So it happened again.
With most demanding projects, it happens at some point.
Iโd done all the research, put together all the pieces, the sales arguments, the benefits, the hooks and the most appealing approachesโฆ
But then I hit a snag. Couldnโt get started with the actual writing.

After 15+ years in this racketโฆ it STILL happens.
So what happens right at that point – and I have it on good authority Iโm not alone on this ๐
Itโs not exactly writerโs block, because the material is right there, the ideas are thereโฆ
But for some reason nothingโs flowing out. Just dry heaves of cliches, if that.
Whatโs missing is theย VOICE.
Or is it even that? I know how they sound, how they want to be seen, their vernacular, the industry expectationsโฆ all of that.
So itโs not that either.
The final hurdle isย PERSPECTIVE.
And thatโs something only the copywriter can come up with, ultimately.
It may not happen alone, because after all nobody writes in a vacuum – it just doesnโt happen.
But what turns the situation into gleeful productivityโฆ
Is discovering that perspective!
And to do that, you need to beย patient in the moment
To experience that uncomfortable moment when you have all the pieces, but they havenโt yet aligned into a coherent whole.
So you stew. So you arrange and rearrange the pieces. So you talk with colleagues, maybe the client one more time.
But eventually, if youโre patient and diligent with your process, the light will come on.
The perspective finally emerges!ย
You know how to use this material to โgive a speechโ in writing. To communicate with an outcome in mind. What to include, what to leave out. It all follows from that perspective.
So this just happened to me, five minutes before I wrote this very thing.
If you do NOT do this, and rush into the jobโฆ the result will likely be lacklustre, boring, cookie cutterโฆ somewhat effective yes, but notโฆ quite what both you and your client were looking for. That oomph. That memorable twing and twangโฆ
So learn to have that patience, actually exercise it until you โgetโ thatโs how perspective emerges.
And then you have what it takes to glue together a piece of copy. Or perhaps a string of them. Youโve gone pro, where you used to fumble.
And while that uncomfortable moment comes to even seasoned prosโฆ you now know how to handle it.
Handle your boring moment, and turn it into something that excites both you and your clientโฆ and ultimately their customers.
Itโs so worth it. So go practice. ๐
PS.ย Part of that uncomfortable moment is inevitably that โwhat if itโll be no good?โ or โwhat if theyโll be really unhappy with me?โ. Fear of customer reaction, basically. All the copywriting pros will tell you that the imposter syndrome never really completely goes away. It just changes forms and mutates, makes you work for it. Itโs not fatal. You can learn to swim in it and win. So go forth and win over yourself, your client and their clients. Love this job.


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