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    Copywriting Tools (most of them free)!

    If you're a surgeon, it's very helpful to have some good surgical tools.

    If you're a carpenter, it's very helpful to have some good carpentry tools.

    If you're a copywriter, it's very helpful to have some good copywriting tools!  

    As a copywriter myself, here's a list of the most useful tools I've personally found:

    Copywriting Tools

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    P.S.  What are the secret tools in your copywriting toolbox??


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    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Oh yeah, Gimp is great! I used to use it in the past when I didn't have Photoshop....and still use it if for some reason I need some quick image editing and am not on my own computer.

    Great recommendation!

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    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Hey PJ, great recommendation!

    You know what's sad though? I still to this very day "chicken peck" type with just two fingers....you can see me in action here:

    http://www.nevblog.com/august-2015-goals/

    .....I might use this to once-and-for-all correct this bad typing!

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    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Oh that's interesting, I never thought about what people use internationally. Actually in my email I've noticed A LOT of people have suggested OneDrive because their entire work ecosystem is based around Microsoft so it's much better to stay within that ecosystem.
    Link to comment

    One of the best (and easiest) tips I've found for proofreading is to use Google Translate. No matter how many times you go over your work - even when asking others for help - it's easy to miss things. Our brains have a way of filing in the gaps and inserting words without us realizing it.

    However, I've found that LISTENING to your copy (via Google Translate) makes finding your mistakes so much easier. Even better, close your eyes and listen. I guarantee you'll find errors you wouldn't have otherwise.

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    I use CANVA to design my images. It can do soooo many things <3
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    Guest Neville

    Posted

    I love Canva! I don't use it all the time because I'll just go with Google Drawings or Photoshop, but I am SUPER DUPER IMPRESSED with how easy they make images for social. Very good layout.

    I use it on my iPad sometimes for design inspiration :)

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    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Ohhh you use Google Translate just to LISTEN to your message. I really like this idea Ryan, possibly shirt-worthy suggestion :-)
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    Here are my top productivity hacks:

    a) Get an early start. After getting up at 05.30 for work for a few months i discovered it was a great time to get work done. Works especially well in the summer.

    b) Get stuff that may distract you done ASAP. Things not directly related to your productivity, but still important enough that you may pause work to do them. If you do it beforehand, you are more likely to find yourself in that elusive "Zone" and able to ride that wave of creativity until you either finish or you wipe out.

    c) Take a brisk walk. This is especially powerful when combined with the first two hacks. Rise early, do all your distracting stuff first, then head out for a brisk walk, around 30-45 minutes. You will have a 30-minute window after you return home where you have an increased ability to concentrate and thus, to get your stuff done.

    d) Don't be afraid to take breaks, especially if they involve getting away from the computer for a bit. Context-switching your brain is good, especially if you're stuck.

    e) Get yourself a snazzy t-shirt and put that on, mix up your own self-image a bit. ;)

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    Yes! Probably should have explained that better. Just copy and paste your work and hit "Translate."

    Then the lovely lady of Google will read your copy aloud for you to review.

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    First 60 minute of the day: WRITE. Before breakfast, shower, petting the dog and even brushing my teeth! First thing I do after waking up is drink a glass of water and then - write copy for MY OWN SHIT for an hour. Feels like you the day before even before kickoff :)

    KillNewsFeed for chrome: Kills Facebook newsfeed and saves tons of time and negative mental energy spent on other people's bullshit.

    StayFocused for Chrome: I have a 40 minute daily 'allowance' on Facebook, major news sites and even the stupid Online CandyCrush habit I picked lately - combined.

    Pomodoro: When writing "heavy" copy (VSL, sales page, email sequence), it gives me 100-150 minutes of 'pure' writing inside of an 180-210 minutes time span. And the best thing? My brain doesn't feel goddamn fried.

    Momentum for Chrome: immediately forces you to set your major focus of the day + love their background HD pictures.

    And Crossfit, which 10x physical, mental and emotional strength

    Loved your google drawing suggestion, will try it for sure

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    Guest PJ White

    Posted

    Yeah, good luck Neville. Trouble with someone as fast and bad as you are (if you don't mind me saying), as you develop the skills to involve all ten fingers, you inevitably have to go through a process of slowing down. It's frustrating, but worth it in the end.
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    Guest PJ White

    Posted

    Got to agree with Scrivener recommendation. Takes time to get familiar with, but is stunningly good once you know what it can do. For drafting and keeping track, and just making the admin bits of writing easier, it is truly awesome.
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    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Great advice Kris! I especially like D.....as I love taking random breaks and distractions :)
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    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Great schedule Idan, possibly shirt-worthy comment!

    I didn't put ALLLLL my productivity hacks on the post since it was focused more towards tools, but my favorite hack is staying light all morning and barely eating anything except fruit or coffee.

    If I stay light in the morning, I can work super hard all day until I eat. I don't mind being a little bit hungry if it means I get a ton of work done!

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    Guest Sue-Ann Bubacz

    Posted

    Nev:

    I'm a little bit in love with Trello to help organize writing resources, ideas, links, etc. I also keep little snippets of code I use often, profile url's, color codes and stuff like that there in a handy dandy board. I love google stuff, like docs, but didn't know about Google drawings! Can't wait to try it out. And I'm experimenting today with Siri as a virtual assistant...another new one to me! I'm with Iris, Canva rocks it for me for visuals but, I've been experimenting with Visme for adding multi-media visuals as well, lately. I'm too computer stupid for Photoshop, so far, so I've been working around it!

    Well, thanks Nev, I always love getting your take on things and finding something useful:) Take care, Sue-Ann

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    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Hey Sue-Ann, Trello seems great for organizing things, I know a ton of people who use it all the time.

    Glad you discovered Google Drawings now, it's just so easy to use and stick into your other Google apps!

    Glad you got something from this :-)

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    Some top tips here from everyone. Thanks.

    Is there any app out there that allows you to write in blocks and then move those blocks around? Sort of like sticky notes (colour coding handy too) but within a page/document you can save.

    Seems such a simple thing. It must exist!

    Link to comment
    Google Drawings is waaaaayyy underrated. Good call, Neville. I did almost all my artwork for a (simple) site on there recently and the ease-of-use, simplicity, and flexibility does make it stand out among other free tools in its category.
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    Two free online tools that maybe of use:

    https://www.mindmup.com - mind mapping - lots of export options, save to to your google drive, easy to use.

    https://www.draw.io - a free online drawing tool, save to local drive, google drive, lots of export options too, sophisticated but simple.

    Alternative to Google Docs is Outlook.com, (old hotmail accounts should have been moved over to it). It give you access to all Microsoft's office tools including OneNote (click on the top left box-grid thing) - Its FREE... Try to stick to Google Docs or Outlook, or you will end up like me with duplicate work and spending time searching both for something you had been working on in the past... :/

    Cheers

    Nick

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    Guest Neville

    Posted

    I use Tables in Google Docs to do this. Just make a table and write in it. You can bookmark the table for easy linking and move it around.
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    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Glad you agree Drew! It really is astoundingly simple compared to anything else.
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    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Oh nice, never seen those! Maybe shirt-worthy recommendations Nick!

    Good tip on sticking to one ecosystem, I imagine having both would get really confusing really quick.

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    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Wow, glowing testimonial for Scrivener. I've never used for more than 5 minutes, and might have to give it a re-visit.
    Link to comment
    Guest Sam Logan

    Posted

    Hey Nev,

    I've been enjoying your emails for a while and this was an impressive post.

    It was so impressive that you got me to start considering splashing out on a rake of new gear. This is a real achievement - I pride myself on being spendthrift and doing the most with the least.

    The two tools I want to share are two I want to use in combination: The Most Dangerous Writing App (http://www.themostdangerouswritingapp.com/) and Hemingway Editor. I know Hemingway Editor has been recommended before, but using it with TMDWA is my unique contribution. Basically, I write in TMDWA with the serious time pressure it enforces. Then I tidy things up and make them clear in Hemingway. Between the two I feel I get a very high quality result in a very short time period.

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