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| | #1 |
| Warrior Member Join Date: Feb 2011
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Hey everyone! What are your thoughts on this? How many pages on a website should a sales letter be? How long is too long? It is my understanding that a sales letter / web site, should not be any longer than 12 to 15 pages but is'nt that too long? What do you think?
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| | #2 |
| HyperActive Warrior War Room Member Join Date: Oct 2010 Location: Rochester, Minnesota
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Not to sound harsh but if your asking that question should you be writing your sales page? Don't worry just realize it may hurt sales. Anywho, Long copy is good. Do you need long copy? Not necessarily. As long as you portray every single dimension of your product, and that means every doubt or question they may or may not have. If this is a straight forward item that a majority know a lot about than short is fine, but if it is even a little confusing explain it. |
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| | #3 |
| Banned War Room Member Join Date: Jan 2011
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One way to shrink your sales copy is to have a video on the page and then have the outline of the video be the bulk of the copy.
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| | #4 |
| HyperActive Warrior War Room Member Join Date: Dec 2010
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I usually like my copy to be in the 2500 to 3000 words range.
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| | #5 | |
| HyperActive Warrior War Room Member Join Date: Oct 2010 Location: Rochester, Minnesota
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If people are at work and get an email on your product and want to check it out they can't watch it. Boom, lost a prospect. Anything conveyed in a video should be also in plain writing. | |
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| | #6 |
| Warrior Member Join Date: Jan 2011 Location: Wyoming
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I prefer short and to the point. I get bored with reading pages and pages. But if their were alot of pages, the whole thing would have to be "catchy" for me to continue to read. Your first paragraph would have to draw me in.
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| | #7 |
| HyperActive Warrior War Room Member Join Date: Oct 2010 Location: Rochester, Minnesota
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Thats exactly the point, to an extent. While it may deter some readers/potential buyers, long copy gets higher quality buyers meaning less returns and less questions asked.
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| | #8 |
| HyperActive Warrior War Room Member Join Date: Oct 2010 Location: Rochester, Minnesota
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Read a little on copywriting, perhaps you'll learn better that way. Honestly I did not see the 12-15 pages...it is the same generic question I have seen three times today, which is fine don't get me wrong. I have not seen the file itself how big the headline is, pictures, videos, text size in general. OP if you need someone to look I will read over your landing page for free. |
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| | #9 |
| Senior Warrior Member War Room Member Join Date: May 2009
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| I totally agree: as a buyer, I prefer to keep them short and to the point. If there's too much fluff, I skip away: I dont have time to read through 10 pages of stupid filler.
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| | #10 |
| Wordsmith (& Skepchick) War Room Member Join Date: Sep 2008
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Truly the blind are leading the blind, so far, in this thread. For people to comment as they are doing without knowing what's being sold is ... somewhat "intuitive", to put it very politely indeed. ![]() The copy needs to be as long as it needs to be in order to answer all the reasonably foreseeable objections. Obviously copy for a $7 "report" doesn't need to be anything like the length of the sales copy for a $27,000 residential course. Now the moderators have kindly moved the thread to the Copywriting Forum, you might do a little better. |
| Alexa Smith ... ... writes stuff that snaps, crackles and pops, even if it's only about cauliflowers. | |
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| | #11 |
| Senior Warrior Member War Room Member Join Date: Jun 2008 Location: Northern Hemisphere, for now.
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| | #12 | |
| Steve Crofford War Room Member Join Date: Aug 2009 Location: Marysville, Wa
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| | #13 |
| HyperActive Warrior Join Date: Jun 2010
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Yeh as said above it will depend, there are times for short copy and times for long copy.... I've seen copy that kept going and going and going, and had to be around 30+ pages in terms of scrolling down. It all depends
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| | #14 | |
| Steve Crofford War Room Member Join Date: Aug 2009 Location: Marysville, Wa
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So a sales letter needs to be written to cater to all sorts of different people. There are analytical people who would want a long letter, in detail and read every word. There are others who will just skim through to each point and that's it. The letter has to be written to accomedate all types of people. | |
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| | #15 |
| Senior Warrior Member War Room Member Join Date: Jun 2008 Location: Northern Hemisphere, for now.
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| Understanding how most people scrutinize a Web sales page will make you a much better copywriter. Most people first look at the headline. If it’s a grabber or has some other relevant meaning to them, most will scroll to the price, then the postscript. If that person is still with you they'll then go through the body of the text looking at bullets, text boxes, paragraph headers and other 'stand out' stuff. This is where people will read snippets interesting to them. If you still have their interest and if they actually have a need or desire for your product an individual will read enough (some or all of the page) to satisfy his or her convincer strategy. Copywriting is much more than simply knowing what to write and how to write it. Understanding how most people 'examine' an offer will give you a lot of insight on how to proceed. |
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| | #16 | |
| Steve Crofford War Room Member Join Date: Aug 2009 Location: Marysville, Wa
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| | #17 |
| J.W. Acre War Room Member Join Date: Nov 2009
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Happily, there's a way to test your results. And that is...to test your results. Your copy is too long when it starts costing you conversions. For as long as additional info keeps bringing in additional buyers, there's no such thing as too long. |
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| | #18 |
| Senior Warrior Member Join Date: Sep 2003 Location: Miami
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long enough to sell the product.
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Dave Miz “Judge your success by what you had to give up in order to get it.” ― Dalai Lama XIV | |
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| | #19 |
| Advanced Warrior War Room Member Join Date: May 2008
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| | #20 |
| Copywriter / Marketer War Room Member Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Toronto, Canada
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You're sales page should be long enough to compel , persuade , and seduce your prospect to buy your product. How many pages is that? Whatever it takes. It could be 4,8,12, or even 32. Answer their objections, make them desire your product, and make them take action... right now! Best, Bill Jeffels . |
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| | #21 |
| Steve Crofford War Room Member Join Date: Aug 2009 Location: Marysville, Wa
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| | #22 |
| Active Warrior Join Date: Jul 2010
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We use video for almost everthing. In fact, within a few weeks, it will be EVERYTHING. Consider picking up a Sony HD Cam and Camtasia. You now have your own TV station. I personally have spent over 12 hours on one 45 second video. . . HOWEVER, it works. Personally, people are becoming lazy and are expecting video.
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| | #23 |
| HyperActive Warrior War Room Member Join Date: Nov 2008
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Ever read Rich Dad, Poor Dad? That's one REALLY long sales letter, and it works!
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| | #24 | |
| Words Rule the World War Room Member Join Date: Dec 2010 Location: South Texas Coast
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| | #25 | |
| Wordsmith (& Skepchick) War Room Member Join Date: Sep 2008
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![]() However, it doesn't really matter what we think - it matters what the vendor's (potential) customers think, and how they vote with their wallets. Testing is the only answer. However, I do very strongly suspect that many people are using videos of various different kinds without having tested them adequately, and that some vendors would really be shocked to discover how much potential business their use of video (and especially autoplay video) is actually costing them. | |
| Alexa Smith ... ... writes stuff that snaps, crackles and pops, even if it's only about cauliflowers. | ||
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| | #26 |
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| | #27 |
| Fingers of Fury War Room Member Join Date: Oct 2005 Location: Miami, Florida, USA.
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Twenty-four pages is too damned long... But twenty-THREE... now that's PERFECT. |
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| | #28 |
| Focused Warrior War Room Member Join Date: Dec 2010 Location: Nebraska, USA
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As a customer, I'll tell you my least favorite thing is auto-play audio and video. I don't know how marketers think this is truly attractive to a buyer. It gives them zero control and catches them off guard, which is off-putting in those first critical moments. If someone puts a highly-targeted and compelling invitation to "push play", that will give me a reason to justify playing it right then and open my mind. Or at least bookmarking it and playing it when I have more privacy. I don't care if it's the solution to my worst problem that day. Auto-play is awful. And I do like a combo of video and audio. I sometimes need to reread benefits, tips, examples, or whatever to really get sold on something. If I have no way to get that, I am less likely to be convinced I need to part with my money. I also don't want to have to restart the page for a 10 minute video because the thing is too dang long so I can hear something again! Alexa's right - marketers need to do a little more testing before they go "all in" on some kinds of video marketing. There is such a thing as a video that's too long. There is such a thing as video not being enough for everyone. Let people rewind, keep it in digestible chunks, and offer at least some visual copy. I think a combo with serious testing may be optimal for the widest swath of prospects. Just my 2 cents. |
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| | #29 |
| Warrior Member War Room Member Join Date: May 2010
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Depend on the product, your audience, the investment required and the familiarity the audience has with the product. A membership site or online course with a warm audience familiar with the instructor can work in about 3-4,000 words. But that's only one example. |
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| | #30 |
| Active Warrior Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: Australia
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It depends on your price point, if it is $197, then 13 pages would be a good length. |
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| | #31 | |||
| www.copy-e-writing.in Join Date: Sep 2010 Location: India
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Quote:
Well, normally this is the range that I aim for, may be longer if needed. Quote:
When many people say that as buyers, they like short, crisp messages. They will not necessarily buy your product even then. And history says, LONG COPY has always sold it. Tell more, sell more! | |||
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| | #32 |
| FastEasySuccess Join Date: Oct 2009 Location: wisconsin
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Simple Answer...as long as it takes. You want to never limit yourself and at the same time you don't want to ever bore your prospects or ramble on. Every thing in your copy should be there for a reason and continue to test your efforts to increase the results. |
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| | #33 |
| Here for the Beer War Room Member Join Date: Nov 2009 Location: Chicago burbs
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Please. If someone isn't interested enough in your product to read about it, you don't have a customer.
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| | #34 |
| HyperActive Warrior Join Date: Jan 2011
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I think 8 - 10 pages are the best to add a sells website. You can include over that no problem. |
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| | #35 |
| Yes! Yes I am. Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: Costa Rica
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Holy crap! I'm shocked that so many would think a long copy would be effective on the Web. The other day as a matter of fact, I was asked to write copy for an email campaign. After writing what I thought was a great 300-400 word sales letter, I was asked...can you make it shorter? How about 3 sentences? WTF? Anyways you might be surprised to know...I DID IT. And although it only went out less than 24 hrs ago...I am already getting the feedback that it was the best response of any campaign to date. ...so in short (no pun intended) I think less is more when it comes to email marketing. PS: who in there right mind would want to read 3000 words of a sales pitch? Let alone have the time. |
| Don G. Halbert - Inbound Marketing & Direct Response Copywriter "Someone is sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago." | |
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| | #36 | |||
| Words Rule the World War Room Member Join Date: Dec 2010 Location: South Texas Coast
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What worked a hundred years ago on paper works today on the web. People haven't changed. Quote:
I'm not saying that's always the case for others, but I've been around long enough to suspect well crafted long copy will out perform short in most situations. Well crafted is the key. Quote:
The skilled copywriter grabs attention, heightens interest and builds a gravity well that pulls the reader ever further toward the moment of truth. Of course, there are those who skim or skip to the end. The skilled copywriter accounts for that in the design (yes, sales letters are designed) and builds in places they can easily jump back into the well. | |||
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| | #37 | |
| www.copy-e-writing.in Join Date: Sep 2010 Location: India
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I would suggest people to see the following link from AWAI blog: Long copy vs. short copy It will clarify your questions. | |
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| | #38 |
| Yes! Yes I am. Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: Costa Rica
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Great piece for sure so thanks for that. I was referring to the usage of long copy in email campaigns. I still stand by my theory that this is more the short copy domain. Especially with the likes of 140 characters or less Twitter posts and FB statuses. Email and social both have the attention span of a goldfish. Pura vida! |
| Don G. Halbert - Inbound Marketing & Direct Response Copywriter "Someone is sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago." | |
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| | #39 | |
| Words Rule the World War Room Member Join Date: Dec 2010 Location: South Texas Coast
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| | #40 |
| Yes! Yes I am. Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: Costa Rica
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Actually funny you would say that because I've seen the contradicting opinions on the subject of the attention span of a goldfish. However many more agree that it is the least and considered very very short. PS: i know i find something that 'hooks' me from the start and I will likely read 80% of it...long or short...don't matter. |
| Don G. Halbert - Inbound Marketing & Direct Response Copywriter "Someone is sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago." | |
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| | #41 |
| Copywriter and Marketer War Room Member Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: Philly Suburbs, USA
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For one of my copywriting clients, I wrote the main salesletter, upsell, and downsell pages. All told, it was about 65 pages of copy. My client didn't care though because it pulled better than 4% on the launch and made him more than $30K in the first 24 hours alone. When it comes to copy length, there is no such thing as too long... only too boring. |
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| | #42 | |||
| Copywriter and Marketer War Room Member Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: Philly Suburbs, USA
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Quote:
Are you trying to get them to a salesletter which will do all of the heavy lifting? Or are you trying to make the sale in the email? Quote:
If you're on Jay Abraham's lists, then you could get a 20 page email from him periodically... and read every word with bated breath. | |||
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| | #43 |
| Words Rule the World War Room Member Join Date: Dec 2010 Location: South Texas Coast
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| | #44 |
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It's a pleasure I could have such a lasting impact. Pura vida! |
| Don G. Halbert - Inbound Marketing & Direct Response Copywriter "Someone is sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago." | |
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| | #45 | |
| Yes! Yes I am. Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: Costa Rica
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| Don G. Halbert - Inbound Marketing & Direct Response Copywriter "Someone is sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago." | ||
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