We've shown you how to and covered some of the key basics, teaming up with website-building tool to offer some helpful tips. Now it's time to take a closer look at your portfolio's copy and how you present and sell yourself with your writing.
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Everyone鈥檚 heard of 鈥榗onversational writing style鈥 but to sell yourself online, you need to write very differently to how you鈥檇 talk or chat over email. It鈥檚 more like acting 鈥 in an authentic true story, told brilliantly from a well-rehearsed script.
Writing is hard. To pull it off, it helps to think of writing text for your portfolio as a different skill = Wordcraft.
Staring at the screen, hoping that text will magically appear has happened to us all. To beat frustration, do a pencil and paper role-play exercise before you go anywhere near the laptop.
Pretend you are on TV, giving a press conference that is going out live to the nation. Both arts and business journalists are asking you precisely who you are, why you鈥檙e here, and badgering you to justify why each piece of displayed work is in your portfolio. What are you going to tell them?
Sketch out answers for the arts columnist and the business papers in turn. Scribble reams if you like, and use spider diagrams and mind-maps too. The more material you create here, the shorter the inevitable 鈥榖locked up鈥 moments will be later on. These sheets are the monolith you鈥檙e going to sculpt your masterpiece from.
The big question dominating online readers鈥 subconscious minds is always, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 in it for me?鈥 a.k.a "how will this product/service make my life better, right now?鈥
That better life is what people want to buy. Which means, in sales parlance, people buy benefits, not features. Features are aspects, specifications, i.e. ten GB of RAM, a 52-inch screen.
Don鈥檛 imagine people will automatically calculate how your features will make their lives better; you need to make it understandable.
To sell the above hardware, you would need to convey:
How the 10 GB of RAM is so fast, you鈥檒l never get 'buffer face' (to link to the human truth, impatience).
How a 52-inch screen gives an immersive entertainment experience where you can shut the world out completely (to play on the human desire for escapism).
Always think one step beyond features. Get into the cause and effect by applying the beneficial effects of features to your knowledge of human desire and emotion - then present the expected results as 鈥榝acts鈥 that are difficult to argue with.
Further to the salesmanship mind-set, think hard about the questions potential buyers of your product/ service might be asking themselves. What are their pain points? How can you make yourself relevant?
You need to know because you鈥檙e pitching yourself as the elixir to their pain.
Storytelling is coded in our DNA; it鈥檚 how people make sense of the world and an integral part of the human experience. Therefore, to write without narrative is to go against the grain of thousands of years of human communication.
Wherever you can, thread your text into some narrative. One of the simplest ways to do this is to start with an action and build your story with 'therefore' and 'but'.
For example, on your 鈥楢bout鈥 page bio, you might say:
鈥淚 went to study graphic design in London but it was costly therefore I got a job at Tate Modern. Therefore, I was exposed to great art all day every day. Therefore, I have an ingrained appreciation of and flair for colour. Therefore, I am a superior graphic designer.鈥
鈥楤ut鈥 can be used to create antagonistic pressure (conflict) in the narrative, which makes the story exciting and should be used wherever feasible, e.g. to highlight your creative problem-solving skills and ability to work under pressure.
Using 'therefore' and 'but' driven narratives can result in intriguing mini case studies told in two or three lines of copy.
Good tone awareness means being accessible: using widely-known words in a fresh way, to deliver messages your target audience understand and empathise with. It鈥檚 essential to have a considered view on your appetite for humour and aggression, a 鈥榗ompany policy鈥 on where you fall on the spectrum of wanting to be liked, respected or even feared.
You need to decide who you are before you know how you鈥檒l 鈥榮peak鈥. Compare and contrast the voices of Innocent Smoothie, Pret a Manger, PwC and Gov.uk, then work out where you want to position yourself along the tonal spectrum.
Now you have your conversational tone; you must address the person you鈥檙e talking to. Using a lot of 'you' keeps the readers' subconscious listening - Who? Me? - And using 'I' or 'we' re-positions the text from an 鈥榓bstract concept鈥 to a 鈥榮tory of human endeavour鈥 - it鈥檚 vital to show there鈥檚 a human heart behind the screen somewhere. People do, after all, buy people.
It鈥檚 wise to have a Google Keyword strategy to refer to, as you sculpt your copy. Use the , decide what you鈥檙e optimising on and sprinkle keywords liberally, but not overbearingly, into your text, with emphasis on your intros and headings.
Next, you'll want to consider the kind of words that are associated with your keywords, because Google will be looking for them and will reward you if you're staying on topic. So if you're a photographer, add in a few words associated with your profession such as camera, lighting and snaps.
Structure your copy, so skim readers don鈥檛 miss the best bits. Get direct to the point. Put your benefits at the very beginning of bullet points, in headings and right beside images.
Demonstrate your knowledge of your readers鈥 pain points right at the beginning of any longer posts, like blogs and bios. And it always helps to start your storytelling with a bang!
Your value proposition is the distillation of all your benefits, the synopsis of your story, told as succinctly and powerfully as possible. Creating the perfect VP is an article in itself.
You鈥檝e got the mindset, ideas and raw material. Now you need to find ways to tell the full story, only shorter while leaving nothing of crucial importance out:
Go for concise, active sentences (read a little to get in the mood. He practically invented website copy best practice)
Strip out any superfluous words - be creative and ruthless
Try and find ways to use one word in place of 2 or 3 - a good tip is to use a thesaurus for inspiration, but never choose a word you didn鈥檛 know anyway (being overly 'wordy' makes your copy pretentious and inaccessible)
You can often easily shorten a sentence by reworking the word, action or notion it begins with
Purposely trying to make sentences shorter makes a more assured, authoritative tone: i.e. 鈥榓n apple a day keeps the doctor away鈥 can be retold as 鈥榙aily apples promote good health.鈥 - you need to find your tonal balance
Aim for zero ambiguity. Potential double meanings distract flow.
There鈥檚 a big difference between editing and proof-reading. Editing looks to improve, proof-reading seeks perfection.
Keep an open mind for the first few drafts. Allow all text to be subject to change - structure, tone, emotion, etc. The most important thing you can do is read aloud. Storytelling is an oral tradition, which means words are too. Words are musical; you鈥檒l hear a duff note better than you could ever see one.
Once you鈥檙e sure you couldn鈥檛 possibly write a shorter, more empathetic, benefit-brimming narrative, give it one last thorough proof-read before uploading.
Be warned; repeated rewrites will leave you suffering from word-blindness, where your brain is only seeing what it wants to see. A super effective way to beat this is Font-Swapping. It鈥檚 so simple: if you鈥檝e been drafting in Georgia pt. 11, proofread in Verdana pt36. Change the font, treble the size. You鈥檒l be able to see it as if for the first time.
To conclude, to write the perfect copy to support your online portfolio, bear these things in mind:
Enjoy this final quote from prolific horror writer Neil Gaiman:
鈥淭his is how you do it: you sit down at the keyboard, and you put one word after another until it's done. It's that easy, and that hard.鈥
If you enjoyed these tips, then look out for the next article in this four-part series, brought to you by 99精品视频 in association with . The website publishing platform makes it easy to create beautiful websites, portfolios, blogs and online stores. For a short time only, 99精品视频 readers can benefit from 10% off their first purchase using the code: CREATIVEBOOM.