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How To Write Persuasively

When writing an advertisement, your aim is to persuade your readers to follow a particular course of action – willingly. This is where persuasive writing comes in handy.

There are three elements in this process:

1. You must win the trust of your audience.

2. You must appeal to their emotions (rather than to their intellect).

3. You must rationalise their decision for them, so that they feel comfortable in making it.

If you succeed in all three areas, you will have engineered their consent to buy your product or service.

Here are some tips to help you to achieve this desirable state of affairs:

1. Persuasive Writing: Win The Trust Of Your Audience

The first step in persuasive writing is to show that you are a person who can be trusted. So try to give your audience something of value: advice, interesting “inside” information, or helpful tips. Indicate why your opinion here should be valued – give a little detail about your background and your credentials.

To win their trust, you must know something about your audience:

You must also try to find some common ground with your audience:

Use generalisations to persuade your audience to agree with you – people feel more comfortable when they know that, “80% of families use …” or that “8 out of 10 teachers state that parental interest improves student grades …”

2. Persuasive Writing: Appeal To The Emotions

We all know that people respond to emotional appeals more readily than to intellectual appeals, so utilise this in your advertising. There are three steps to follow:

First, arouse an emotion – anger, fear, resentment, envy, greed, sympathy.

Second, give a reason for the emotion – “your children are precious to you, don’t risk their future by …”

Third, give your audience an appropriate course of action to follow – “Call now to ensure your place in this new …”

When appealing to the emotions, your most powerful tools are words. So choose them wisely and earn to use them to create the desired effect on your readers.

3. Persuasive Writing: Rationalise

The last step in persuasive writing is rationalisation. This is giving people good reasons to believe what you’re telling them. We all do this to ourselves every day. How many times have you said something like this to yourself, “My old car is going to start costing me money soon; I’d be better off buying a new one now”?

Tell your would-be customers that they’ll save money in the long run by spending it now and you’ve given them a reason to act immediately.

Summary

By Jennifer Stewart


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