The hardest thing in copywriting is not sounding clever. It is sounding simple about something complicated. Anyone can make an easy idea sound complex. The skill, and the thing that actually sells, is taking a tangled concept and saying it in a few words a busy stranger gets instantly. Let us do it together, the way it actually happens at the desk.
Start with the messy version
Say you sell a service and the first draft of your value proposition comes out like this:
“We provide an end-to-end, fully managed digital presence optimization solution leveraging continuous iterative improvement methodologies.”
That is what the idea looks like before it is finished. It is not wrong. It is just unreadable. Nobody feels anything. Now we cut.
Step 1: Say it out loud to a friend
Ask yourself: how would I explain this to a friend at a table, with no jargon? You would never say “end-to-end digital presence optimization solution.” You would say something like “we build your website and then keep improving it for a year.” Already clearer. The spoken version is almost always simpler than the written one, because speaking strips the corporate armor.
Step 2: Find the one real benefit
Behind the jargon, what does the customer actually get? Not “optimization methodologies.” They get a website that keeps getting better instead of going stale. So: “a website that does not go out of date.” Now there is a benefit a human can feel.
Step 3: Make it concrete
“Keeps improving” is still a little abstract. Make it tangible. “We build your site, then spend a year making it better, together.” Now the reader can picture the year, the togetherness, the ongoing care.
Step 4: Cut one more time
Read it again and remove any word that is not pulling weight. “We build your site and improve it with you for a full year.” Shorter. Clearer. Done.
Look at the journey:
- Before: “end-to-end, fully managed digital presence optimization solution leveraging continuous iterative improvement methodologies.”
- After: “We build your site and improve it with you for a full year.”
Same idea. One a reader skips, one a reader gets in a second.
The method, named
That is the whole technique: say it aloud as if to a friend, find the one real benefit, make it concrete, then cut. Repeat until a busy stranger understands it instantly. Simplicity is not dumbing down. It is the hardest, most respectful thing you can do for a reader, because you did the work of clarity so they would not have to.
The instinct to sound sophisticated is the enemy. The confident move is to be so clear that there is nothing left to misunderstand. Clear beats clever, every time, especially when someone is deciding whether to give you their money.
Takeaway: Take your most complicated sentence, say it aloud to an imaginary friend, find the one benefit, make it concrete, and cut. Repeat until a stranger gets it instantly. That is the skill the whole craft is built on.

