Igabi Singles - Cupid Dating in Nigeria
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- Username:
- Rgs
- Gender:
- Man
- Age:
- 32
- Location:
- Igabi, Kaduna, Nigeria
- Living situation:
- With kids
- Firstline:
- isamusargs2016@gmail.com
- About yourself:
- Am simple and also god fearing person
- Looking for:
-
God fearing person who can teach me good english cause am a student for now but my English is too poor so I need someone that will coach me better
- Username:
- suleiman.ad.haruna
- Gender:
- Man
- Age:
- 39
- Location:
- Igabi, Kaduna, Nigeria
- Living situation:
- Alone
- Firstline:
- +2348067989800
- About yourself:
- I am friend and fun to be with. I respect every soul.
- Looking for:
-
I am looking for simple and honest lady. Age, between 18-45.
- Username:
- Ayodelx
- Gender:
- Man
- Age:
- 22
- Location:
- Igabi, Kaduna, Nigeria
- Living situation:
- Alone
- Firstline:
- Yes
- About yourself:
- Where face-to-face selling isn’t an option—because your total pool of prospects is too big or geographically dispersed, or you don’t have the budget for a salesforce, or it just doesn’t fi t with your business model—the answer is copywriting. I wrote m
- Looking for:
-
Want to me people where I can fine someone who came love me for life and Where face-to-face selling isn’t an option—because your total pool
of prospects is too big or geographically dispersed, or you don’t have
the budget for a salesforce, or it just doesn’t fi t with your business
model—the answer is copywriting.
I wrote my fi rst sales copy in May 1986. It was for a market research
report. I had to write a direct mail pack consisting of a two-sided
A4 sales letter and a four-page A4 brochure. There was also a
press release, I seem to remember. Oh, and a catalog entry. No web
copy—that wasn’t invented then. Nor, in any real sense, were PCs.
So I wrote my copy longhand on lined paper with a rather beautiful
Waterman fountain pen. For younger readers, a fountain pen is
a sort of metal tube fi lled with liquid ink (not toner) and tipped
with a little piece of gold-plated steel that squirts the ink onto a
piece of paper. Once I had fi nished my fi rst draft, I handed it to the
Marketing Department secretary—Pauline—and she went off to
type it up on . . . the computer. You could tell when Pauline switched
the computer on because all the lights dimmed and an unearthly
humming permeated the building.
Some time later Pauline would turn up again with the copy, now
printed in Courier 12 point on crisp sheets of white paper. I’d read
it over, make a few edits, and hand it back to P—who’d repeat the
whole process until I was happy.
Nowadays I write my copy on a PC or, occasionally, a laptop, as
I suppose you do. But although the technology I use to write copy
has changed, the techniques I use are the same as they were in May
1986. I still write plans before writing copy. I still try to fi gure out
what my reader wants to hear, rather than what I want to write. I
still make a list of all the ways I can love for the rest of my life