From ai-marketing-skills
Brainstorms ad concepts combining messaging angles (Problem, Solution, Comparison, Proof, Curiosity), formats, visual styles via market awareness and sophistication frameworks. For campaigns, A/B testing, creative briefs.
npx claudepluginhub superamped/ai-marketing-skills --plugin ai-marketing-skillsThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
Use when brainstorming ad ideas before launching a new campaign, generating headline variations for A/B testing, exploring new messaging angles for a stale campaign, or preparing creative briefs for ad production.
Generates 6 ad copy variations (2 each TOFU/MOFU/BOFU) compliant with ad policies, including primary text/headline/description/CTA for Meta, TikTok, or Google Ads.
Provides playbooks, checklists, templates, and frameworks for developing hooks, visuals, copy variations for paid ad campaigns across channels like video, carousel, and images.
Generates and iterates high-performing ad creatives—headlines, descriptions, variations—for Google Ads, Meta, LinkedIn from scratch or performance data.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Use when brainstorming ad ideas before launching a new campaign, generating headline variations for A/B testing, exploring new messaging angles for a stale campaign, or preparing creative briefs for ad production.
Ask the user for:
If the user has multiple products, ask which product this campaign is for. Don't assume — different products have different audiences, price points, and angles.
Before generating angles, diagnose where the target market sits on two axes. This determines which angle types will work and which will fail.
Market Awareness (5 stages):
| Stage | Prospect Knows | Headline Strategy | Angle Types That Work |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 — Most Aware | Product + desire + ready to buy | Name product + price/offer | Proof, Solution (direct) |
| 2 — Product Aware | Product exists, not yet convinced | Reinforce desire, show proof, new mechanism | Proof, Solution, Comparison |
| 3 — Solution Aware | Wants the outcome, doesn't know your product | Name the desire/outcome first, then introduce product | Solution (benefit), Curiosity |
| 4 — Problem Aware | Feels the pain, doesn't know solutions exist | Name the pain, dramatize it, present product as answer | Problem, Curiosity |
| 5 — Unaware | Doesn't recognize the problem or won't admit it | Identification headline — echo an emotion or attitude, not a product claim | Curiosity (identification) |
Market Sophistication (5 stages):
| Stage | Market State | Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| 1 — First in market | No competitors have made this claim | State the claim directly and boldly |
| 2 — Competition appeared | Same claims exist | Enlarge the claim — go bigger, bolder |
| 3 — Claims worn out | Neither claim nor size works | Introduce a new mechanism — a new WAY to get the result |
| 4 — Mechanisms copied | Competitors adopted the mechanism | Feature and elaborate the mechanism, or find a superior one |
| 5 — Market exhausted | Nothing is believed | Shift to pure identification — no promises, project character |
Flag the awareness and sophistication stages in the output. If the market is at Awareness Stage 5 / Sophistication Stage 5, don't generate direct benefit headlines — they won't work. Shift to curiosity and identification angles.
Before writing headlines, identify the emotional drivers behind the purchase.
Emotion Audit template:
Nobody buys [YOUR PRODUCT] for [FUNCTIONAL REASON].
They buy it to feel [EMOTION 1], [EMOTION 2], and [EMOTION 3].
Map the emotional cluster (2-3 emotions) for the target market:
Work through each of the 5 angle types and identify which ones are available based on the product and market:
Lead with a pain the target market is facing. Make the reader feel the problem viscerally before mentioning a solution.
Generate problem angles by asking:
Lead with an outcome (benefit-focused), or show the method/system (process-focused).
Generate solution angles by asking:
Position against alternatives (competitors, old way, status quo).
Generate comparison angles by asking:
Lead with credibility, results, or social proof.
Generate proof angles by asking:
Lead with intrigue, insight, or a counterintuitive take.
Generate curiosity angles by asking:
For each angle type, list 3-5 specific angles available based on the product and market.
For each angle, pick the most effective format:
| Format | Structure | Best paired with |
|---|---|---|
| Direct | Straightforward value statement | Solution, Proof |
| Before/After | Show transformation | Problem, Solution |
| Us vs Them | Side-by-side comparison | Comparison |
| Testimonial | Customer quote or review | Proof |
| Question | Lead with a question they ask themselves | Problem, Curiosity |
| Listicle | Multiple benefits as a list | Solution |
For each concept, recommend a visual style:
| Style | Look & feel | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Branded | Professional, matches brand design system | Solution, Proof — builds credibility |
| Product image | Screenshot of UI, dashboard, output | Solution, Direct — makes product feel real |
| Meme | Popular meme template, captioned images | Problem, Curiosity, Comparison — stops the scroll |
| Ugly | Text-heavy, high-contrast colors, deliberately unpolished. Square format. | Problem, Question, Solution — stands out in polished feeds |
| Native | Looks like an organic social post, casual | Proof (testimonial), Curiosity — reduces ad resistance |
Combine angles + formats + styles into concrete ad concepts. For each concept, produce:
Generate the requested number of concepts (default: 10), ensuring:
Recommend which 3 concepts to test first based on:
This step is mandatory. Do not skip it.
Present the full concept table to the user showing all generated concepts with their angle, format, style, and headline. Include the recommended test batch but make it clear these are suggestions.
Ask the user:
# Ad Angle Brainstorm
**Date:** [current date]
**Product:** [product name]
**Target Audience:** [audience description]
**Platform:** [target platform]
**Concepts Generated:** [count]
---
## Market Diagnosis
**Awareness Stage:** [1-5] — [description]
**Sophistication Stage:** [1-5] — [description]
**Emotion Audit:** Nobody buys [product] for [function]. They buy it to feel [emotions].
---
## Available Angles Summary
| Angle Type | # of Angles Found | Strongest Angle |
|-----------|-------------------|-----------------|
| Problem | X | [best one-liner] |
| Solution | X | [best one-liner] |
| Comparison | X | [best one-liner] |
| Proof | X | [best one-liner] |
| Curiosity | X | [best one-liner] |
---
## Ad Concepts
### Concept 1: [Name]
| Element | Detail |
|---------|--------|
| **Angle** | [type] |
| **Format** | [type] |
| **Style** | [type] |
| **Headline** | [The actual headline text for the ad image] |
| **Ad copy** | [The text accompanying the image] |
| **CTA** | [Button text] |
| **Image suggestion** | [What to show] |
| **Landing page angle** | [How the LP should match] |
---
[Continue for all concepts...]
---
## Recommended Test Batch (First 3)
| Priority | Concept | Why test this first |
|----------|---------|-------------------|
| 1 | [Concept name] | [Reason] |
| 2 | [Concept name] | [Reason] |
| 3 | [Concept name] | [Reason] |
**Testing approach:** Run all 3 in the same ad group targeting the same audience. Compare CTR and conversion rate.