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From skills-for-humanity
Writes and audits marketing copy using the attention-desire-action framework. Use for landing pages, ad copy, email copy, and product descriptions when copy isn't converting.
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Copy fails when it describes the product rather than the reader's experience of having it. "Comprehensive workflow management platform with real-time collaboration" describes features. "Your team stops losing work in email chains" describes an experience. The reader buys the experience, not the feature set. Every piece of copy that describes the product from the product's point of view rather t...
Writes and edits copy using positioning-first thinking, voice-of-customer research, and the Seven Sweeps editing framework. Use for headlines, taglines, email, landing page, product, UX, and sales copy.
Writes rigorous, conversion-focused marketing copy for landing pages and emails. Enforces mandatory context gathering, copy brief confirmation, and strict no-fabrication rules.
Generates marketing copy using proven frameworks (AIDA, PAS, etc.) for ads, landing pages, emails, social posts, and product descriptions. Reads reference files for framework selection and brand voice rules.
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Copy fails when it describes the product rather than the reader's experience of having it. "Comprehensive workflow management platform with real-time collaboration" describes features. "Your team stops losing work in email chains" describes an experience. The reader buys the experience, not the feature set. Every piece of copy that describes the product from the product's point of view rather than the reader's is leaving conversion on the table.
The three-layer model maps every effective piece of copy:
Attention (the opening): The sole function of the first line is to earn the second line. Not to establish credibility, explain the product, or summarise the offer — to earn the next sentence. Attention is lost in the first three seconds. The headline must name a specific benefit or problem, not a category. "Project management software" is a category. "Your team ships on time, every time" is a claim that addresses a specific pain.
Desire (the body): The body must make the reader feel the gap between their current state and a better one. This is not enthusiasm or puffery — it is specificity. "Boost productivity" is enthusiasm. "Cut the time your team spends on status updates from 3 hours a week to 10 minutes" is specific and credible. The desire is created not by telling the reader the product is good, but by making them feel what it would be like to have the problem solved.
Action (the CTA): The call to action must be singular (one action only), specific (not "learn more" but "start your free trial"), and low-friction (the language should make action feel easy and obvious, not like a commitment or a risk).
Step 1: Attention — Does the Opening Earn the Next Sentence? Read only the headline and first line. Stop. Ask: does this give the reader a reason to continue? Specifically:
If the headline is a category label ("Enterprise HR Software") or a generic claim ("The Best Solution for Your Business"), it has failed at attention.
Step 2: Desire — Does the Body Create the Gap? Read the body copy. Ask:
Step 3: Action — Is the CTA Singular, Specific, and Low-Friction? Evaluate the call to action:
Step 4: Feature/Benefit Confusion Flag every statement that describes the product (feature) rather than the reader's experience of having the product (benefit). For each:
Step 5: Overall Verdict and Headline Rewrite State the copy's single most significant failure. Rewrite the headline based on the strongest benefit identified in the copy.
Attention Assessment: [Opening quoted] — [Verdict: earns next sentence / fails at attention] — [Specific diagnosis]
Desire Audit: [Benefit specificity and credibility / Gap-creation assessment / Fear/resistance addressed or ignored]
Action Assessment: [CTA quoted] — [Singular / specific / low-friction check] — [Friction language identified]
Feature/Benefit Confusion:
Overall Verdict: [Primary failure in one sentence]
Rewritten Headline: [New headline addressing the strongest identified benefit]
Rewritten CTA: [If the CTA is failing — specific, low-friction alternative]
/writing-audience-calibration — copy must speak to the specific reader; generic copy that speaks to everyone reaches no one./writing-argument for long-form copy (sales pages, long emails) where the copy is structured as an argument that needs to be logically sound as well as emotionally resonant./writing-tone-alignment when copy spans multiple formats (headline, body, email sequence) and the tone needs to be consistent across them.After delivering this output, use AskUserQuestion to offer the next move:
/writing-tone-alignment — Align copy tone to the audience/writing-audience-calibration — Calibrate the copy for the specific audience/communication-objection-mapping — Address objections the copy must overcome