“To believe your own thought, to believe that what is true for you in
your private heart is true for all men – that is genius.” Ralph Waldo
Emerson~ Want to know one of my secrets to getting my copy très
conversational? Bridge phrases! You know. That throw-away language my
journalism school professors called “empty and useless.” The connector
phrases that keep the pace going – like a bucket brigade! Direct mail
copywriter Maxwell Ross used that concept to illustrate how copy should
flow.
Let me take you back to when the West in America was young.
When men were rugged. And women didn’t have
to diet. I’m talking about the time before there were fire departments.
Oh, there were still fires. Just no organized way to put them out. So
they came up with the bucket brigade system.
When a blaze got going, the townspeople pulled together. They’d line
up and pass water – bucket by bucket – from the nearest water source to
the fire. Being careful to keep the water moving along briskly. No let
up. No slow down. Can you picture it?
Well, that’s what we aim for in copy. It needs to move along briskly.
No let up. No slow down. Each sentence pulls the reader into the next.
And so on. And so on. Until he’s so deep in your copy he doesn’t want to
come out. In fact, once your reader has gotten through 25% of your
copy, chances are he’ll read it all, says copywriter Joseph Sugarman
(the marketing genius who introduced the Blu Blocker sunglasses among
many other successful marketing campaigns). Joe also said, “The sole
purpose of the first sentence in an advertisement is to get you to read
the second sentence.” There’s your bucket brigade in action.
Sure, on their own, these phrases may sound a little sensational. But
I prefer to think of them as connecting and conversational. Prodding
the reader to continue on. Raising the interest level. Bridge phrases
break the rules your grammar teacher may have wanted to pound into your
head. But they sure do sell. (Thank goodness copywriting isn’t like real
writing. We get to break all the rules!) But don’t take just my word
for it.
Take notes and read on for some examples:
As if that’s not enough
Best of all
But wait there’s more
By now
By the way
Even better
Good news!
Here’s why
Meanwhile
Nevertheless
No wonder
On the other hand
What’s more
You see
Think about it
But that’s just part of the story
These are just a few
It’s true
No wonder
Think about it
Take moment to go through some of the copy you’ve written and see if
it quickly flows from one statement to the next. Where it doesn’t use
one of the bridge phrases listed above. Reread your copy. See the
difference?
Copywriting guru Lorrie
Morgan-Ferrero has been helping entrepreneurs and copywriters get their
marketing messages razor sharp since 1999. Get free access to 5 tips to
turn your “blah” sales message into red-hot copy that ROCKS… at www.RedHotCopy.com