Archive for August, 2025

August 25th, 2025

How to Get Better at Copywriting (Part 2)

By Rahimah Sultan


Advertising Disclosure: Marketing Success Review may be compensated in exchange for featured placement of certain sponsored products and services, or your clicking on links on this website. There is no expense to you.



The first three exercises were covered in part 1. The rest are covered here.


4. Product Descriptions

In this exercise, you’ll be writing product descriptions with different goals.

Just pick a product or service for which you’re the ideal customer. Be sure it’s something you’re really familiar with and that you can easily describe. Now write a short 100 to 300-word description for it.

You’ll write five versions of this, with each one focusing on a different aspect.


~ Feature-based: Describe the main features of the product or service (color, material, dimensions, what it does).

~ Benefit-based: Focus on how the product will improve the customer’s life (“This canvas shopping bag has eight inside pockets of various widths to hold bottles, tall cans, wine…)

~ Urgency-based: Use time-sensitive language like “last chance” or “limited offer.”

~ Scarcity-based: Create a feel of scarcity. (“Only 3 left in stock!”)

~ Emotion-based: Arouse a strong emotional response. (“Feel more secure when you use this lock.”)


Remember, you’re not putting all of these aspects into one description; but 5 different descriptions.

When you’ve finished, read each description and ask yourself:

Which one expresses the most value and persuades you to buy? Why? How does changing the focus between emotion vs features alter the feel of the copy?

Emotion and desire drive customers to act. Both are necessary for good copy and you need to know how to balance them—to move beyond boring dry facts.

This exercise sharpens your ability to move beyond dry, boring facts and focus on what truly drives customers to act—emotion and desire.


5. CTA Variations

Review your emails and find one that promotes an offer. Check the CTA that’s used.

Practice different variations of this CTA. You’re going to write 10 variations.

Don’t just change out a word or two.

Test different tones, swap out the action verb, try out different urgency levels, etc.

Remember, the focus is on simplicity and getting the reader to take fast action.

Some can be more urgent while others are more subtle and benefit-focused.


For example:

Urgency – “Claim your spot before they’re all gone.”

benefits  – “Buy now and unlock two free bonuses.”

When you’ve completed the CTA variations, analyze what you’ve come up with.

Which one do you think would work better in that email, and why?

Remember, simplicity and clarity are key with all CTAs.


6. Turn boring features into benefits

Of course, features are important when it comes to selling anything, but it’s not the matter-of-fact plain ones that make the sale. It’s the EMOTIONAL reaction a person has to these features.

You need to make those features sound appealing.

For example:

Instead of cotton dishcloths for your kitchen, “12-inch multi-colored dishcloths to match your kitchen.”

Open something like Amazon in your browser and pick one of the top 5 products that pop up.

It doesn’t matter what it is – shoes, coat, water pitcher, or whatever.

Write out ten features about that product.



Take these features and turn them into a BENEFIT while asking yourself:

 “What does the customer gain?”

For example:

~ Feature: “Has a detachable lining”

~ Benefit: “Remove lining whenever you want”

To help you spice up your copy, ask yourself why the customer would care.
A trick to use for help in answering this question and for making your copy more relatable and persuasive is to finish your sentence with “so you can…”

The above coat example now becomes:

“Has a detachable lining that you can remove for those warmer days and NOT have to spend MONEY for another coat.


7. Write for different times of the customer journey

This exercise, for customers at different stages of their journey, is a little more advanced.

Choose a product to write about, but don’t overthink it.

Picture a customer at three different stages of the purchasing process.

Write for each of these stages. Your copy will be DIFFERENT because at each stage the goal is different.


First stage:

In the first stage, the customer realizes there’s a problem.

Write an Ad or headline that addresses the difficulty and introduces your product or service as a possible solution.

This copy will be the customer’s FIRST contact.

In the Second stage, the customers are seeking solutions.

They’re comparing options and deciding which one is best for them.

Compose an email that educates the reader about how your product or service UNIQUELY solves their problem. Detail WHY you’re the right person/product/service and the reason they should choose you.

The email SHOULD NOT be SELLING but delivering information and value.


In the third stage, the customer is ready to buy. Write a landing page or a sales page encouraging them to take the next step and buy the product.

Although this exercise takes some time, it will help you to understand how to “meet” your customers where they are in the buying process. This is essential in all great marketing.

These are not all the levels of customer awareness, but they are more than enough for this exercise.

Effective copywriting is tailored to resonate with a particular target audience.

Understanding who you’re trying to reach is vital when creating copy that grabs attention and encourages further engagement.

It’s not all or nothing when it comes to great copy.

Now you have a variety of exercises on how to get better at copywriting, from which to choose and to reference again and again.




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August 12th, 2025

How to Get Better at Copywriting (Part 1)

By Rahimah Sultan


Advertising Disclosure: Marketing Success Review may be compensated in exchange for featured placement of certain sponsored products and services, or your clicking on links on this website. There is no expense to you.




Are you tired of the same old advice about how to get better at copywriting, like writing out great ads or emails you find online word for word?

Doing so will not help! You have to learn how to structure copy; learn how to get inside the minds of your customers and appeal to their emotions, fears and deepest desires.

Following are some easy exercises you can practice instead.

Anyone can use them – beginners or seasoned copywriters. You can always improve your writing skills with experience, practice, and repetition.


1. Create Different Headlines

To create headlines for different audiences you should get a deeper understanding of how to construct them for various viewers and customer avatars.

Start by choosing a product/service you already know and love.

If you can’t come up with anything, check Facebook or Instagram and scroll for a few seconds until you find an ad.

Once you’ve decided on a product, create five different targeted audiences that might have an interest in the product along with their main objection or challenge.

These could be:

~ Demographic-based audiences based on measurable characteristics such as gender, age, family status, education, income, location, occupation, and ethnicity…

~ Geographic-based audiences determined by segmentation which takes into account the location of prospects to help determine marketing strategies…

~ New parents at home who don’t have extra time in their day…

~ Retirees who are not looking to be fit and buff necessarily, but want to keep their muscle & mobility as they age…

~ College students looking for fitness on a tight budget…


Now write 5 headlines to each audience promoting the product/service you selected.

Focus on speaking directly to the specific interests, pain points, or desires of each group.

For example: Discover simple ways to maintain muscle mass and improve mobility as you age.

The focus is on the main problem, which is muscle mass for mobility.


2. Weak Copy

Now you’re going to rewrite weak copy. This can be an email, sales page, ad, or anything that seems not quite right or has something missing.

Analyze each section while making notes on what you think is missing or could be better written.

Is the offer clear? Are benefits clear? Is there a weak CTA (call to action) or no call to action at all? Is the offer strong and does it have the correct tone?

When doing this exercise, be sure to find something that actually has a flaw.

Now, rewrite the copy and fix the flaws you noted.

Look for:

Clarity: Simplify jargon or confusing phrases.

Benefit-driven language: Change the copy to place emphasis on how the product solves a particular problem for the purchaser.

Emotional appeal: To make the customer feel understood, add urgency, empathy, or desire.

Stronger call-to-action (CTA): Be sure the CTA is clear, specific, action-oriented, and that it creates urgency.

“Grab your free trial now” vs. “Learn more.”

Compare your new version to the original.

Is your version easier to read and understand? Is it more compelling? Does it create a stronger desire for the product?

Be absolutely honest with yourself! If what you wrote isn’t better, improve it.

Use this exercise to help you learn how to critically analyze copy and make MEANINGFUL improvements that actually increase engagement & conversion.

When you’re satisfied with the revision, send it on its way.

Here’s the third step to take for getting better at copywriting.


3. Reverse Engineering

If you’re one who loves rewriting winning or “proven” copy, you can use this reverse engineering technique instead of just rewriting it word for word.

Break the copy into its core components.

Then isolate the hook, the problem, the solution, and the CTA.

Now go back and rewrite each section of the copy using different phrasing or structure while sticking to the main persuasion principles.

As you proceed, ask yourself this:

How does the hook grab attention in the first few seconds or words?

What problem does it address, and how is the copy relatable to your target audience?

How does the product/service solve the problem?

What emotions are you trying to evoke (e.g., fear, excitement, curiosity, or relief)?

What’s the next step for the audience to take and is that step clear and compelling?

Lastly, what made the original copy so effective? What elements worked well and how can you incorporate them into your copy?

This exercise does MUCH MORE than simply rewriting the copy word for word ever could.

It shows you how to identify the strategic elements of winning copy and then how to apply those strategies to your own writing.


Part 2 will be covered in the next article.

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