Category Archives: Copywriting and Content Writing Tips

Are you committing these writing mistakes when writing content?

Common writing mistakes committed by content writers

Common writing mistakes committed by content writers

A client sent me a website link to check out. The moment I loaded the link I could see at least three grammatical errors without even having to read a single paragraph.

Some writing mistakes are glaring, some are subtle and some are just a part of our habit.

Sometimes my writing also has mistakes and it is very embarrassing when they are pointed out by the client.

Fortunately, even when the client points out the errors, he or she knows that it is either an oversight on my part or it is just a part of my writing style. That’s a saving grace.

This blog post has some nice writing tips listing mistakes that even established writers and authors commit.

Some of these include

Wrongly using commas

Just because you are pausing doesn’t mean you have to use a comma. Use them sparingly.

I have this tendency to use commas, sometimes even before an and.

Long complicated sentences

Divide complex thoughts into smaller, simpler sentences. This is more important because most of your visitors will be accessing your website on their mobile phone.

Shorter sentences are easier to comprehend. They are easier to read. They make a stronger impact because every sentence carries a single thought.

Run-on sentences

I have never studied grammar properly. Hence, I needed to check what a run-on sentence is.

By definition, a run-on sentence is when two or more independent clauses (that can be termed as complete sentences) are included in a single sentence without a logical connection.

For example, “I love eating oranges I eat an apple everyday.”

These are two complete sentences in themselves. Either you write them separately or you use a conjunction, something like, “I love eating oranges but I eat an apple everyday,” or “Although I love eating oranges I eat an apple everyday.”

Passive voice

Using passive voice isn’t always bad but avoid it whenever you can.

For example, instead of writing “Passive voice should be avoided,” you can write “Avoid passive voice,” or “You should avoid passive voice.”

One drawback of using passive voice that I can see is that it unnecessarily injects extra words and phrases into a sentence.

Since it is “passive” it creates a disconnect. But when you use an active voice, you’re talking to your readers.

Lack of parallel structure when creating bullet points

When you’re creating bullet points, follow one grammatical structure.

For example, I can help you

  • Write better content for your website.
  • Improve your SEO
  • Improve your conversion rate.

Or,

I can help you with

  • Writing better content for your website.
  • Improving your SEO.
  • Improving your conversion rate.

Avoid using this

I can help you with

  • Writing better content for your website.
  • Improving your SEO
  • Better conversion rate (<– this one)

Wrong word choice

Actually, for many years, I have not made such mistakes. But many people do. For example, using “loose” when you actually mean “lose”. Also, mixing “its” and “it’s” or “there” and “their”.

Sentence fragments

I sometimes use very small, fragmented sentences for an impact. You may also use fragmented sentences in poetry, but don’t overdo them.

For example: Through content writing. I can help you with many things. Improve your SEO. Better content for your website. Better conversion rate.

Although, structurally, there is nothing wrong in these sentences, some of them are not sentences but phrases.

Again, use them to create an effect, but don’t fill your entire write-up with such sentences. Fragmented sentences look good as bullet points though.

Vague pronoun references

In the above-linked blog post, the writer has given a good example: “When Jack found his cat, he was very happy.”

Although, you can assume that Jack was happy to find his cat, the sentence itself doesn’t make it clear whether it was Jack who was happy or the cat. I would rewrite the sentence like this, “Jack was very happy when he found his cat.” or “Jack was very happy to find his cat.”

Overused ellipses and em dashes

Elipses are the three dots – … – that you often use when you want to leave something midway.

Something like, “I would have completed your document today but I was…anyway, I will try to complete it tomorrow early morning.”

You use em dashes to put extra information in a sentence. Something like, “He wiped his feet vigourously before entering – he knew that in the afternoon his wife swept the floor – and as a result, he had twisted his ankle.”

There are uses of elipses and em dashed – that’s why they are there – but don’t overuse them otherwise they end up distracting the reader.

Improperly formatted quotations

Quotation marks have a meaning. Writers use them to write dialogues between different characters. They are also used when you don’t mean to use a word in the sense that it is often used.

For example, David often likes to call himself a “writer” but no one knows exactly what he writes.

Another example: He is the “champion of the poor” – it means, I don’t actually mean to call him the champion of the poor.

If you want to highlight a word or a phrase, use bold font instead.

Actually, off late I have been committing this mistake, especially when I’m linking to other blog posts; I enclose the title within quotations. I will avoid doing that now.

Do I use any special technique or process to proof read?

No, I don’t. In fact these days I’m not even using a proper word processor. I’m writing this using iA Writer and then straight away I will export the HTML into WordPress.

This doesn’t mean I’m careless about my writing. It’s just that, I have reached a stage when I can write without worrying about committing grammar mistakes. And the browser has a very decent spell checker.

I do give the write-up a thorough reading before sending the document to the client.

How to get relevant traffic with SEO copywriting

Using SEO copywriting to get relevant search engine traffic

Using SEO copywriting to get relevant search engine traffic

Anybody can get traffic from search engines. Very few can get relevant traffic.

Well thought of SEO copywriting can help you get more relevant traffic from search engines, as rightly suggested by this Copyblogger blog post.

What is SEO copywriting?

SEO copywriting means writing content on your website or blog with the intention of improving your search engine rankings but at the same time, maintaining the quality and the engagement level of your writing.

Read: 15 SEO copywriting tips that will certainly improve your search engine rankings

Copywriting is all about convincing your visitors into performing the action that you want them to perform once they are on your website or blog.

Although, you are mostly writing content for your website or blog, many people prefer to call this form of writing as copywriting because you are constantly selling something whether it is the idea of downloading your e-book or further exploring your web pages or submitting your contact form or subscribing to your email updates.

When you also add the aspect of SEO (search engine optimization) it means using words, phrases and expressions that give Google and other search engines the exact idea of what you are communicating or what information you are providing to your visitors when they visit that particular link.

Read: Importance of keyword research before writing content

It then helps the search engines rank your content for those particular words and expressions (what you call keywords).

Using SEO copywriting to get relevant traffic

As mentioned above, relevant traffic means getting traffic that converts. Relevant traffic should increase your sales.

There are many ways you can use SEO copywriting to get relevant traffic to your website or blog.

Use highly focused content for better SEO

The above Copyblogger post suggests that you aim for a “minimum viable audience”. This immediately rings a bell.

Just today I was explaining to a client (mobile app development) that one single blog post shouldn’t try to contain all possible keywords and search terms for better SEO copywriting.

Instead, focus on solving one single problem and then provide a solution.

I know, in the times of longform content it is often suggested that comprehensive blog posts must be created that cover every possible topic related to the main, big topic.

Though, there is nothing wrong in doing that, but as much as possible, don’t dilute your content.

According to recent Google updates, it is not the length of your content that improves your SEO, but the relevance, the value that you provide.

Also, it is not possible for everyone to create 3000+ word blog posts with regularity.

Instead, focus on as narrow a niche as possible.

Don’t overlook location-based SEO copywriting

Suppose you provide accounting services in London. It’s no use optimizing your copywriting for keywords like “accounting services”, “bookkeeping services” and “accountant services” because these are highly competitive terms.

You have a better chance of ranking well if you concentrate on writing content for terms like “accounting services in London” and “bookkeeping services in London”.

Want to narrow down more?

Suppose you mostly serve clients in Notting Hill. Then why not focus on “accounting services in Notting Hill”?

If you can create lots of web pages and blog posts on how well received your accounting services are in Notting Hill, you will surely get relevant traffic and generate more local business.

Aim for less competitive keywords

A bit old advice, but still relevant.

High-competition keywords can take you ages especially when scores of websites and blogs are already ranking well for them. They must have toiled for months and even years to reach that position and you will need to do the same (or wait for a stroke of luck).

On the other hand, make a list of less competitive keywords, what they call “low hanging fruits”.

You may think that you will get less traffic for those less competitive keywords, but at least there will be some traffic in the foreseeable future. It is better than having no traffic.

Follow time-tested SEO conventions during copywriting

An increasing number of Google updates focus less on the language that you use and more on the intent with which you write and publish content. Nonetheless, the words that you use still matter.

Hence, use your main keyword within the first 100 words of your write-up. The logic is that sometimes the search engine crawler leaves your website without reading further. This is why, it is very important to hit upon the main topic as early as possible so that the crawler doesn’t miss the main point.

Aside from this, use your main keyword in the title of your web page or blog post and if possible, let your keyword appear in your URL.

It is understandable that you get a high when Google Analytics shows a rising graph of your search engine traffic. But unless that traffic increases your business, it is of no use.

This is why, when SEO copywriting, don’t focus on generating traffic, focus on getting relevant traffic.

5 Reasons your online copywriting is not converting

5 reasons your online copywriting is not converting

5 reasons your online copywriting is not converting

No matter how much traffic your online copywriting generates, unless people do business with you or unless they do what you want them to do, it doesn’t matter much.

Your online copywriting must convert.

Read: 10 copywriting tips to boost your website conversion rate

What is conversion?

In terms of writing content for your website (even your blog) conversion means people doing what you want them to do.

Conversion can be macro and micro.

Macro conversion means more people buying from you and more people using your service.

Micro-conversion can be anything.

You may want your visitors to download your e-book or your white paper.

You may want them to subscribe to your email newsletter.

You may even want to encourage them to come to your website or blog frequently.

You want to engage them.

Your macro conversion is the sum total of your micro-conversions.

The more engagement you have with your visitors, the greater are the chances of them becoming your paying customers and clients.

Here is a comprehensive explanation of the difference between micro-conversions and macro conversion. A long read, it is also good example of a pillar page as well as long form content.

How do you know your online copywriting isn’t converting?

Of course, if you are not generating enough sales it means your online copywriting is not converting.

If you are not getting regular subscribers to your newsletter it means your content is not inspiring people enough.

If people are not downloading your e-book, they don’t find your content or your copy worthy enough.

Somehow, your copywriting isn’t making a mark.

People are not impressed.

They are not finding what they are looking for.

You need to evaluate your writing.

Unless you know why your conversion rate is very low or even non-existent, you cannot make amends.

Listed below are 5 reasons why your online copywriting is not converting.

1. You are focusing more on yourself and less on your customers and clients

When people come to your website, they’re not interested in you just for the heck of it.

They have a problem and they are looking for a solution.

They have a need and they are looking for someone who can fulfill that need.

If you come to my website looking for someone who can improve your SEO with online copywriting, you don’t want to know what a great copywriter I am.

You want to know whether I understand your problem or not and accordingly, I can improve your SEO.

YOUR problem should be my focus, not my skills and abilities.

Of course, you need to know my skills and abilities, but they should be integrated into a you-centric message.

If you focus more on yourself and less on your customers and clients, there is no emotional connection and people leave your website without doing business with you.

2. You don’t have a call-to-action

What do you want people to do when they are on your website?

If you are simply busy generating traffic from search engines and social media websites without making it clear exactly what you can offer, your conversion rate is going to be low.

Your copywriting should make it clear that you are in the business of providing solutions people are looking for.

3. Your online copywriting is not web friendly

People have a certain way of reading text on their mobile phones and even on their PCs and laptops.

I have repeatedly written on my website that people don’t read blogs and websites the way they read traditional magazines and newspapers.

The digital world is full of distractions.

While you are browsing a website or a blog, you are constantly being disturbed by notifications and by the possibilities of easily going to another website or blog.

Since most of the people may be accessing your website or blog on their mobile phone, they may be sitting at a crowded and noisy place.

The point is, online copywriting needs to take into account zillions of distractions.

Write very short sentences.

Be clear about what you are saying.

Cover every important point as quickly as possible so that even if someone leaves your website midway, he or she knows what you are trying to communicate.

Keep your copy easily scannable.

Organize your text under various headings and subheadings and bullet points.

Don’t beat around the bush.

4. You have a misleading headline or web page title

Many people come to your website after coming across your link on Google or one of the social media websites like Facebook, LinkedIn or Twitter.

They will be drawn to your website due to the title or the headline that they read.

Some writers create misleading headlines and titles to draw people to the website or blog thinking that the only purpose of their writing is generating traffic.

Many entrepreneurs mistakenly think that it’s all about getting traffic to the website, whereas it is not.

Yes, you need traffic, but more than traffic, you need people who are actually interested in doing business with you.

When you use misleading headlines and web page titles, people feel cheated and they quickly leave your website.

5. You are not getting rightly targeted traffic

Rightly targeted traffic means getting those people to your website who would like to become your paying customers and clients.

For this, through your online copywriting, you need to target searcher’s intent: why people are looking for that particular piece of information?

In the beginning, when people had just started doing business online, I was providing web design and web programming services.

I mostly focused on creating and publishing HTML and PHP tutorials on my website.

Though I was able to generate lots of traffic, I rarely got clients.

Instead of targeting people who were looking for web designers and web programmers to build their websites, inadvertently I was targeting people who themselves wanted to learn web design and web programming.

Routinely publishing educational content is not bad, but publishing educational content just to attract an audience who is interested in learning but not in doing business, can be counter-productive.

Even for my content writing and online copywriting business I share lots of educational content but now I don’t repeat the same mistake.

Even when I’m sharing my knowledge and experience with my visitors, I never neglect the keywords and search terms that bring me content writing and copywriting clients.

Hence, be careful of your targeting when regularly publishing content on your website or blog.

Remember that it’s very chaotic on the web.

People will come across your information among hundreds of other links.

When they come to your website, they may get confusing or mixed signals.

The job of your online copywriting is to make sure that you articulate the benefit of doing business with you, as clearly as possible.

If you don’t do that, you will have a low conversion rate.

15 SEO copywriting tips that will certainly improve your search engine rankings

15 SEO copywriting tips

15 SEO copywriting tips

Table of contents for 15 SEO copywriting tips.

Constantly improving and maintaining your search engine ranking is an integral part of doing business online, especially if getting targeted search engine traffic matters to your business.

What does your SEO depend on? Among many things, copywriting (what you write on your website or blog) is the single most important aspect of your SEO strategy.

Traditionally, copywriting has mostly been used in advertising.

If you wrote ads, if you wrote sales letters, you were a copywriter (you still are).

But, on the web, the lines between a web content writer and a copywriter are constantly being blurred.

Hence, an average content writer is also a copywriter.

Difference between SEO copywriting and SEO content writingAlthough, as a writer I can differentiate between SEO content writing and SEO copywriting, most of the people don’t, and hence, there is a great chance that if your writing web copy, you’re doing copywriting.

Some wise person on the Internet has said copywriting means “writing to persuade, convert and sell”, which makes complete sense.

Effective copywriting gets you attention (which is much needed on the web), clicks from other websites, social networking websites and email, and of course, conversion.

What is SEO copywriting and why is it important?

Writing for a website or a blog to improve search engine rankings is called SEO copywriting.

The reason it is called “copywriting” is because when you’re writing for the main website, aside from writing general content which is there to inform the visitors, selling the product or the service being represented through that website, is also often the job of your writing, and hence, whether you know it or not, any writing on the main website is also sales copy.

But selling isn’t the only thing you need to achieve as a professional web writer; your writing must also be able to improve the search engine rankings of the website or the blog you are writing for.

Hence, SEO copywriting.

You may like to read Why is SEO copywriting important?

SEO copywriting brings search engine traffic, makes people buy from you

SEO copywriting brings search engine traffic, makes people buy from you

SEO copywriting is important because it boosts your rankings for the right keywords and search terms and at the same time, when people are at your website, it prompts them to take an appropriate action (buy your product or download your e-book).

SEO copywriting is also important because it can help you bring down your search marketing cost.

If your rankings improve organically (on the strength of your content), you don’t have to spend money on programs like Google AdWords.

When you advertise on Google AdWords, you pay for every click.

Which means, if you are getting 1000 clicks from Google, you are paying for those 1000 clicks.

On the other hand, if you improve your SEO through copywriting, once you have attained good search engine ranking, whether you get 1000 clicks or 1 million clicks, the only money you have spent is on getting the SEO copy written.

You must know how to write search engine friendly copy.

For that, you must know how search engine crawlers crawl your content, how they access the information on your website and then how that information is processed.

You already know it isn’t just the copy on your website that decides your search engine rankings although, it is the most important aspect because how your website must rank depends on the relevance of the information that exists on your website.

Unless your copy is search engine optimized, nothing much is going to happen that can improve your search engine rankings.

Listed below are 15 SEO copywriting tips that can help you improve your search engine rankings. —-

1. Understand that every piece of writing has an objective

Every piece of writing must have an objective

Every piece of writing must have an objective

Take it this way: when people are searching for information on Google, in most of the cases they are asking questions.

More so when an increasing number of people are using voice search.

Read Copywriting services for voice search

When someone is searching for an SEO copywriter, for example, she is going to use an expression such as, “looking for an SEO copywriter for my ad agency”, or “need an SEO copywriter for my tech start-up”, or something like “find and SEO copywriter for my accounting business website”.

These are very precise searches and people have gained enough experience to not to throw random terms into the search engine.

Everybody knows that simply searching for “SEO copywriter” or “SEO copywriting” is going to bring up millions of unnecessary results.

Hence, if I want to offer my SEO copywriting services to and accounting business, I must create a dedicated web page to attract those visitors.

Similarly, if I want an ad agency that is looking for an SEO copywriting service, I should mention that too in my copy.

The point is, you must know, you must understand what the web page or the blog post you are currently writing aims to achieve, and then aim every word, every sentence, at achieving that objective.

2. Use the title to express precisely what you are offering

The importance of web page title in SEO copywriting

The importance of web page title in SEO copywriting.

Take for example this blog post. It offers you 15 SEO copywriting tips that can help you improve your search engine rankings.

Whether you come across this title on search results or on one of the social media websites, you will immediately know what to expect.

Your title also tells Google and other search engines what your piece of content to be ranked for.

If the Google ranking algorithm decides to rank this blog post higher, it knows that it offers SEO copywriting tips that can help search engine users improve your search engine rankings. …

3. Use your main keywords in the title

Main keywords in the title

Main keywords in the title

Here, the three main keywords for me are “SEO copywriting”, “tips” and “search engine rankings”.

You don’t necessarily have to include all your keywords but it can certainly help you improve your SEO if you can incorporate all your major keywords within the title.

Your web page or blog post title has a big impact on the rankings of that particular link.

Spend lots of time making sure that

  1. The title captures the central theme or the main offering of your web page or blog post.
  2. It contains your domain or primary keywords or search phrase.

 

4. Aim towards creating a holistic experience

Convey that you understand the users problem

Convey that you understand the user’s problem

Yes, focusing on your primary, secondary and longtail keywords is important, but use them as tools, not as a central points.

The central point is the value that you provide.

Write with passion.

Write with sincerity.

Write for humans while focusing on machines.

Give the readers what you have promised in the title or the headline.

Remember that how people react to your copy is as important as the SEO aspect of your writing.

If people find your writing useful, they’re going to spend more time on your web page or blog post.

When they spend more time it tells Google that they find your content useful and hence, it deserves to be ranked even higher.

If your web copy holds no value, people leave immediately, and when they leave immediately, Google assumes that it does not have the information people are looking for and hence, lowers its rankings.

Hence, focus on value and relevance first, and then think of how you can present the value and the relevance through your primary, secondary and longtail keywords.

5. Make a list of all the keywords and search phrases you want to cover through the current web page or blog post

Since we are writing about SEO copywriting and we acknowledge that keywords are important for improving your search engine rankings, we should definitely have a list of keywords we want to focus on.

Making a list of keywords and search phrases isn’t just good for SEO, it is also good for keeping you on your path.

What are keywords after all?

Keywords are the words and expressions used by your target audience to look up information on Google.

They are the leitmotif of your entire message.

Your keywords are the focal points.

When you jot down all the keywords you want to concentrate on, you know what to write about and what to ignore.

6. Write an attention grabbing headline

Write attention-grabbing headlines

Write attention-grabbing headlines

Headline can turn “eh, whatever” into “wow, this is awesome!”

Although, many a time, the title of your web page or blog post is same as your headline, you can have a different title and a different headline.

The title comes under the title HTML tag, something like <title>This is my title</title>

The main headline, in your source code, looks like this: <h1>Main headline</h1>.

Compared to the rest of the body on your web page or blog post, the font type of the headline is bigger and more prominent.

Anyway, if the purpose of your title is to bring people to your website from search engines and social media websites, the purpose of your headline is to hook the reader into reading the rest of your copy.

If your headline is not attention grabbing, people are going to leave faster.

This is what David Ogilvy said about the importance of your headline:

On the average, five times as many people read the headline as read the body copy. When you have written your headline, you have spent $ 0.80 out of your dollar.

I mostly keep the title and the headline more or less the same but sometimes if the entire essence of my web page or blog post cannot be captured within the title (the title shouldn’t be beyond 60 characters, including spaces), I use a different headline so that I’m not constrained.

Different copywriters suggest different ways of creating compelling headlines.

Some suggest that you use emotional triggers.

Every buying decision after all, is emotional.

Why do you want to improve your SEO?

You want your business to succeed.

Why do you want your business to succeed?

You want to make more money (let’s assume this reason for the time being).

Why do you want to make more money?

It’s the answer to this question for which you want to improve your SEO.

This, is emotional.

Your headline can trigger emotions, curiosity, fear, inspiration, a sense of controversy, a sense of kinship, a sense of reaching out to something forbidden, or something like that.

7. Keep your writing scannable

Scannable writing for better SEO copywriting

Scannable writing for better SEO copywriting

Scannable writing is convenient both for your human readers and search engine ranking algorithms.

What does scannable writing mean in the context of writing for the web?

Here are a few things to keep in mind:

  1. Write smaller sentences.
  2. Keep your paragraphs short (normally, not more than one sentence).
  3. Avoid using very complicated words unless they are essential to your copy.
  4. Maintain a conversational style.
  5. Express a single idea in a sentence and hence, don’t use many “and”, “or”, or “but” unless absolutely necessary.
  6. Organize different topics under headings and subheadings (make ample use of <h2> and <h3> tags.
  7. Use bullet points.
  8. Highlight your main keywords with bold and italics types, but don’t overdo.

The main idea is, make it easier for people to quickly browse through your copy and get your message without having to read every sentence and every paragraph.

8. Use interlinking during SEO copywriting

Interlinking helps SEO copywriting

Interlinking helps SEO copywriting

A good thing about writing for a website or a blog is it’s easier to link to other sections.

This helps you avoid creating lots of duplicate content.

If a bit of information already exists somewhere on your website or blog, why not link to it instead of rewriting it?

It also makes it easier for search engine crawlers to access content that hasn’t yet been crawled.

Google is constantly crawling websites from one link to another.

The crawler may come to your website through any link and then it tries to crawl every link present on that link and all other links that are present on those links.

When crawling, it also works out the relationship between your various web pages and blog posts and decides overall what your website represents.

For example, no matter through which link or blog post the Google bot enters my website, I want it to understand that I provide content writing and copywriting services and everything else surrounding these two services, including SEO content writing and SEO copywriting.

Make sure when you are linking to other sections of your website or blog, use your keyword in the hypertext.

9. Write a compelling intro

Your main headline is the intro that hooks the reader.

After that it is your first paragraph.

The reaction to your first paragraph decides whether someone is going to read your rest of the copy or not.

You can write the first paragraph to achieve any of the two things:

  1. Make the readers agree with what you’re saying – we usually like to read things we are agree with.
  2. Pique the interest by asking relevant questions or writing some hard-hitting sentences that force the reader to read further.

The point is, use every trick in the toolkit to make the reader read the first paragraph, without misleading.

10. Use the inverted pyramid approach

The inverted pyramid approach in copywriting

The inverted pyramid approach in copywriting

In the traditional copy, you often build the suspense and then reveal what you have to offer in the end.

Nobody has that much patience on the web.

Spill the beans in the beginning.

Tell your readers whatever you have to offer in the beginning itself.

Remember the purpose of your copy, ultimately, is not to make the reader read the whole thing, but to act, to convert.

If I want to tell you how I can help you improve your search engine rankings it’s better that I tell you in the beginning itself because you are desperate to improve your search engine rankings and if I dillydally, you may go somewhere you can quickly find the solution you’re looking for.

Does it mean your copy must be around 100-200 words?

What about search engine rankings then?

What about all those SEO experts and content marketing experts who are constantly telling you that longform content is better for your search engine rankings and thin content is of no value?

My suggestion is, it depends.

You can keep your entire web page or blog post interesting so that people read it through and through.

You can tell the important stuff in the beginning and then deal with nitty-gritty that helps you write more afterwards.

The thing is, don’t keep people waiting.

They will get bored.

Even if they don’t get bored, something else will distract them and they will leave your website or blog without reading the important stuff.

11. Use your keywords within the first 100 words of your copy

You don’t have to force-use them, but if it is possible, use your keywords and main phrases within the first 100 words of what you’re writing.

This is easier to achieve if you cut to the chase and start talking about the important stuff from the very beginning.

As long as people are using search terms and keywords to look for information, they are important.

Now that I think of it, people no longer use keywords, they use search phrases, but we still call them keywords.

Anyway, sometimes, something or the other happens and the search engine crawler leaves your web page or your blog post without going through the whole content.

When this happens, though, it has crawled your web page or blog post, it hasn’t understood what it represents.

This is why, whatever words and expressions it encounters in the beginning, it makes sense of your web page or blog post accordingly.

Hence it is better that

  1. You cover your main topic in the beginning.
  2. You use your keywords and search expressions in the beginning.

This way, even if the crawler does not completely go through your web page or blog post, it will have at least some idea of what you’re trying to say.

12. Understand the intent of your search engine users

Pay attention to search intent when writing copy

Pay attention to search intent when writing copy

This is something that I have already touched upon above, but now I am describing it in detail.

Primarily, 4 intentions have been recognized when people use a search engine, namely

  1. Informational intent – Looking for information to learn something, to know something or to reconfirm something.
  2. Navigational intent – Instead of typing the exact URL you want to go to, you search for the name of the website (especially when you don’t know the URL).
  3. Transactional intent – You want to buy something.
  4. Commercial intent – You want to buy something but before that you want to read reviews or you want to compare different products or services.

Targeted content can be created for all the intents.

When writing copy for a website or for a blog, if you know people of what intent you are targeting, you can write better copy and you will also get better results.

Is one intent more important than the other?

It depends.

You need brand presence, you want people to come to your website even when right now they don’t intend to purchase from you.

When people know about your business, when they have the need, they will come to you.

For example, you’re reading these tips on SEO copywriting; you may not be looking for a professional SEO copywriter, but when you need one, you may remember my website and then contact me if you like what I have written.

13. Make it as comprehensive as possible

This is longform content.

Longform content may not be user-friendly (try going through 3000+ words on a mobile phone) but search engines like Google certainly like it.

One reason why Google likes longform, comprehensive content is that it covers pretty much everything that a search engine user is looking for.

For example, if you are looking for SEO copywriting tips, it’s good if you get all the information you need to improve your search engine rankings in one single blog post rather than having to visit different links and then compile the information to make it into something worth using.

The ranking algorithm also favors longform content.

When you create a comprehensive web page or blog post, it makes people – as long as your content is interesting and useful – spend more time on your link.

When they spend more time on your link, Google assumes that it has useful information and hence, it deserves to be ranked higher for the search term being used.

Also, people share longform content more than they share short web pages or blog posts.

This again helps your SEO because you get more incoming links from social media websites as well as other websites and blogs.

14. Better SEO copywriting means writing in the language of your readers

Write in the language of your readers

Write in the language of your readers

Writing in the language of your readers has many benefits.

One of the biggest benefits is you will be using keywords and search terms that people actually use rather than making your own guesses and floundering in the process.

This also increases your conversion rate because people can relate to what you are writing.

Writing in the language of your readers doesn’t mean dumbifying your writing.

If I’m writing for a programming company targeting tech start-ups then I will be using lots of jargon that is commonplace in the industry not because I want to show off, but because people are comfortable with that language.

If I write for a boutique shop, I will use language that is used by an average customer of that boutique shop.

15. Use data backed up by sources

People love data, especially in the B2B sector.

Hence, if I say this tip improves your SEO by 20% rather than simply “improves your SEO”, you will feel more reassured, especially if I can link to an authoritative blog post or an article that makes this claim along with a real-world example.

Data is convincing.

It makes you learned.

Ideally, data should come from your organization (something like, “our research shows that “41% respondents reported an improvement after applying our SEO tips”), but even if you’re not in a position to use your own data, it is all right to use data from other trusted sources.

Conclusion

You cannot rush your way into SEO.

There is a reason businesses have an “SEO strategy”.

You have to work at many aspects including

  1. SEO copywriting
  2. Increasing content density
  3. Publishing lots of authoritative content
  4. Interlinking
  5. Getting quality back links
  6. Generating engagement

But everything boils down to having quality content.

SEO copywriting is all about quality content

SEO copywriting is all about quality content

It is your content, after all, your copywriting, that people share with each other, recommend, engage with, find on Google and other search engines, and generally, talk about.

If there is no quality content, nobody has anything to talk about your business.

Hence, one of the most important SEO copywriting tips, give the copy of your web pages and blog posts the respect and importance it deserves.

You will automatically start improving your search engine rankings once you acknowledge the importance of good quality content.

How to write trustworthy content?

How to write trustworthy content

How to write trustworthy content?

Once people are on your website, you need two things to improve your conversion rate: high-quality content and your ability to make people trust you.

Writing trustworthy content is one of the biggest challenges faced by content writers and those people who want to write content for their own business websites.

How do you make people trust you, especially through your writing?

Trust in terms of doing business with you carries two implications for the other person:

  • They are going to spend money on you.
  • They don’t want to regret spending money on you.

Putting trust in someone also makes you vulnerable.

Nobody wants to be taken for a ride.

It is not good for one’s self-esteem.

Our defense mechanism automatically kicks off the moment there is a possibility of trusting someone.

Take your own example: you’re casually browsing through a website, even liking the information that they have put up.

If they offer you something for free, for example download one of their e-books or use one of their digital services, you will gladly lap up the opportunity.

But the moment they want you to pay for a service or a product, your analytical antennae stand-up.

Suddenly, you are thinking about the pros and cons of using the service or downloading the e-book.

You will quickly look up other websites if you can download an alternative e-book, or use another service that is free, or buy it at a lesser cost if you really need to use it.

On the other hand, if you trust the website, even if right now you don’t intend to purchase something, when the time comes to purchase, you will have no problem purchasing from that website.

You trust Amazon. You trust Google. You trust LinkedIn and Facebook.

Even if you don’t trust these renowned websites, at least you are familiar with them and you know that millions of other people are doing business with them and hence, they must have some system setup.

But a smaller website neither enjoys familiarity nor trust.

The only way you can make your visitors trust you is through the quality of your content writing, and the sincerity that jumps out of your writing.

Building trust with content writing

Here are a few things you can do to build trust with your content writing:

Write and publish content regularly

Familiarity breeds trust.

The more people see you, the more they trust you.

If you appear in front of them only when you want to promote yourself or want to sell them something, they’re going to be put-off and they’re going to take measures that you stay out of their vision.

On the other hand, regularly offer them something useful.

Become a part of their lives.

In the times of social networking it is very easy to become a part of people’s lives: write and publish high-quality content that people would like to read and share with each other and then post it on platforms like LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

You can also build a mailing list to regularly send your updates to your subscribers.

Having said that, familiarity is a double-edged sword: you can inculcate trust, and you can also piss people off.

Make sure your content adds value to people’s life and doesn’t annoy them.

Negative association is worse than no association.

Write and publish authoritative content

Everybody knows that writing and publishing authoritative content takes effort, knowledge, wisdom and time.

People who make an effort to publish authoritative, high-quality content are taken to be hard-working, and hard-working people are easier to trust.

The general perception is that people who want to take others for a ride are lazy and avoid hard work.

Hence, the opposite also works: those who are hard-working don’t want to take people for a ride because they want to enjoy the fruits of their hard work in a righteous manner.

How do you write and publish authoritative content?

Do lots of research.

Link to other pieces of authoritative content.

Take your data from sources that are highly regarded such as Time, New York Times, Howard Business Review and such.

Quote multiple sources that show your readers that you have done extensive reading.

Increase your knowledge and then use your knowledge to present a unique perspective.

Respect the wisdom of your readers.

For example, I don’t want to trick you into hiring my content writing services.

I know and accept that whether you want to hire my content writing and copywriting services is entirely your own choice and you are intelligent enough to make a decision.

On my part, I have put enough content on my website to give you an insight of how I write and what I can deliver.

After that, it’s up to you whether you want to work with another content writer or a copywriter or you want to work with me.

This is my way of building trustworthiness for my business.

This brings me to the last point of the blog post…

Stop constantly promoting your business through your content writing

On your various services pages you have explained to your visitors what a great product or service you are offering and what they stand to lose if they don’t do business with you.

Good. There’s a reason you separate your business website from your blog.

Here is a nice thing I read about building trust:

“People don’t trust words. People trust actions.”

This is where storytelling plays an important role.

Instead of constantly harping about your great product or service, tell people what difference your product or service is making in others’ lives.

If you can’t do that, at least educate people.

For example, if you have built a project management app and right now you don’t have many stories that tell how you have changed lives, you can describe various features with real-world applicability.

You can create a comprehensive FAQs section.

Recently I found out that even Microsoft doesn’t have a good FAQs section for OneDrive.

Result: I moved to Google Drive.

Inform people. Educate them. Provide them information they can use to improve their lives. Give them better options. Share with them your knowledge. Trust their judgement. This is how you build trust with content writing.