A teaser copy is made of two to three short but carefully composed sentences and is similar to blurbs and extracts. In direct mail, they on the outside of a letter while in online copies, they commonly appear right after the headline. If your headline for your online copy isn’t able to do justice to the rest of your article, a teaser copy is definitely called for.

Introduce Yourself

If yours is a new company, your teaser copy could do with a bit more information about your business. If you have certain facts or figures to make your company more memorable, like having a product that’s the first of its kind in the market, or being the industry leader in a specific region, so much the better!

Remember: if you’re going to use a teaser copy to introduce your business, be sure to do so with a bang!

Be Entertaining

It’s hard to be funny, witty, or clever when you’re limited to just one sentence, and that’s often the case with headlines. You have greater leeway, however, with teaser copies so take advantage of it if you dare.

If you’re going to use humor, make sure that it’s in the sense that your target market – and not just you – stands to appreciate.

What? There’s More?

If you think that your products or services are very attractive to your target market and they just need that extra push to make a purchase, your teaser copy can give them just that. For this purpose, your teaser copy must include details that will not just complement but enhance what your headline said about your product.

If it’s a headline’s job to state the main benefit of your product, let your teaser be responsible for stating the additional but much-wanted benefits that only your product can offer and your target market is sure to desire.

Make a Connection

Headlines make people pay attention and teasers build on that by making a connection with the readers. Teasers can be used to create relationships between readers and the products or services you’re promoting.

If this is what you want a teaser for, it’s important to see the bigger picture. Imagine how a person’s life can change – gradually or maybe even instantly – simply by taking you up on your offer. Whatever it is, that’s what your teaser should contain!

Explain the Image

If a particular image is accompanying your online copy and it’s critical to what you’re offering, use the teaser to further explain what that image is about. Pictures may speak a thousand words, but these words can be used to create different meanings. Use your teaser to ensure you’re getting the right image across.

Tease

Last but not the least, use the teaser copy to tease. Give them a taste, but don’t give them all. Let them have a peek, but don’t let them see everything. Use the teaser to give readers tantalizing snippets of information, making it very clear all the while that the only way to get more is by reading the rest of your copy.

Teasers, like every other aspect of online copywriting, adhere to the same guidelines. As such, you need to keep it short, simple, but powerful. Do that and your teaser copy is sure to convince your readers to heed your call to action in the end.

For more great copywriting tips check out Power Copy Club – an online membership site where members learn how to master the art of sales copywriting and ad creation, how to create short copy, long copy and how to do video sales letters the right way. As a special for our valued readers and site visitors, we have secured a complimentary FREE Lifetime Silver Membership Pass to Power Copy Club. This membership is normally valued at $47, but you can access it for FREE today by clicking here: Power Copy Club Free Lifetime Silver Membership Pass.

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Julie Warner
Author: Julie Warner

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