most clear statements they could.
But simplicity doesn’t mean replacing creativity with meaningless buzzwords. ConversionXL created a list of words that marketers should do their best to avoid — these are phrases that you don’t want to use:
- “On-demand marketing software”
- “Integrated solutions”
- “Flexible platform”
- “World leader”
- “Once-in-a-lifetime opportunity”
- “Changing the way X is done”
- “Paradigm shifting”
- “Exceeding customer expectations”
- Use a simple sentence structure.
- Keep sentences short.
- Use short words. Short words are easy to understand and skim.
- Don’t get fancy with your wording.
- Be clear and succinct. Use the most basic words to describe what you’re trying to say.
If you can be simple, you can write great conversion copy.
5) Write like a human.
There’s another technique that will help you crush your competition: Sound like a human being.
- Write the way you speak.
- Use normal words, like the ones you’d use if you were talking to a ten-year old. For example, why use “convivial” if you can use “friendly?”
- Use short sentences.
- Break grammar rules if the writing still sounds good and natural.
- Be funny.
- Use first person.
- Use expressions you’d use in a normal conversation. “Seriously.” “I’m thinking…,” “Wait a second.” “It was crazy.” “Wow.” “It was pretty awesome.” “It’s like…”
Ramit Sethi, a personal finance advisor, entrepreneur, and author of the famous blog “I Will Teach You To Be Rich,” has with sky-high conversion rates and a powerful personal style. His blogs read like a personal email to a best friend. He doesn’t even mind tossing in a word or two that he would use if he was hanging with his buddies. Check out this excerpt from one of his blog posts:
Try to get yourself away from the idea that you’re writing “copy,” and think of it more as a conversation. If you do that, you’ll write better. You’ll sound like a human. Your conversion rates will go up.
6) Use numbers and get specific.
- “Your conversion rates will explode!”
- “In the last ninety days, customer conversions have increased by an average of 78.2%.”
Let’s take a look at an example. Check out this landing page example from TeamGantt. They use a specific number to promote the benefits of their product:
How effective would it be if they claimed to have “millions of tasks scheduled?” The number makes a big difference. Customers want to have specific information about benefits customers are seeing, and they want specific examples of what they will experience. Specificity is a powerful tool.
7) Ask for readers to take action.
The final killer technique of a conversion pro is the call-to-action. If you don’t ask for conversions, you won’t get them. That’s why I suggest that you start with the end goal in ind — and the whole point of your landing page is that conversion. All of your copy should be building up to that conversion. Don’t be shy!
Similarly, writing CTA button copy is just as important, if not more so, than the rest of the copy on your page. Remember, how I mentioned that CTA buttons are one of the copy that people actually read? It matters. Simple changes in wording can create huge conversion increases, like in this example:
For more ideas on CTA copy that drives clicks, check out these 14 real-life examples of great CTA copy.
8) A/B test your copy.
Get started with HubSpot’s free landing page builder
You can use HubSpot’s free landing page builder to test page variations against each other.