When you hire a copywriting or marketing agency, you should give them lots of money and long deadlines. Well, we would say that. But, there are some thing you can do to get the best bang for your buck. It’s important to develop a positive relationship between writers and clients so that both parties enjoy the day-to-day. Because, hey, life’s too short.
We’re a marketing agency that loves to deliver strong results for our clients. Apply the ideas in this article and you’ll be the dream client we wish we had (and currently do have, you know who you are). AND, you’ll ensure you get outstanding content. It’s a win-win.
We love the written word and although we do other cool things, like website design and SEO, this article will focus on how to work with marketing copywriters.
Let’s jump in.
No matter who you are, you need a framework that allows good writing to happen. In other words, it’s all about managing the writing process.
So, here’s a big ol’ list of the pitfalls that create bad writing, and how you can avoid them so you can be the best client possible.
Luckily, it's rare that pieces go totally off the rails. In many cases, you can trace the problem back to an unclear, or non-existent, brief.
Remedy: mutual understanding between client and writer is essential and a brief is how you get it. Another step that can reduce hostile feedback is the use of detailed outlines or skeletons. If it’s a 2000-word brochure, taking time to approve a 200-word outline at the start is far easier than a mess of edits at the end.
Lawyers, academics and technology firms are notorious for writing things ‘because this is the way we’ve always done it.’ Don’t be one of the bad actors.
Remedy: hire talented writers that read and write outside your field or company. Let them challenge convention to ensure that it serves the needs of actual readers.
Some people in big companies use brand bibles and conventions to turn good prose into ugly corporate speak: typically, with too many capital letters (speed bumps for the eyes), impenetrable product names and trademark symbols everywhere. Hopefully, you’ll be able to steer clear of this.
Remedy: establish rules, but also let writers be flexible. Like health and safety regulations, at their worst, brand guidelines are often used as an excuse for stupid decisions and conventionality. It’s less risky to write like a corporate robot but it is also less effective. Find writers who know the guidelines better than everyone else, and know when it’s right to break those rules. Also, try writing your own guidelines (if you don’t have any) or contributing to rewriting your existing guidelines (if you do).
The best clients nominate one person to us as an editor and let them be the focal point for all feedback. This way, the writer gets a single set of comments. Working within an organisation, it’s important to agree who gets to sign off the document and who gets to give feedback.
The people with sign-off have a power of veto and, ideally, you want to keep that number to a minimum. You also need to make sure you provide feedback, not rewrites. Tell your writers what you want them to do and why, not how they should rewrite it. Like broth, too many cooks can spoil a document.
Feedback face-to-face or on the phone is good. Redlined documents: less good. It’s like a theatre director giving line readings to an actor rather than helping them explore the character and give a performance. (Line readings = ‘when you say his line, raise your eyebrow.’ Yuck!)
Remedy: try to give feedback in person, by email or in comments rather than changing the text itself.
If you’re hiring writers to come and work onsite, it’s important to consider the physical environment you’re providing for them. Writers, like programmers, need a good working environment that is free from distractions and designed for the purpose.
A good resource for this is Peopleware: Productive Projects and Teams by Tom DeMarco and Timothy Lister. Here’s a link to it. Even though it is about software development, almost everything in it applies equally to writers.
It’s easy to let standards slip and lose concentration when you’re faced with a tight deadline and lots of interruptions. As a client, if you’ve given a writer a project, please don’t email them every day checking up on progress. And try to agree sensible deadlines to help manage the workload. It’s a good idea to get things done a few days early.
When you’re working on a case study or a press release, it’s good to agree a workflow with your writers before you start. This can be either as part of the briefing process or as part of your planning. Fail to plan, plan to fail.
Great buildings start with an architect’s drawings. Even Ikea shelves come with assembly instructions. To have your writers write well, you need to provide a clear brief. It doesn’t have to be an elaborate formal document. It doesn’t have to be a document at all if your writer/s can answer all the basic questions in their head or by reference to something they've done before. But you do need it.
Here is the outline of a briefing document that you can use as your very own briefing checklist:
‘Do not be bullied out of your common sense by the specialist: two to one, he is a pedant.’
- Oliver Wendell Holmes
To get the most out of a writer, there are some more important principles to follow. Here’s what we’ve found matters most:
If you work with agencies, contractors or directly with writers, review the way you select, brief, and manage them and see if there are any ways you can do it better.
Needless to say we've thought long and hard about how we’d like clients to work with us. It’s important to us because we love the written word and always try to create content that sings.
That said, it’s also in your best interest to follow these guidelines. Whether you work with us or another agency, these tips will ensure your writers know exactly what you want and deliver the content you need.
But, working well with your writers is just a start. There are many facets to an effective marketing campaign, and inbound marketing is an art and a skill. It’s also a form of marketing that, when done right, delivers results. Statistically, it achieves three times the results than paid advertising.
So, beyond writing, you need to ask yourself, is your business getting the leads it needs to thrive? Well, is it, punk?