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the hidden copywriting skills you already have

RICEMEREDITH · August 15, 2025 ·

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📖Turn the Page📖

​Hey [FIRST NAME GOES HERE],

I was talking to a teacher last week who said, “I’m not sure I have what it takes to be a copywriter. I’ve never written or done anything like this before.”

I had to stop her right there.

You’ve been writing copy your entire career. You just called it something else.

Stay with me here:

That parent email you sent about the field trip? That was direct response copy. You had to get busy parents to take action (sign the form, send money, pack a lunch) by a specific deadline. You probably included social proof (“The kids are so excited!”) and addressed objections (“Don’t worry about the weather—we have indoor backup plans”).

Your classroom newsletter? That was content marketing. You were nurturing your audience (parents), building trust, and positioning yourself as the expert guide for their child’s education.

That lesson where you hooked reluctant students on fractions or (GASP) POETRY?? That was conversion copywriting. You had to grab attention, overcome resistance (“When will I ever use this?” or “Poetry is so dumb!”), and get them to take action (engage with the material).

Your parent-teacher conference prep? That was client communication and stakeholder management. You presented data, told stories, and guided conversations toward desired outcomes.

Here’s what most people don’t realize:

Good copywriting isn’t about manipulation or pushy sales tactics. It’s about clear communication that helps people make decisions that serve them.

Sound familiar?

You’ve spent years:

  • Understanding your audience’s needs and motivations
  • Communicating complex ideas simply
  • Overcoming resistance and objections
  • Guiding people toward beneficial actions
  • Building trust and credibility
  • Adapting your message based on feedback

These aren’t skills you need to learn. These are skills you need to recognize.

The only difference between your classroom communication and copywriting is the context.

Instead of helping students learn fractions, you’re helping customers understand why they need a solution. Instead of getting parents to sign field trip forms, you’re getting readers to join an email list.

Same skills. Different application.

So what’s next?

  1. Start noticing your communication wins. When you write an email that gets quick responses, or explain something in a way that finally clicks—that’s copywriting in action.
  2. Collect your success stories. Every time you convinced a resistant student to try, or helped a confused parent understand their child’s needs—write it down. These become your case studies.
  3. Practice the translation. Take a piece of successful teacher communication and think: “How would I apply this same approach to help a business owner connect with their customers?”

You’re not starting from zero. You’re building on expertise.

What’s one communication win you had this week?

Hit reply and tell me about it. I’d love to celebrate it with you.

Cheering you on,

Meredith

The 4 x1

  • Update about Content Biz: I’m spending a lot of time on goal mapping and planning right now. This is something I have avoided or rather just kind of glazed over in the hustle of starting my own business, but this summer has really motivated me to plan for the next 9 months so that my summer looks a bit different next year! Interested? Hit reply and I’ll send you my framework!
  • Update about Coaching Biz: The Debut Cohort of From Classroom to Copywriter starts next week! I’m so freaking excited to dive in with the amazing ladies who signed up. Know someone that would love to get in on it next time? Forward this link so they can get on the waitlist! ​
  • Tiny Brave Thing: Last week I stretched my social muscles while at a conference for 5 days. Working from home has definitely meant less time with others, you know, conversating. It was really amazing to learn so much from so many brilliant people—and also, it was exhausting. I’m still catching up.
  • One to Grow On: Question from James Clear in his weekly newsletter… “Let’s say the worst-case scenario actually occurs. There are obviously things you won’t like about it. But what aspects of that scenario are you excited about?” (This one really made me think. How many people out there have this tiny spark inside when something really dramatic happens?)

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