Teaching2014-06-24·15 min

Creating Your Marketing Voice When Writing Copy

Creating Your Marketing Voice When Writing Copy

Eben Pagan teaches entrepreneurs how to develop an authentic marketing voice for copywriting that converts. He reveals the counterintuitive approach of writing like you speak to one close friend, using specific concrete language instead of abstract generalizations, and targeting emotions over logic to create compelling marketing messages.

Creating Your Marketing Voice When Writing Copy

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Key Moments

How to Create Your Marketing Voice for Copywriting -- A step-by-step process for developing an authentic marketing voice that converts by speaking to one person with specific, emotional language

Start Your Marketing Voice With a Friend's Tone

Start developing your marketing voice with the tone you'd use talking to a close friend or family member, creating familiarity and friendliness as your foundation

0:45

Building Marketing Voice From Customer Interviews

Talk to your customers one-on-one to learn their specific words, fears, frustrations and desired outcomes to build your marketing voice

13:17

Concrete Real Outcomes Beat Abstract Ideas in Copy

Focus on concrete, real outcomes that people can imagine happening rather than abstract ideas and generalizations

7:55

Stay in rapport by using words your customers would use and staying within their realm of experience to maintain connection

11:10

One-to-One Marketing Voice Even When Broadcasting to Thousands

Write marketing copy as if you're speaking to one person who is alone, using first person singular and one-to-one voice even when broadcasting to thousands

2:33

Relevant Clips27

  • How-To

    How to Create Your Marketing Voice for Copywriting -- A step-by-step process for developing an authentic marketing voice that converts by speaking to one person with specific, emotional language

  • Teaching0:45

    Start Your Marketing Voice With a Friend's Tone

    Start developing your marketing voice with the tone you'd use talking to a close friend or family member, creating familiarity and friendliness as your foundation

  • Teaching2:33

    One-to-One Marketing Voice Even When Broadcasting to Thousands

    Write marketing copy as if you're speaking to one person who is alone, using first person singular and one-to-one voice even when broadcasting to thousands

  • Teaching4:18

    Speak-Write Technique for Natural Conversational Copy

    Use 'speak-write' technique by recording yourself answering questions or covering points, then transcribing to capture natural conversational tone

  • Teaching12:30

    Specificity Reaches More People Than Abstraction

    Being more specific and concrete paradoxically speaks to more people, not fewer, unlike abstract language that actually reaches fewer people

  • Teaching13:17

    Building Marketing Voice From Customer Interviews

    Talk to your customers one-on-one to learn their specific words, fears, frustrations and desired outcomes to build your marketing voice

  • Teaching6:02

    Why 'You' and 'Your' Are Marketing's Most Powerful Words

    The words 'you' and 'your' are the most powerful words in marketing because they address one individual human in personal conversation

  • Teaching9:53

    Target Irrational Emotions Not Logic in Marketing

    Target irrational emotions like envy, desire, fear and aspiration rather than logic, because emotions drive most human behavior

  • Teaching11:10

    Stay in rapport by using words your customers would use and staying within their realm of experience to maintain connection

  • Teaching6:41

    Speak to Specifics — Eleven Pounds Not 'A Lot of Weight

    Speak to specifics, not generalities - say 'lose 11 pounds of belly fat in 11 days' instead of 'lose a lot of weight'

  • Teaching7:55

    Concrete Real Outcomes Beat Abstract Ideas in Copy

    Focus on concrete, real outcomes that people can imagine happening rather than abstract ideas and generalizations

  • Answer0:45

    How to Build a Friendly, Converting Marketing Voice

    Start with the tone you'd use talking to a close friend or family member to create familiarity and friendliness. Then write as if you're speaking to one person who is alone, using 'you' and 'your' frequently, and focus on specific concrete outcomes rather than general abstract concepts.

Show 15 more
  • Answer

    Five Techniques for Copy That Converts

    Write like you're having a conversation with one close friend, use the speak-write technique by recording yourself then transcribing, focus on specific concrete outcomes, target emotions rather than logic, and use words your customers actually use by talking to them directly.

  • Answer12:23

    Specificity Paradox — More Concrete Means More Relatable

    Marketing copy should be specific and concrete, not general. Counterintuitively, being more specific actually speaks to more people because it's more relatable and believable, while abstract general language reaches fewer people despite seeming more inclusive.

  • Answer11:10

    Staying in Rapport by Mirroring Customer Language

    Stay in rapport by using words your customers would use, staying within their realm of experience, talking about situations they've been through, and describing outcomes they want in language they can easily follow and relate to.

  • Answer5:11

    The Emotional Power of Second-Person Marketing Language

    The words 'you' and 'your' are the most powerful words in marketing because they address one individual human in personal conversation, making the communication feel more emotional and personal rather than detached.

  • Answer9:10

    Target Emotions Over Logic in Marketing Copy

    Target emotions rather than logic. Focus on irrational drives like survival, relationships, social status, envy, desire, fear and aspiration because these emotions actually drive human behavior and decision-making.

  • Quotable12:36

    Specific Concrete Sensory Language Reaches More People

    counterintuitively by talking more one-to-one, by being more specific, more concrete, by sticking to the emotional topics and by speaking in sensory specific language, by staying in rapport, what I do is I speak to more people, not to less

  • Quotable2:23

    Write Copy Like You're Talking to an Old Friend

    we want to start talking to people as if they're sitting in front of us. We want to start talking to them as if we're having a conversation with an old friend

  • Quotable6:02

    The Two Words Every Marketer Must Overuse

    The most powerful words in marketing that you'll be using over and over and over are the words you and your

  • Quotable11:01

    Outcomes That Trigger Envy Beat Abstract Benefits

    don't tell me that I'm going to be optimal. Okay, tell me that people are going to envy me

  • Question12:16

    Specific vs General — Which Copy Reaches More People

    Should marketing copy be specific or general to reach more people

  • Question0:37

    The Most Powerful Words in Marketing Copy

    What are the most powerful words to use in marketing copy

  • Question

    Staying in Rapport When Writing Marketing Copy

    How do you stay in rapport when writing marketing copy

  • Question9:40

    Should you target emotions or logic in marketing copy

  • Question0:50

    Developing a Marketing Voice for Copywriting

    How do you develop a marketing voice for copywriting

  • Question3:33

    Writing Copy That Actually Converts

    How do you write marketing copy that converts

Entities Touched

Canonical Teachings

Foundation: Speaking Like a Friend

Eben introduces the counterintuitive approach to marketing copy by starting with the familiar, friendly tone you'd use with a close friend. He explains why this creates better connection than formal academic writing and sets up the framework for developing an authentic marketing voice.

The Power of One-to-One Communication

The core teaching reveals why writing to one person, even when broadcasting to thousands, creates more emotional impact. Eben demonstrates how using 'you' and 'your' triggers different parts of the brain and shows the speak-write technique for capturing natural conversational tone.

Specifics vs. Generalities

Eben breaks down why concrete, specific language outperforms abstract generalizations through examples like 'lose 11 pounds of belly fat in 11 days' versus 'lose a lot of weight.' He reveals the counterintuitive truth that being more specific actually reaches more people.

Targeting Emotions Over Logic

The training shifts to emotional triggers, explaining how survival, relationships, social status, envy, desire and fear drive human behavior more than logical appeals. Eben teaches staying in rapport by using customers' own words and staying within their experience.

Learning From Customer Conversations

The final section emphasizes the importance of talking directly to customers to learn their specific language, fears, and frustrations. Eben explains how these conversations provide the raw material for building a compelling marketing voice that resonates with your entire audience.

Procedural frameworks taught here

Counterpoint 3

Claim:Abstract, general marketing language reaches more people because it's inclusive

Reframe: Specific, concrete language that speaks to one person actually reaches more people because it's more relatable and believable

Claim:Marketing copy should be written in formal, professional language to appear credible

Reframe: Marketing copy should be written like you're talking to a close friend to create familiarity and trust

Claim:Appeal to logic and rational thinking in marketing to convince people to buy

Reframe: Appeal to emotions and irrational drives like envy, desire, and fear because that's what actually motivates behavior

Topics

Business Frameworks

speak-write

Common Mistakes

abstract academic writingtalking to masses instead of individualsusing general language