For a free RSS subscription, click here.

Learn more.

Enter your email address to receive Netregistry News in your inbox:

Delivered by FeedBurner



Advanced Search
Word Up - How the Right Words Can sell
By Jonathan Crossfield | Published  7/May/2008 | Internet Marketing , Website Development | Rating:
Page 1 of 1

Writing effective copy for a website is not easy.

Producing content that is not only correct in grammar and spelling but also motivates the reader to buy can take a lot of skill. But carefully written online copy can also attract traffic to your site through careful use of keywords and by providing informative articles that your target audience wants to read. Online copy comes in many forms – email marketing, blogs, website copy, press releases - giving you a number of strategies to convert website visitors into customers.

Netregistry already uses professional writers for our own marketing, as well as producing articles and submissions for Nett Magazine. Now you can access those same writers to work for you!

Because Netregistry wants to provide you with a complete online solution, our new copywriting service allows you to take advantage of the best internet marketing strategies with a price within reach of most small budgets.

$150 per page (up to 500 words)

It doesn’t matter whether you order a webpage, a blog post or a newsletter; the price is the same. No subscription fees, no setup fees. We’ve deliberately kept the price structure simple to encourage businesses to use our copywriters in as many ways as possible. Your requirements will change from month to month, but the price will always be the same.

Each additional 100 words per page is charged at $50, meaning you can order exactly what you need for your purposes.

For more information on how Netregistry’s copywriting service can help you attract more customers and close more sales, call our sales team on 1800 78 80 82.



How would you rate the quality of this article?
1 2 3 4 5
Poor Excellent
Add comment
Related Articles
Comments
  • Comment #1 (Posted by Daniel Lewkovitz)
    Rating
    May I respectfully suggest you sack your copywriters, or whomever drafted the page advertising the service. It contains dozens of basic grammatical errors.

    Kind regards.
     
  • Comment #2 (Posted by Jonathan Crossfield)
    Rating
    Thank you for your comments. As the copywriter responsible for the article, I can honestly say that the grammar is perfectly acceptable in modern writing. There is a continual debate about certain rules in grammar - including whether to start a sentence with a conjunction such as 'but'. Most usage guides consider that particular rule archaic and without any true basis. Although there are a couple of lines I would willingly recast purely for stylistic reasons - deadlines are wonderful things - there is nothing I would change grammatically.

    For a further discussion on the differences between strict grammar and the rules of copywriting, I recently analysed the issue on my blog at http://www.jonathancrossfield.com/blog.

    However, I feel the need to point out that 'whomever' is used incorrectly in the comment and should be replaced with 'whoever'.
     
Submit Comment