Artwork

Content provided by Ella Hoyos & Minnie McBride, Ella Hoyos, and Minnie McBride. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ella Hoyos & Minnie McBride, Ella Hoyos, and Minnie McBride or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Player FM - Podcast App
Go offline with the Player FM app!

Long vs Short Form Copy - What Gets Best Results?

27:38
 
Share
 

Manage episode 372181620 series 3371202
Content provided by Ella Hoyos & Minnie McBride, Ella Hoyos, and Minnie McBride. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ella Hoyos & Minnie McBride, Ella Hoyos, and Minnie McBride or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

This episode is for you if you want some brilliant and insightful tips on approaching long form and short form copy.

What do we mean and how are they different?

This bite-size episode discusses the differences and looks to answer the following burning questions:

What’s the difference between long form and short form copy?

What are the frameworks and structure to consider?

How do you deal with writing constraints?

How long should pieces of copy be?

And how long should you actually spend writing?

Join us as we give our thoughts on tackling all lengths of copywriting tasks and answer your questions in our fun and informative conversation.

Quotes ‘It was the American advertising copywriter, Eugene Schwarz, author of a book called Breakthrough Advertising in the 1960s, who first said, copy isn't written, it's assembled.

For me, that was a big light bulb moment.’ ‘So when people read something online, they're going to spend about 3 seconds, three precious seconds looking at it before they make the decision whether to carry on reading or not.’ ‘The reader. They're just scrolling…

Messages wash over them and content washes over them. So it's about finding those headlines and spending the most time, really, when you're writing on crafting those really good headlines of subheadings and really good first sentence hook that's going to keep that reader… sticking around to read the whole piece.’

Resources Character and word constraints - examples:

Instagram - bio total 150 characters; caption 2,200 characters

Facebook - 63,206 characters (though for best engagement you should do less)

Twitter - tweet 280 characters - but more with Twitter threads, Twitter handle 15 characters, profile name 50 characters, bio 160 characters

Linkedin - ‘About’ section 2,600 characters, if publishing an essay publishing content length 110,000

Blog posts - according to Hubspot 2,100-2,400 is the sweet spot for best SEO Sales pages can be anything up to up to 6,000 words or longer

Contact us Please drop us a voice note at www.memo.fm/crackingcopy and let us know what you think or what topics you would like us to cover.

Twitter @cracking_copy

Facebook @crackingcopy ➡️

Share this podcast with someone who’ll find it useful You can also find us at:

Instagram: Ella Hoyos - @flurrymarketing

Minnie McBride - @sosocial_minnie

LinkedIn: Ella Hoyos - https://www.linkedin.com/in/ellahoyos

Minnie McBride - https://www.linkedin.com/in/minniemcbride

Ella Hoyos and Minnie McBride are co-hosts of this new podcast. We are professional copywriters and marketers. We deep dive into a different aspect of copywriting in each ‘snack-sized’ episode and hope, along the way, to help you become better writers for your business.

Support this podcast!

If you found this episode helpful you can show your appreciation by making a donation! This helps offset the costs of producing the show and we’ll love you for it :) www.buymeacoffee.com

  continue reading

39 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 372181620 series 3371202
Content provided by Ella Hoyos & Minnie McBride, Ella Hoyos, and Minnie McBride. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ella Hoyos & Minnie McBride, Ella Hoyos, and Minnie McBride or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

This episode is for you if you want some brilliant and insightful tips on approaching long form and short form copy.

What do we mean and how are they different?

This bite-size episode discusses the differences and looks to answer the following burning questions:

What’s the difference between long form and short form copy?

What are the frameworks and structure to consider?

How do you deal with writing constraints?

How long should pieces of copy be?

And how long should you actually spend writing?

Join us as we give our thoughts on tackling all lengths of copywriting tasks and answer your questions in our fun and informative conversation.

Quotes ‘It was the American advertising copywriter, Eugene Schwarz, author of a book called Breakthrough Advertising in the 1960s, who first said, copy isn't written, it's assembled.

For me, that was a big light bulb moment.’ ‘So when people read something online, they're going to spend about 3 seconds, three precious seconds looking at it before they make the decision whether to carry on reading or not.’ ‘The reader. They're just scrolling…

Messages wash over them and content washes over them. So it's about finding those headlines and spending the most time, really, when you're writing on crafting those really good headlines of subheadings and really good first sentence hook that's going to keep that reader… sticking around to read the whole piece.’

Resources Character and word constraints - examples:

Instagram - bio total 150 characters; caption 2,200 characters

Facebook - 63,206 characters (though for best engagement you should do less)

Twitter - tweet 280 characters - but more with Twitter threads, Twitter handle 15 characters, profile name 50 characters, bio 160 characters

Linkedin - ‘About’ section 2,600 characters, if publishing an essay publishing content length 110,000

Blog posts - according to Hubspot 2,100-2,400 is the sweet spot for best SEO Sales pages can be anything up to up to 6,000 words or longer

Contact us Please drop us a voice note at www.memo.fm/crackingcopy and let us know what you think or what topics you would like us to cover.

Twitter @cracking_copy

Facebook @crackingcopy ➡️

Share this podcast with someone who’ll find it useful You can also find us at:

Instagram: Ella Hoyos - @flurrymarketing

Minnie McBride - @sosocial_minnie

LinkedIn: Ella Hoyos - https://www.linkedin.com/in/ellahoyos

Minnie McBride - https://www.linkedin.com/in/minniemcbride

Ella Hoyos and Minnie McBride are co-hosts of this new podcast. We are professional copywriters and marketers. We deep dive into a different aspect of copywriting in each ‘snack-sized’ episode and hope, along the way, to help you become better writers for your business.

Support this podcast!

If you found this episode helpful you can show your appreciation by making a donation! This helps offset the costs of producing the show and we’ll love you for it :) www.buymeacoffee.com

  continue reading

39 episodes

All episodes

×
 
Loading …

Welcome to Player FM!

Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.

 

Quick Reference Guide