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Great leaders write great copy
When you write copy intended for larger audiences, you inevitably have to deal with the fact groups are made up of people with wildly different wants and needs.
You might want to reach all of them with your message, but you can't write a compelling story that resonates with everyone. So don't.
Great copy doesn’t try to please everyone. It focusses on converting a small but perfectly suited segment of your audience that is:
most likely to buy your product
be pleased with the results
be open to spreading the word about it afterwards
If you try to offer everyone something relevant, your messaging becomes ambiguous.
Try instead writing with a single individual in mind that matches your ideal customer. Write your copy while thinking about what they really want and helping to answer that intrinsic question: what’s in it for me?
Worried about the idea of neglecting 75% of your audience?
In some marketing situations you can solve that by splitting your work up into multiple campaigns, each designed for a different type of client. For example:
splitting up your database and designing multiple variations of the same email campaign so each one resonates with that particular demographic
designing landing pages unique to one client type and using those pages to target a much more narrowed down subset of people through advertising
creating and distributing white papers specific to a problem relatable to one part of your intended audience
Remember, if you try to please everyone you risk interesting no-one.