How I Write Your Copy
- You review my samples
- Over the phone or online, you tell me about your business challenge, needs, and ask me to bid on your project(s).
- I prepare a formal Letter of Agreement. It outlines my understanding of the project, its scope, describes what I will do for you, details the copy I’ll write, when I will deliver the copy, and clearly listing my fee, and terms.
- You approve and sign the Letter of Agreement, and send it, with your purchase order, back to my desk with your retainer (usually 50% of the project fee).
- You supply all of the background information I need, especially your marketing plan, buyer journey, target audience information, product literature, manuals, and market research
- Upon receiving your 50% retainer, we get on the phone. I ask you lots of questions about your company, your offerings, competitors, marketing challenges, your unique selling proposition, clients, prospects, offer, buyer journey, call to action, and more.
- You supply me background information
- We agree on when the copy outline deadline (skipped if really short copy)
- I review past and current marketing collateral or any other assets your company has produced and discuss their results (or lack of them) with you.
- I review all of your offering’s literature you supply
- I read the articles you supply about your company you supply
- I study your website
- I examine your competitors’ websites
- I send you an outline of your copy for you to approve on the agreed time (skipped if really short copy)
- I send you my first draft on the agreed time
- You send the copy back to me with your comments, 2 revisions max, for up to 30 days
- You approve and sign off on the final draft
- I send you the final draft.
- I follow up by phone to make sure you are satisfied.
- You get the results you want
- You celebrate.
- I send you my final invoice.
- You pay.
- I celebrate with In N Out burger. And then I appease my avian overlords with more millet snacks, and hang on to my liver for another month.