The Copywriting Test That Can Save Your Etsy Website cover art

The Copywriting Test That Can Save Your Etsy Website

The Copywriting Test That Can Save Your Etsy Website

Listen for free

View show details
WATCH ON YOUTUBE: https://youtu.be/tybUEk1vTS4 If Etsy is such a powerful platform, why doesn't every brand just open an Etsy shop? That question sounds simple, but it reveals something really important for Etsy sellers. Etsy can bring traffic. Etsy can make it easier to get found. Etsy runs Google ads. Etsy gives you a marketplace where buyers are already searching. So if Etsy does all of that, why would anyone need their own website? The answer is because Etsy is not built to grow your brand. Etsy is built to grow Etsy. In this episode, I break down why Etsy sellers need to think differently when they move from Etsy to their own website. A website is not just a place to copy and paste your Etsy listings. If you treat your website like Etsy with a different logo, it probably will not work. On Etsy, buyers are usually already searching for something. They land on your product, compare it to other similar products, look at the pictures, read a little, check the price, and decide. But on your own website, the job is different. You have to slow the buyer down. You have to help them understand your brand, your product, your mission, and why they should care. That means your website needs stronger messaging. A lot of Etsy sellers make beautiful products, take great pictures, and still struggle to explain why someone should buy from them. They say things like "handmade," "unique," "high quality," or "perfect gift," but those phrases are usually not enough to build a real brand. Everyone can say them. They are not visual enough. They are not specific enough. And they often do not give the customer a real reason to believe. So in this episode, I walk through a simple three-part test for better brand messaging: Can they visualize it? Can they prove it? Can no one else say it? First, your customer needs to be able to see themselves using the product. If you sell handmade mugs, "handmade ceramic mug" might describe the item, but it does not create much desire. A stronger line paints a moment. Something like, "The mug that makes 6:30 worth waking up for." Now the buyer can picture the morning, the coffee, the quiet moment, and the feeling of reaching for that specific mug. That is what good website messaging can do. It helps people see the product inside their own life. Second, your claims need proof. If you say your product is the best, the perfect gift, cleaner, softer, more relaxing, or higher quality, you need to explain why. A claim without proof is easy to ignore. A claim with a reason becomes believable. For example, instead of saying a candle is "the perfect candle for winding down," explain what makes it good for that moment. Is it the scent? The ingredients? The burn time? The way it is made? The emotional use case? Give people something they can believe. Third, and maybe most important, your brand needs to say something that no one else can say in the same way. If every other shop can make the same claim, it is not a strong positioning statement. "The perfect gift for mom" is not enough because every candle shop, jewelry shop, mug shop, and print shop can say the same thing. But if your product is connected to your story, your mission, your point of view, your customer's specific life, or the problem you are trying to solve, now you have something stronger. I also talk about the difference between getting sales and building loyalty. Etsy can help you get sales, but your website needs to help people remember you. It needs to help people understand what you stand for. It needs to make them feel like they are buying from a brand, not just buying another product they found online. This is where I bring in examples like Spindrift and Sonnet James. Spindrift is not just another sparkling water brand. Their message is built around real fruit and no mystery "natural flavors." That matters to a certain kind of customer. Sonnet James did not just sell dresses. She sold the idea of being a playful mom who could get down on the floor with her kids and still feel beautiful. That is brand-building. It is not just describing the product. It is connecting the product to a deeper reason someone wants it. And that is the real lesson for Etsy sellers. Your Etsy shop can prove that people want your product. But your website has to prove why people should want your brand. If you are thinking about building a website for your Etsy shop, this episode will help you understand what needs to change. Your website needs more than products, photos, and a checkout button. It needs messaging that makes people visualize the product, believe your claims, and understand why your brand is different from every other option. Because if your website just says the same thing every Etsy shop says, it is probably going to flop. But if you use your website to tell a stronger story, make better claims, and build real brand loyalty, it can become something much bigger than just another place to sell your products. In this episode, I cover: Why ...
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet