Written By: Conrad Winter | Jun 3, 2020 12:00:00 AM
By Conrad Winter, a freelance copywriter specializing in content and copywriting for transportation and logistics
For a lot of marketing heads, the pandemic has moved their workload from bad to way worse. For years I’ve been seeing the rise of a phenomenon—marketing leads who are expected to execute an increasing number of projects. On top of steering the juggernaut of their brands, they’re also performing an array of design, production, optimization and analytical tasks. But the place I’m seeing it the most is in the amount of writing that falls on their shoulders—everything from social posts, newsletters and blog posts to campaigns, white papers, and web copy.
Marketing directors were already juggling a mind-boggling amount of work…and then the pandemic hit. If there was any budget for outsourcing before, chances are it got zapped. Many short-handed marketing departments lost staffers, too. So if you are a marketing director who’s already doing it all and writing it all, what do you do now? The answer: do it better and faster. Here are a few road-tested tips from a freelance copywriter in transportation and logistics to help you manage the new work load through the pandemic and beyond.
Whether it’s a nag or an actual item on your to do list, it’s time to get over the hope that this is all going to end and you’re not going to have to write that “thing”—whatever it is. I’ve found that it’s that first step that’s so very hard. My go-to to just get that little jump that gets the writing train in motion is the Pomodoro Technique. The way it works is you set a timer for one hour, and you write. What you accomplish doesn’t matter: maybe you mind map (a fancy word for brainstorm) or outline, maybe you just start writing the darn post. The point is, after an hour, you’ll have something to build on, the project will be real—and you may just keep working now that you’ve got it going.
Pomodoro sprints are a way to keep your momentum going, too. After your first, take a break and then hit it again. Repeat until you’re finished. Don’t ask me why. Breaking up the work just works.
It’s easy to overlook your 30,000-foot view , your strategy and your personas when faced with a deadline. It’s hard not to be laser-focused on the deliverable you want so desperately off your plate. But you must. Force yourself to do the brief, even if you’re certain it’s all in your head. Don’t allow yourself to be lured into the weeds. On top of everything else you have to do, you don’t have time.
No one likes outlines—the word tends to the torture of elementary-school English. Instead write headlines (iterate a bunch of them—more on that below) until you come up with one you love and simply must write to. Then write your subheads. (Sneaky, huh? you just wrote the outline without dragging your heels like a 12-year-old.) Next step is to write it. Wait a day if you can.
The best lesson of my writing career was to give myself permission to write a horrid, awful, embarrassing first draft. I wouldn’t judge myself. The only catch? I had to write it fast and forward, meaning no editing while I wrote. (Sounds scary, I know, but that cr*p-draft is never as bad as you think it will be.)
With your draft in hand, the hard part is over. There’s just something about having a manuscript—good or bad, it doesn’t matter. It’s easier to improve writing than it is to create writing. So take the time to celebrate your draft and take a break (important point) before launching into the most important part of writing. Editing is when you make it good.
Marketers who are expected to do it all with no budget will invariably face projects they’ve never done before. Take heart, there is always a method. When you don’t know where to start, it can help to think in terms of a document format. Sometimes when you create a form, it can free you to just fill in the blanks. How would this hack work for an Eblast? The format would go something like this: Subject line, preheader text, headline, salutation, text blurb, call to action line, button. Why does this work? It breaks seemingly-insurmountable challenges into approachable pieces that you can write, and then go back and make better later.
The difference between a post or ad or Eblast that reads like a strategy document and one that has reader interest, eloquence, cleverness or expresses a nugget of insight…is iteration. To come up with a really good headline or lede or tagline, you have to come up with a lot of them. There is no other way. That is really the secret. I know, you don’t have a lot of time, you have to get it out the door. But if you do have a little time, even if it’s during your edit, try to beat what you’ve written. The mind gets loose once the project is in motion—and that’s when the gems present themselves.
All right. You’ve written it. Other people have to see it and approve it. They may improve it. (Let’s hope.) They may ruin it. (Don’t take it personally.) Whatever happens, you have to manage it. Insist on clear, consolidated feedback. Your reviewers comments can’t conflict. Let them fight it out. Keep track of the rounds of revisions by keeping a running tally of reviewers’ initials and your corrections like this: SG_CW_SG_CW_SG_CW. In this example, Steve Garvey made three rounds of revisions which the copywriter (CW) executed. Why do this? It’s a gentle way of keeping Steve honest and ensuring he’s not going backwards.
If you had to write it yourself, chances are you’ll have to proofread it yourself. Even though you’ve seen the document 5 times already, just do it. Don’t let a deflating typo slip through. Before you publish, take the time to read through every word frontwards and then backwards. (Old proofreader’s trick.) Do it while your mind is fresh and not at 1 in the morning. Your document can never be proofread enough. It will amaze you what you catch. And after all your hard work, your writing deserves it.
Writing is hard. Even when you’ve been doing it a long time. It doesn’t help to beat yourself up because you think you’re taking too much time. Good writing keeps the marketing ball rolling by drawing leads, maintaining brand presence and motivating your team members internally. But good writing takes time. So until this is over and you get your budget back to outsource, take the time.
By Conrad Winter, a freelance copywriter specializing in content and copywriting for transportation and logistics. Based in Metuchen, NJ, he writes white papers, case studies, website copy, and blog posts for carriers, 3PLs and industry associations.
Tags: Marketing