10 Copywriting Exercises That Will Sharpen Your Skills

Why You Need Copywriting Exercises

Want to write copy that converts? Like any skill, great copywriting takes practice. Whether you’re a beginner or seasoned pro, these 10 targeted exercises will help you write clearer, more persuasive copy – fast.

According to Marketing Experiments, writers who practice specific techniques improve conversion rates 47% faster than those who don’t. Ready to level up? Let’s dive in.

1. The “Before-After-Bridge” Workout

What it teaches: Transforming features into compelling benefits

How to do it:

  1. Pick a random product (coffee maker, accounting software, etc.)
  2. Write:
    • Before: The customer’s current frustration
    • After: Their ideal outcome
    • Bridge: How the product solves it

Example:
Before: “Wasting hours on messy spreadsheets”
After: “Financial clarity in minutes”
Bridge: “Our software automates your bookkeeping”

Pro Tip: Do this daily for a week – you’ll start seeing benefits everywhere.

2. Headline A/B Testing Challenge

What it teaches: Writing attention-grabbing headlines

How to do it:

  1. Write 5 headlines for the same product
  2. Test them on Coschedule’s Headline Analyzer
  3. Note which emotional triggers score highest

Variations to try:

  • Number headlines (“7 Secrets…”)
  • Question headlines (“Tired of…?”)
  • How-to headlines (“How to…”)

3. The “Cut It in Half” Edit

What it teaches: Concise writing

How to do it:

  1. Take an existing piece of copy (yours or someone else’s)
  2. Rewrite it using exactly half the words
  3. Keep all key messages intact

Why it works: A HubSpot study found that shorter copy often converts better when testing landing pages.

4. Customer Avatar Interview

What it teaches: Writing to your ideal customer

How to do it:

  1. Interview 3 actual customers
  2. Ask:
    • “What was your biggest frustration before buying?”
    • “What almost stopped you from purchasing?”
    • “What results have you seen?”
  3. Use their exact words in your next sales page

5. The “No Adjectives” Challenge

What it teaches: Powerful verb/noun choices

How to do it:
Write a product description without using ANY adjectives. Only:

  • Concrete nouns
  • Active verbs
  • Specific numbers

Example:
❌ “Amazing, life-changing results”
✅ “Clients gain 3.2 more hours daily”

6. Swipe File Reverse Engineering

What it teaches: Analyzing winning copy

How to do it:

  1. Collect 5 high-converting sales pages
  2. For each:
    • Highlight emotional triggers
    • Note transition techniques
    • Mark where they place the CTA

Great sources: Really Good EmailsSwiped.co

7. The “One Idea Per Sentence” Drill

What it teaches: Clear communication

How to do it:
Take a complex paragraph and rewrite it so:

  • Each sentence contains just one idea
  • No sentence exceeds 14 words
  • All jargon is removed

Why it matters: American Press Institute research shows comprehension drops 10% for every extra idea per sentence.

8. Objection Handling Practice

What it teaches: Anticipating concerns

How to do it:

  1. List every possible reason someone wouldn’t buy
  2. Write a 1-sentence response to each
  3. Turn the best into FAQ sections

Common objections:

  • “It’s too expensive” → “Costs less than 3 coffees/week”
  • “Will it work for me?” → “92% of users see results in 2 weeks”

9. The “Twitter Length” Test

What it teaches: Essential messaging

How to do it:
Describe your product/service in:

  1. 280 characters (a tweet)
  2. Then 140 characters
  3. Then 50 characters

What survives is your core message.

10. Sensory Description Practice

What it teaches: Vivid writing

How to do it:
Describe a product using:

  • 1 taste comparison
  • 1 sound analogy
  • 1 texture reference

Example (for a CRM):
“Frustration-free like your first sip of morning coffee, clicks that sound like satisfied snaps, smooth as fresh notebook paper.”

Putting It All Together

The best writers aren’t born – they’re trained. Schedule just 15 minutes daily for these exercises, and you’ll see dramatic improvements in:

  • Clarity
  • Persuasiveness
  • Conversion rates

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