How does copywriter write professional opinions?
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Ever read something and thought to yourself, “Okay, but how did you know?”
Or worse “This sounds preachy and I don’t trust it.”
That’s the fine line copywriters walk when sharing professional opinions. You want to educate, maybe challenge your audience a little, but not come off like a self appointed guru. Especially in the Kenyan market, where humility, clarity, and authenticity matter deeply.
So, how does a skilled copywriter express strong, informed opinions professionally and still win hearts, clicks, and contracts? Let’s break it down.
What is a professional opinion in copywriting?
It’s not just “what you feel.” It’s a backed up, experience informed perspective on something that affects your client’s or audience’s goals. It could be:
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Why short form content is underperforming
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Why your brand needs a tone of voice guide
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Why AI generated content won’t replace human nuance in Kenya
It’s expert insight with proof not just vibes.
1. Know who you’re talking to
This isn’t just about demographics, it’s about energy. Are you writing for a Nairobi-based marketing executive trying to prove ROI? A startup founder in Nakuru looking to build visibility? A business mama in Eldoret who’s still new to digital strategy? Knowing this changes everything. Professional opinions should be contextual, not copy pasted from Western blogs that don’t reflect our market reality.
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2. Use authority, not arrogance
Your tone should say I’ve been there, I’ve tested this, and here’s what works. It should not be I know better than you. Use phrases like:
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“In my experience working with Kenyan SMEs…”
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“What I’ve seen with most local ecommerce brands is…”
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“One mistake I often notice is…”
It softens the opinion but still signals authority.
3. Back it up with examples
Want to sound professional? Show, don’t just tell. Instead of saying: “Short form isn’t working anymore.” Say something like:
“We ran a campaign for a Kisumu based food delivery app and short Instagram captions were getting scrolled past. But once we added storytelling and humor, engagement tripled.”
Numbers. Stories. Kenyan relevance. That’s your power combo.
Always research thoroughly on the topic at hand and have different expert opinions to compare and contrast.
4. Balance boldness with clarity
It’s okay to be bold in fact, your audience needs that, but bold doesn’t mean brash. It means clear. Don’t say: “Brands that use AI tools are lazy.” Instead: “AI tools are powerful, but when brands rely solely on them without human editing, the soul of the message is lost.” See the difference? Same opinion. One invites thought. The other provokes defensiveness.
5. Keep it local, keep it real
Professional opinions that are too abstract will get tuned out. So when you can, localize the context:
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Talk about Kenyan consumer behavior
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Mention specific industries here (e.g., agriculture, ed-tech, matatu advertising!)
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Reference platforms your audience actually uses (Instagram, WhatsApp, Jiji, Tiktok)
Your opinion should feel relevant, not recycled.
Citing your sources especially the experts in the field gives your article credibility.
As a copywriter, you’re not just a wordsmith. You’re a strategist. A brand voice amplifier. Your opinions shape the content your clients publish, the values they express, and the audiences they attract. So yes — your opinion matters. But how you say it? That’s where the craft lives. Be bold, but kind. Be confident, but curious. Be informative, not intimidating. And always write like a human.
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