Process for Writing a Listing with Emma Schermer Tamir - a podcast by Michael Veazey

from 2020-01-16T05:00:12

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Process for writing a listing needs a deep understanding of what is going on with the competitive space. Being thoughtful about your strategy is key.


Construction principles Competitive structure

You need to understand what is going on in your competitive category What are customers expecting?

So start by looking at your competitors’ products Then look at the reviews of your competition

Is everyone complaining about something that your product has solvedYou might find uses of your product
You may get life case studiesKeyword research

SEO is what happens before people get to the pageBut you have to get traffic - be very clear about the keywords
Make sure you can run PPC and organic Keyword strategy
Be very thoughtful about thisIt can be very tempting to see keywords with large search volume 

But that can really steer you in the wrong directionKeyword stuffing vs. Relevance
Make sure the words you choose for the copy is thoughtfulAre they words that customers want to see on your listing?

Eg: misspellings or Spanish Client work

Many clients bring keywords using multiple tools.  Others don’t feel confident. Or they are curious to see if there is an extra phrase.

Emma offers researchThey can also review research

Sometimes you have a case that looks like high search volume and low competition - but sometimes you can do a google search and realise that something is a brand name. Handling niches that are competitive/will it work
Some clients have a great opportunity and they are leaving money on the table. It’s rare that one of the clients hasn’t at least place an order. 

Sometimes space can be dominated by a brand - because there isn’t any competition. So you may be able to address a similar segment but at a different price point, or colour, or ingredients. In some categories, there can be a lack of on-Amazon search volume. 

But your market share is way more important than total addressable marketThere can STILL be an opportunity to outsell a traditional brand. 
Example - “Cover Girl” makeupThey recently reformulated their entire product line to be cruelty-free

If even one of their products is made in China, this comes off the table. On Amazon for one of their top-selling mascaras, the only indication of this is a tiny leaping bunny symbol on one image. So if you’re wanting to purchase a royalty-free mascara, you might not even know this is a relevant option for you. 
BenefitsPeople get confused about what a benefit is. 

For example, a heavy-duty country backpack that is going to go into extreme environments and it will be an essential part of their journey. If you just say it’s “durable”, what does that actually mean?

It means that people can with confidence going into tough terrainProtect their most valuable possessions
Enable them to complete their journeyWhen you’re presenting info, you shouldn’t save best for last -lead with your best benefits. 

In journalism, there is an old practice called inverted pyramid - most important to least important in descending order. Back when you had stories that were in presses, they needed to be able to lop off the least important parts of the story. 

Really grab them, then help them understand why that matters. WHAT EMMA OFFERS

Free offers from  Emma: Free listing analysis (Click below) Amazon Listings

Maximize your conversions with well-crafted, keyword-rich listings that grab and hold customers’ attention.Marketing Consulting
Get personalized, tailored guidance on every step of your marketing journey.Newsletters and Email Campaigns
Reinvigorate your mailing list with copy that entices subscribers to open your emails and engage with your brand.Blog Posts
Introduce a new perspective with a guest post from Emma, or post new content that attracts and excites a tribe of loyal customers.Video Scripts

Further episodes of Amazing FBA Amazon and ECommerce Podcast, for Amazon Private Label Sellers, Shopify, Magento or Woocommerce business owners, and other e-commerce sellers and digital entrepreneurs.

Further podcasts by Michael Veazey

Website of Michael Veazey