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  • - Seven copywriting exercises you can do right now

  • to become a copywriter.

  • Now, first of all, I want to you to understand

  • that copywriting is a learnable skill.

  • How do I know it's a learnable skill?

  • Because I learned it.

  • When I first immigrated to Vancouver, Canada,

  • I couldn't speak a word of English, right?

  • So, English is not my first language.

  • So I know for a fact that if I could learn this skill,

  • if English is not your first language

  • or it is your first language, you can learn this skill.

  • It's very much like a muscle, right?

  • You can go to the gym, you can bench press,

  • you can do push-ups, you can do curls.

  • You can work that muscle.

  • So today I want to give you seven exercises

  • that you could do that you could exercise

  • your copywriting muscles

  • so you can become a better copywriter.

  • Sound good? Here we go.

  • Exercise number one, and that is I want you

  • to sign up for what I call a learning email address.

  • It's not your primary email address.

  • A learning email address

  • and you would use the email address

  • to subscribe to everyone's list.

  • Everyone has got a learning page,

  • some kind of offer. Subscribe to their stuff.

  • So what happens is, you could use gmail,

  • I like to use gmail,

  • when you get the email addresses,

  • you can then filter them and sort of put them

  • in different folders so you're collecting different emails

  • from different people, different learning pages.

  • So you would see other people's work.

  • When you do this, you are building your email archive

  • of other people's work like naturally.

  • So that's exercise number one.

  • Sign up for other people's stuff.

  • Do not use your primary email address.

  • You'll be bombarded with thousands and thousands of emails

  • everyday and you'll come back to my channel

  • and comment and you bitch about it. Don't do that, okay?

  • Copywriting exercise number two

  • and that is go to www.swiped, S-W-I-P-E-D, .co

  • I'll put a link somewhere on this page

  • You go there and you see a lot of different white files

  • and sales letters and what you want to look for

  • is look for what I call control,

  • write it down, control pieces.

  • Meaning that it's a marketing piece

  • that has been proven to convert sales.

  • Proven to generate revenue. Look at those control pieces

  • and then you want to save them, you can print them out

  • I like to print them out because I am old school, right?

  • So I like to print them out and I like to look at them

  • and I like to dissect "okay here's the headline."

  • "Oh here's the storytelling part"

  • "Oh here's the guarantee"

  • and you're looking at other people,

  • other master's work, right?

  • And this will give you a better understanding of,

  • "Oh I can see that this is what makes it good."

  • or "I really like this headline here." Right?

  • If you like it, copy and paste

  • maybe put it in your work document, organize it nicely.

  • Then you're building your own little virtual library

  • if that makes sense.

  • Copywriting exercise number three,

  • now this is so simple but this is one of my secrets.

  • When I had clients who were contacting me

  • and they hired me to write copy,

  • one of the first things that I do

  • is always ask them and say

  • "hey can I talk to some of your existing customers?"

  • You will be shocked how many entrepreneurs

  • and business owners, they don't ask.

  • They don't talk to their customers.

  • So here's what I do

  • this is what makes me look like a genius, right?

  • In my early twenties, I would say, "okay

  • give me a few of your best customer's contact information

  • I will go and talk to them."

  • So then I would settle a time, I work on the phone with them

  • and I simply ask them "Hey, you know,

  • why did you do business with this company?"

  • "what motivated you to buy from them?"

  • "Why didn't you just buy from everybody else?"

  • And most of the time you'll find out

  • they'll tell you everything.

  • "Oh I love about the customer service."

  • "I love the brand."

  • "I love this, like how this product works."

  • And all of that, I wrote all of those things down.

  • And I went back and I talked to my client and said

  • "Hey you know, do you know why people buy from you?"

  • and usually they would say "Oh they buy from us

  • because of A, B, C, and D" and I said

  • "That's not true. Let me share with you

  • exactly why they buy from you."

  • and I show them X, Y, Z and they're like

  • "Oh my God, you're a genius. How come we didn't know this?

  • How come we never find out about

  • all these things about customers?"

  • And I mumble "because you never asked." Like duh!

  • So then all I need to do as a copywriter

  • is taking what is obvious like "Duh! Hello?"

  • You take in what's obvious and then you craft a message

  • 'cause if I'm talking to three, four, five people

  • that's why they bought from this person? This company?

  • I took all that and guess what?

  • Most of the time, other people

  • they're buying for the same reason!

  • Like, craft marketing message

  • then you send out to a market place

  • and it works. And then you look like a hero.

  • So it's not so much about writing,

  • it's about doing the research

  • It's about understanding the customers.

  • Most people don't do this.

  • So that's exercise number three.

  • Exercise number four

  • and this I actually learned it from my mentor Alan

  • and Alan's the one who had taught me copywriting.

  • And he actually learned this from the great Gary Halbert

  • Which Gary Halbert, when he was alive,

  • arguably one of the, if not thee greatest,

  • copywriter of our time.

  • Kind of the Michael Jordan of copywriting.

  • Gary Halbert used to have this exercise

  • and he said "Okay after you've finished a marketing piece"

  • and Gary usually sells to the masses, right? Like everybody.

  • "Once you've finished your marketing piece,

  • and backed in a direct real piece,"

  • and he said "here's what you wanna do"

  • "You wanna go to a bar, go to a pub."

  • "Go somewhere public and you show people what you wrote"

  • "About the author, about the letter, about the campaign."

  • You show people, and he asked people

  • "What do you think about this?"

  • And they would read it and if they say to you

  • "Oh this is really good!"

  • This is like "yeah, yeah this is cool!"

  • It means it's shit. It means this is shit

  • It means your stuff is not good.

  • That's not the reaction you want. If they say to you,

  • they're reading your letter, they're reading your offer

  • "Where can I buy this?" "I want to buy some of this."

  • Then you know you got something

  • 'cause people vote with their wallets.

  • So show your work to people

  • who may not even be your ideal customers.

  • Have them look at it, get some feedback

  • 'cause they would give you feedback

  • that you may not even be aware, you may not even think of!

  • Just ask them and say "I don't understand this."

  • "This is totally confusing to me."

  • What do you mean it's confusing? It's so obvious.

  • Like one of the things I'll share quickly with you

  • when I talk about closing, in my mind

  • because I've been in the industry for so long

  • I thought everybody knows what closing is.

  • Now when I talk to people outside of business

  • outside of sales, you know what they think closing is?

  • They think closing is this.

  • They think it's closing the door.

  • I say "What the hell? Closing, sales!"

  • "Oh! Sales! You mean like selling, yeah!"

  • They don't make that connection.

  • So then I know from then on

  • every time I talk about closing,

  • I would explain what closing means. I would tell them

  • "Hey, you know how you have traditional sales?"

  • "The kind of people who are slimy, pushy, aggressive

  • like snake oil sales? Closing is a different form of sales."

  • "It's a higher level of sales."

  • "Oh!" Now they're curious, they're intrigued.

  • They want to know more.

  • So even simple things like that

  • 'cause keep in mind in this day in and day out

  • we do this day in and day out,

  • sometimes we take ourself out of the picture.

  • Give yourself a little bit of distance

  • between what you do and what you sell.

  • You would be able to communicate your message

  • so much better to your ideal audience.

  • Copywriting exercise number five.

  • This you can do immediately

  • and that is after you've finish your copy,

  • get yourself a quiet room, okay?

  • Maybe in your bedroom, in your living room

  • and you want to read out your copy out loud. That's right.

  • So after you finish your letter, your message,

  • your email, your learning page, just read out loud.

  • When you read your copy out loud,

  • the spots that you feel like it doesn't flow?

  • If it doesn't flow when you are reading out loud,

  • it doesn't flow for your reader who is reading it mentally

  • as they're going it through, going through the copy.

  • So then you might want to change some of those segments

  • Or when you read it out loud

  • there's certain words you think

  • maybe that word is too complicated. It's confusing.

  • You can replace that word with easier to understand words.

  • Right? Simpler words. You can also do that.

  • So just by reading it out loud, I don't care what you wrote

  • Reading it out loud, you will find

  • that so many places and spots within the marketing message

  • that you could improve. So, very simple exercise

  • but very, very effective.

  • Copywriting exercise number six. Now this exercise

  • is probably one of the most important exercise

  • that I could teach you.

  • And I learned this from, again my copywriting mentor.

  • When he taught me this exercise

  • he said "I have taught this exercise to so many people"

  • "I've shared this with so many people over the years."

  • "No one does it. Dan, you're one of the very few people,

  • maybe the only one who actually does it."

  • I said, "Okay what is that?"

  • Right? Like why is that?

  • He said "I don't know, people are just too lazy."

  • Maybe? So here's the exercise.

  • You take winning, proven pieces

  • letters, marketing messages, copy,

  • and you copy them word for word in your own handwriting.

  • That's the very first thing that my mentor taught me.

  • So we'll take these marketing letters,

  • have a notepad here, the pieces,

  • and I would copy word for word in my own handwriting.

  • Notice I said handwriting. Not laptop, not computer,

  • not typing, none of that.

  • Good old paper and pen. Why?

  • Because when you do that,

  • you are rewiring your nervous system. You're learning.

  • There's something when you use the pen. When you write,

  • it connects to a different part in your brain.

  • So when I first did this, I thought it was kinda dumb.

  • I didn't understand how profound this is.

  • I was arguing a little bit with my mentor, I was like

  • "Why do I need to do this? Couldn't I just read it?"

  • "Couldn't I just type it so much faster?

  • Like, this is slow!" I could type pretty fast.

  • He said, "It's not how it works."

  • And I didn't quite understand. He just said

  • "Just keep doing it. Just keep doing it"

  • "Just keep doing it. Just keep doing it.

  • and I did. And it's not like different letters.

  • It's like the same freaking letter!

  • Do it two, three, four, ten times. The same letter.

  • And one day it clicked for me and here's what happened.

  • As I was copying the letter word for word,

  • Suddenly it's this bizarre experience, okay?

  • Because I've done it so many times

  • I could finish the sentences.

  • I would know what was coming up next, right?

  • Just by memory, but more than that you have this experience.

  • You gotta experience it. You gotta do it

  • I can't just describe it for you,

  • you gotta experience it for yourself.

  • Something will click and suddenly you will get

  • into the psyche and the psychology

  • and the mental state of the copywriter, back then.

  • It's just crazy experience.

  • That you would write and suddenly you kinda get a glimpse

  • of what that writer was thinking about.

  • And then once you do a little bit more

  • because you're kinda trying to imitate

  • you would kinda slowly picking up their voices.

  • They're like "Oh yeah, hmm I can see why he wrote this way."

  • "Why he thinks this way." and it's like

  • you're downloading their writing style to your brain.

  • It's the craziest thing, you gotta do it to experience it.

  • I cannot describe how it is.

  • Now, it's gonna take a while, right?

  • It took me quite a few months

  • before I had the "Ah ha" experience.

  • And that, from then on, this is my go to exercise

  • This is how I got good.

  • Look at great masters and what they have done

  • and you talk about modeling, just do this right?

  • Just do this, you do this ten, twenty, thirty times

  • you do it long enough, something will click.

  • Which leads to exercise number seven

  • which is devote some time every day to write.

  • If you're gonna be a professional copywriter,

  • well what's the difference between a professional

  • and an amateur, right?

  • An amateur kinda does it like hobby! Right?

  • You think about professional golfer, right?

  • If you golf infrequently, whenever you feel like it,

  • you're an amateur golfer.

  • If you're a professional golfer,

  • you do it all the time. Also you get paid doing it

  • but more so it's a part of your lifestyle.

  • So you would not be a very good writer

  • if you're not writing everyday. I don't care

  • if it's as little as ten, twenty, thirty minutes a day

  • let's say thirty minutes a day, let's have a deal.

  • Thirty minutes a day, you're gonna devote some time

  • maybe in the morning, in the evening, it doesn't matter

  • just to writing. The more you write, the better you get

  • the easier it is for you to write, the faster you'll write.

  • In the beginning maybe it takes you

  • I don't know, three hours to craft

  • like, a good ad, a good email.

  • You'll be able to do it faster and faster

  • when you write every day. Every single day.

  • Every single day. Every single day.

  • Then you'll do it in maybe two hours

  • and then one hour and before you know it,

  • I could right now write something in an email

  • send out to my list, it could be five, ten minutes

  • with a very very good email. It could be an ad.

  • Because of practice, right?

  • You could do it. It's a learnable skill.

  • So those are the seven copywriting exercises

  • you could do right now.

  • Now, besides exercise, if you want to learn techniques

  • if you want to learn strategies,

  • you want to learn how to do some of these things,

  • or how do you actually craft a headline?

  • How do you craft a compelling offer?

  • How to craft a compelling call to action?

  • If you want to learn how to do that, click the link below

  • and check on my free on demand training on copywriting.

  • I think you'll love it.

- Seven copywriting exercises you can do right now

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