Facts You Should Know About Headlines

April 4, 2020 Posted by Marketing Advice

Copper Sun has written hundreds of headlines over the years. Some good, some great, and some best not remembered.

But that’s how it works: write many headlines to pick just a few. Here are some facts you should know about writing headlines that reach customers.

Headlines matter

Five times as many people read headlines as read body copy. So make them count!

Long ain’t bad…

It’s a myth that customers won’t read long headlines. Research shows long headlines that are crafted well can outperform shorter ones.

…But no blind headlines

Blind headlines do not mention the product, company, benefit, offer, promise—anything of value to customers. Toss them out.

Humor is hard

Writing humor is a difficult task best reserved for specialists.

‘You,’ ‘FREE,’ ‘now’

Use the most magical three words in advertising.

Localize

If possible, mention the local city or region in your headline.

Three headlines that work

1. Promise useful information

Most people love to learn something new. Give them tips, advice, facts. Not convinced? Then why are your reading this?

2. Self-interest with curiosity

An element of curiosity mixed with customers’ self-interest tend to pull well.

3. News

Headlines with news tend to do well. Use words like ‘announcing’ or ‘introducing.’

A note on shock value

Many writers mistakenly try to shock readers with clever, snarky, or gotcha  headlines. Shock may get attention, but customers oftentimes feel empty afterward (or worse, betrayed) .

Motivate with time limits

Setting a time limit on an offer is a proven way to get customers to act.

Specifics work better than generics

Vague generalities rarely do well with customers. Be specific by using facts, data, and real numbers. And avoid claims like Quality you can’t beat’ or ‘Experts in Auto Repair.’

“Add some quotes”

Research shows putting quotes around a headline increases reader recall by 28%.

Mention your brand

The headline may be the only part of an ad customers read, so try to include the brand.