Thursday, April 25, 2013

How to Go From a Copywriter to NCD in One Year...


How to Go From Rookie to NCD in One Year


So let’s take the audacious route for a change today, shall we? It holds more promise than the same old answers that are as agonizing to hear as to experience, doesn’t it?

A rookie to an NCD? Is it even possible?

Much depends on the size of your dream and what you are prepared to give up in order to gain it.

Let’s say you have to sacrifice a year of hob-nobbing with friends at the local pub…that okay with you? No, TV too, nor surfing the internet, nor watching the latest movie at the theatre? That okay with you? Assuming you want to be a high-flier soon, I reckon you don’t mind it. So let’s on, shall we?

Make copywriting your Bible. Read up all you can about some of the agencies you fancy. Pick one out that will also be a good cultural fit. You don’t want to join an agency in the hope of vying for the top job and then realize mid-way that you hum a different tune than that of the agency head, now, do you? (Wink, wink!) 

Oops, wrong number, no? 

Only that would be too late, no? 

So, make a lot of friends on LinkedIn and other social media sites and find out all you need to know to make the choice.

Soak yourself with details about the agency, its rivals, all about the ad world in your country as also the world. Subscribe to all the newsletters, join the local ad club: they do encourage individual memberships, even students...

By now, you know that copywriting is the way for you and you are as hungry for success as a drowning man to breathe…

Now for the meat of the story:

Look up the client list from your agency’s website and make a note of it in the front page of your copywriting notepad. You do own a notepad, do you not? (Gasp!) Just kidding. If you don’t own one, now’s a good time to get one.

You do not have a brief. You could either say, “Too bad” or “Lucky you” and get on with it. As it is a year-long exercise, you have time on your hands.

Take it slowly. Aim to write a headline by three to seven days. Think of nothing else. From 9 in the morning to 9 in the evening, just focus on what I call “cracking the code”; in layman’s language: get the headline right. 

Because you see, the headline *is* the Big Idea that could make you a millionaire.

Don’t be disappointed if you don’t get it right the first few times. Heck, it might take you more than a week, initially. 

And how will you know whether you’ve got it right? 

Here’s an exercise that has always worked for me. Say a piece of work has been good, I call it a day and I sleep over it. And the next morning I read it once again. If I still like it, it’s good work; else, I re-do the entire work and start all over again, till I’ve got it pat.

Put a tick on the front sheet of the writing pad next to the name of the client that you have finished and move on to the next. 

Never be smug about your victories. You’ve got the rest of the list to complete equally well.on your fragile head.

Never work only for those clients who tickle your fancy. Consider the tragedy of all those missed opportunities, the awards the small ones could also muster. One of my better ads is for pro bono work on AIDS. Just to make the point…

Similarly, do not insist that you are a morning or a night person. I am a morning person, yes, but I work all the time, anywhere anytime. I need silence too to put in the best possible work, but do not shirk my work if I do not have the perfect environs. I may work more slowly or with more errors, but I trundle along even through the disturbances…

But you might wonder if writing great ads for all the clients in one year is too much. Even if you take it slow, at one ad per week, you will have 52 great headlines. And may I add, with practice and if you have a wealth of ideas, you could get at least two if not more ads all in less than a day’s work.  Do the math and come back to me! (Wink, wink!)

But more of that in another post. Suffice it to say that it is not too much, if your hunger for success is as strong as your desperateness to breathe were you drowning… The reason I repeat this point so much is that you have to want something so badly to get anywhere. The hunger to succeed… to be someone out of the ordinary…to be the next NCD…

After you have cracked the code for all the clients, prepare a file of all your ads on Spec in your own neat handwriting. Give it a name, mentioning clearly that these are ads on Spec.

Dash an attractive letter asking for a meeting with the Creative Director and pray for the call and be ready to see your career soar!

Good Luck and God Speed!

Until the next,

Adieus!


No comments:

Post a Comment