RoadChain-SHA2048: 56f897f218032e5c RoadChain-Identity: alexa@sovereign RoadChain-Full: 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
29 KiB
Marketing Mad Libs
Based on: JOUR 4251 Psychology of Advertising + Strategic Communications + Digital Strategy Purpose: Fill in the blanks. Get a campaign. Ship it.
Every template below is backed by a specific psychological principle. The principle is named so you know WHY it works — not so you can skip it.
How to Use
- Pick the template for what you're building
- Fill in every
___blank - Run the checklist at the bottom of each template
- Ship it
Blanks use this format:
[BRAND]= your brand name[PRODUCT]= specific product or service[STAT]= a verified, sourced number[AUDIENCE]= who you're talking to[PAIN]= their problem[BENEFIT]= what they get[ACTION]= what you want them to do[PROOF]= evidence (testimonial, data, demo)[EMOTION]= feeling you want to trigger[DIFFERENTIATOR]= what makes you different from every competitor
1. Blog Post Headline (Stat-Hook Format)
Principle: Truth Effect + Novelty + Cognitive Response Model
The headline uses a verified external stat to establish credibility, then pivots to your solution. The reader's brain goes: "that stat is true → this person knows what they're talking about → I'll keep reading."
Template
[VERIFIED STAT FROM EXTERNAL SOURCE]. [REFRAME THAT CONNECTS TO YOUR PRODUCT].
Fill-in-the-Blank
[X]% of [AUDIENCE] [DO/EXPERIENCE SOMETHING PAINFUL].
[BRAND] [DOES THE OPPOSITE / SOLVES IT / EXISTS BECAUSE OF THIS].
Examples
91% of developers mass-delete marketing emails without reading them.
Every BlackRoad email contains a working code snippet. Open rates: 68%.
73% of AI startups rent 100% of their compute from three companies.
BlackRoad runs 16 models on hardware that fits in a shoebox.
80% of advertisements are misunderstood by their audience.
This one has a checklist at the bottom so you can verify every claim yourself.
Only 22% of marketing emails get opened. SMS hits 98%.
Here's the exact SMS sequence that brought 40 users to RoadPay in one week.
The Rules
- The stat MUST be real, sourced, and verifiable. Link the source in the post.
- The reframe must be specific to YOUR numbers, not vague claims.
- The gap between the stat and your solution IS the hook. Bigger gap = more novelty = more attention.
Checklist:
- Is the stat from a credible, named source?
- Is the reframe a specific, verifiable claim about your product?
- Does the gap between stat and solution create surprise?
2. Landing Page (Full Page Mad Lib)
Principle: ELM (Peripheral → Central transition), Primacy/Recency, Embodied Cognition
The page starts peripheral (fast, visual, emotional) and transitions to central (evidence, arguments, depth) as the reader scrolls. First line = strongest claim. Last line = CTA or tagline.
Template
# HERO SECTION (Peripheral Route — 3 seconds to land)
## [ONE-LINE VALUE PROP THAT CREATES A MENTAL IMAGE]
[ONE SENTENCE THAT MAKES THE VISITOR SAY "THAT'S ME"]
[CTA BUTTON: VERB + BENEFIT]
# PROBLEM SECTION (Bridge to Central Route)
## [STAT]% of [AUDIENCE] [PAINFUL THING].
[2-3 SENTENCES: WHY THIS PROBLEM EXISTS. NAME THE ROOT CAUSE.]
[WHAT HAPPENS IF THEY DON'T SOLVE IT — MAKE IT VIVID.]
# SOLUTION SECTION (Central Route — arguments must survive counterarguing)
## [PRODUCT] [DOES WHAT] [IN A WAY NOBODY ELSE DOES]
[FEATURE 1]: [SPECIFIC BENEFIT WITH NUMBER]
[FEATURE 2]: [SPECIFIC BENEFIT WITH NUMBER]
[FEATURE 3]: [SPECIFIC BENEFIT WITH NUMBER]
# PROOF SECTION (Social Validation + Authority)
[TESTIMONIAL FROM SOMEONE IN THE TARGET AUDIENCE]
[STAT: HOW MANY PEOPLE USE IT / TRUST IT / BUILT WITH IT]
[CREDENTIAL / AWARD / THIRD-PARTY VALIDATION]
# CTA SECTION (Commitment/Consistency — small ask)
## [VERB] [BENEFIT] [TIME FRAME]
[CTA BUTTON: LOW-FRICTION FIRST STEP]
[SUBTEXT: WHAT HAPPENS AFTER THEY CLICK — REDUCE UNCERTAINTY]
# FOOTER (Recency — last thing they remember)
[TAGLINE]
Fill-in-the-Blank
# [STAT ABOUT YOUR PRODUCT'S CORE CAPABILITY — VIVID AND CONCRETE]
[YOUR AUDIENCE]'s biggest [PAIN] is [ROOT CAUSE]. [PRODUCT] [FIXES IT HOW].
[CTA: START / TRY / BUILD / DEPLOY + IN UNDER X MINUTES]
# [EXTERNAL STAT]% of [MARKET] still [DO THE OLD WAY].
[WHY THE OLD WAY FAILS — 2 SENTENCES MAX].
[WHAT THEY LOSE BY WAITING — MAKE IT TANGIBLE].
# [PRODUCT] gives you [BENEFIT 1], [BENEFIT 2], and [BENEFIT 3].
[BENEFIT 1]: [HOW IT WORKS] — [NUMBER THAT PROVES IT].
[BENEFIT 2]: [HOW IT WORKS] — [NUMBER THAT PROVES IT].
[BENEFIT 3]: [HOW IT WORKS] — [NUMBER THAT PROVES IT].
# "[QUOTE FROM REAL USER ABOUT SPECIFIC OUTCOME]" — [NAME], [ROLE]
[X] [AUDIENCE MEMBERS] already [USE/TRUST/DEPLOY] [PRODUCT].
[THIRD-PARTY CREDENTIAL OR PRESS MENTION]
# [VERB] your first [THING] in [TIME]
[CTA BUTTON TEXT]
No credit card. No sales call. [WHAT THEY GET IMMEDIATELY].
# [TAGLINE — 6 WORDS OR LESS]
Checklist:
- Does the hero resolve in under 3 seconds?
- Does the problem section use a real stat?
- Can every feature claim survive "prove it"?
- Is social proof from real users with real names?
- Is the CTA a small first step, not a big commitment?
- Is the last line on the page the stickiest?
3. Email Nurture Sequence (Commitment Ladder)
Principle: Foot-in-the-Door, Commitment/Consistency, Self-Perception Theory
Each email asks for a slightly bigger commitment. The person infers their attitude from their own behavior: "I opened 3 emails from them → I must be interested → I'll try the product."
Template: 5-Email Sequence
EMAIL 1: GIVE (Reciprocity — no ask)
Subject: [SPECIFIC USEFUL THING] for [AUDIENCE]
Body: Here's [FREE RESOURCE]. No strings. [1-2 sentences why you made it].
CTA: None. Just the resource.
EMAIL 2: TEACH (Authority — small ask)
Subject: [STAT]% of [AUDIENCE] get [THING] wrong. Here's why.
Body: [TEACH ONE INSIGHT FROM YOUR DOMAIN EXPERTISE].
CTA: Reply with your biggest [PAIN] — I read every one.
EMAIL 3: PROVE (Social Validation — medium ask)
Subject: How [REAL USER] [ACHIEVED SPECIFIC OUTCOME] with [PRODUCT]
Body: [CASE STUDY: BEFORE STATE → USED PRODUCT → AFTER STATE WITH NUMBERS]
CTA: See how it works → [LINK TO DEMO/VIDEO/WALKTHROUGH]
EMAIL 4: DIFFERENTIATE (Novelty + Vividness — medium ask)
Subject: [PRODUCT] vs. [COMMON ALTERNATIVE] — honest comparison
Body: [SIDE-BY-SIDE COMPARISON WITH SPECIFIC NUMBERS. ACKNOWLEDGE WHERE COMPETITOR WINS.]
CTA: Try [PRODUCT] free → [LINK TO SIGNUP]
EMAIL 5: ASK (Scarcity + Commitment — big ask)
Subject: [TIME-LIMITED OFFER OR EXCLUSIVE ACCESS]
Body: [RECAP THE JOURNEY: you learned X, saw proof, compared options].
[NOW: specific offer with deadline or limited quantity].
CTA: [SPECIFIC ACTION] before [DATE] → [LINK]
Fill-in-the-Blank for Each Email
EMAIL 1:
Subject: The [NOUN] that [AUDIENCE] wish they had [TIME PERIOD] ago
Give: [TEMPLATE / CHECKLIST / TOOL / SNIPPET / GUIDE]
Why: "I built this because [PERSONAL REASON — makes you likeable]"
EMAIL 2:
Subject: [X]% of [AUDIENCE] [COMMON MISTAKE]. Here's the fix.
Teach: [ONE PRINCIPLE — stated simply, with one example]
Ask: "What's your version of this problem? Reply — I read these."
EMAIL 3:
Subject: [USER NAME] went from [BAD STATE] to [GOOD STATE] in [TIME]
Story: Before: [THEIR PAIN]. Then: [WHAT THEY TRIED]. Now: [SPECIFIC OUTCOME].
Ask: "Want to see exactly how? [LINK]"
EMAIL 4:
Subject: [YOUR PRODUCT] vs [THEIR CURRENT TOOL] — I'll be honest
Compare: [YOUR PRODUCT] wins on [X, Y]. [COMPETITOR] wins on [Z]. Here's who should use which.
Ask: "See for yourself — free trial, no card. [LINK]"
EMAIL 5:
Subject: Last chance: [OFFER] expires [DATE]
Recap: "Over the past [X] days, you've seen [WHAT THEY LEARNED]."
Offer: [SPECIFIC DEAL — price, access, feature, bonus]
Deadline: [REAL DATE — never fake scarcity]
Checklist:
- Does Email 1 give real value with zero ask?
- Does each email ask for slightly more than the last?
- Is Email 3's case study a real person with real numbers?
- Does Email 4 honestly acknowledge competitor strengths?
- Is Email 5's scarcity genuine (real deadline, real limit)?
4. Social Media Post (Peripheral Route)
Principle: Salience + Social Validation + Mere Exposure
Social posts are peripheral route. You have 1-2 seconds. Don't argue — signal.
Template: The Stat-Flip
[SURPRISING STAT].
[YOUR CONTRARIAN TAKE IN ONE SENTENCE].
[PROOF IN ONE LINE — NUMBER, SCREENSHOT, OR LINK].
Fill-in-the-Blank
[X]% of [PEOPLE] [DO SOMETHING THAT SEEMS WRONG].
We [DO THE OPPOSITE] and [HERE'S THE RESULT].
[SCREENSHOT / LINK / SPECIFIC NUMBER AS PROOF]
Template: The Build-in-Public
[WHAT YOU JUST BUILT/SHIPPED/FIXED] — [TIME IT TOOK].
[ONE SENTENCE: WHY IT MATTERS TO YOUR AUDIENCE].
[SCREENSHOT OR LINK]
Template: The Social Proof
[USER/CUSTOMER] just [DID SOMETHING WITH YOUR PRODUCT].
[THEIR QUOTE — 1 SENTENCE].
[WHAT THIS MEANS FOR YOUR AUDIENCE — 1 SENTENCE].
Template: The 80/20 Content Post (Educate, Don't Sell)
[THING YOUR AUDIENCE DOESN'T KNOW BUT SHOULD]:
1. [INSIGHT 1]
2. [INSIGHT 2]
3. [INSIGHT 3]
I learned this from [SOURCE — gives you authority without bragging].
Checklist:
- Can someone understand this in under 2 seconds?
- Is there a visual (screenshot, image, video)?
- Does it follow 80/20? (Only 1 in 5 posts should directly promote)
- Would someone share this to look smart/informed? (Social currency)
5. Four Walls Technique (Conversion Copy)
Principle: Commitment/Consistency — get 4 yeses before the ask
Each question is designed so the target audience MUST answer yes. By the time you ask for the action, saying no would be inconsistent with their previous answers.
Template
Do you [BELIEVE THING YOUR AUDIENCE OBVIOUSLY BELIEVES]?
Do you [WANT OUTCOME YOUR AUDIENCE OBVIOUSLY WANTS]?
Do you [HATE PAIN YOUR AUDIENCE OBVIOUSLY HATES]?
Do you [VALUE PRINCIPLE YOUR AUDIENCE OBVIOUSLY VALUES]?
Then [ACTION — SIGN UP / TRY / JOIN / BUILD WITH] [PRODUCT].
Fill-in-the-Blank
Do you [CARE ABOUT / BELIEVE IN] [CORE VALUE]?
Do you want to [DESIRED OUTCOME]?
Are you tired of [SPECIFIC PAIN POINT]?
Do you think [INDUSTRY SHOULD / PEOPLE DESERVE] [BETTER THING]?
[PRODUCT] was built for people who said yes to all four.
[CTA BUTTON]
Example
Do you believe your data should stay on your hardware?
Do you want AI that runs without a cloud bill?
Are you tired of "enterprise pricing" emails from sales teams?
Do you think developers deserve tools that respect their time?
BlackRoad was built for people who said yes to all four.
→ Deploy your first agent
Checklist:
- Would your target audience answer yes to all 4 questions?
- Would a NON-target audience answer no to at least one? (This is targeting)
- Does the CTA feel like a natural consequence of the yeses?
- Are the questions honest, not manipulative? (Each must be genuinely true)
6. Disrupt-Then-Reframe (Confusion Technique)
Principle: Disrupting routine processing prevents counterarguing. The reframe lands cleanly because the brain is busy resolving the disruption.
Template
[TECHNICALLY TRUE BUT CONFUSING STATEMENT].
That's [REFRAME IN PLAIN LANGUAGE].
[COMPARISON THAT MAKES IT OBVIOUS WHY THIS MATTERS].
Fill-in-the-Blank
[BIG NUMBER] [UNUSUAL UNIT OF MEASUREMENT].
That's [SAME NUMBER TRANSLATED TO NORMAL TERMS].
[COMPETITOR / OLD WAY] charges [PRICE] for [FRACTION] of that.
Examples
52 TOPS of neural inference.
That's 52 trillion operations per second.
AWS charges $3.06/hour for half that throughput.
772,327 lines of extracted knowledge.
That's two Google Drives turned into a searchable marketing brain.
Most agencies would charge you $50K for the audit alone.
1,426 documents processed in one session.
That's every PowerPoint, PDF, spreadsheet, and Google Doc across two accounts.
A human intern would need 6 weeks. This took 45 minutes.
Checklist:
- Is the disruption factually true (not misleading)?
- Does the reframe make it immediately clear?
- Does the comparison make the value obvious?
7. Campaign Brief (Full Mad Lib)
Principle: Eight-Element Program Plan + STP + PESO + TPB
Fill this out before ANY campaign. It forces you to make every decision the research says matters.
Fill-in-the-Blank
CAMPAIGN NAME: _______________________________________________
1. SITUATION (SWOT)
Strength we're leveraging: ___________________________________
Weakness we're mitigating: __________________________________
Opportunity we're exploiting: ________________________________
Threat we're adapting to: ____________________________________
2. OBJECTIVE
[WHO: ________________] will [DO WHAT: ________________]
by [WHEN: ________________].
Measurement method: ________________________________________
3. AUDIENCE
Primary segment: ___________________________________________
Their processing style: [ ] Central Route [ ] Peripheral Route
Their attitude function: [ ] Adjustment [ ] Value-expressive [ ] Ego-defensive [ ] Knowledge
Their purchasing goal: [ ] Utilitarian [ ] Self-expression [ ] Identity [ ] Hedonic
TPB bottleneck: [ ] Attitude [ ] Norms [ ] Perceived Control
4. STRATEGY
Key message 1: _____________________________________________
Key message 2: _____________________________________________
Key message 3: _____________________________________________
Positioning statement: [PRODUCT] is the only [CATEGORY] that
[DIFFERENTIATOR] for [AUDIENCE] who [NEED/VALUE].
5. TACTICS
| Tactic | Channel (PESO) | Deadline | Owner |
|--------|---------------|----------|-------|
| | [ ]P [ ]E [ ]S [ ]O | | |
| | [ ]P [ ]E [ ]S [ ]O | | |
| | [ ]P [ ]E [ ]S [ ]O | | |
| | [ ]P [ ]E [ ]S [ ]O | | |
| | [ ]P [ ]E [ ]S [ ]O | | |
6. CALENDAR
Campaign start: ___________ Campaign end: ___________
Midpoint check: ___________ Final report: ___________
7. BUDGET
Staff time: $_________ (target ~70% of total)
Paid media: $_________
Tools/production: $_________
Contingency (10%): $_________
TOTAL: $_________
8. EVALUATION
Awareness metric: _________________ Target: _________
Consideration metric: _____________ Target: _________
Conversion metric: ________________ Target: _________
Advocacy metric: __________________ Target: _________
Checklist:
- Is the objective measurable with a deadline?
- Have you identified the TPB bottleneck?
- Is every tactic tagged to a PESO channel?
- Is the budget objective-task based (not "whatever's left")?
- Are success metrics defined BEFORE launch?
8. Customer Journey Map (Mad Lib)
Principle: Customer Journey Mapping — every touchpoint is an opportunity or a leak
Fill-in-the-Blank
PERSONA: [NAME], [ROLE], [COMPANY SIZE], [TECH LEVEL]
GOAL: [WHAT THEY'RE TRYING TO ACCOMPLISH]
STAGE 1: AWARENESS
How they find us: _________________________________________
What they're thinking: "____________________________________"
What they're feeling: [ ] Curious [ ] Frustrated [ ] Skeptical [ ] Excited
Our touchpoint: ___________________________________________
Friction/pain point: ______________________________________
Action to move them forward: ______________________________
STAGE 2: CONSIDERATION
What they compare us to: __________________________________
What they're thinking: "____________________________________"
What they're feeling: [ ] Interested [ ] Cautious [ ] Overwhelmed [ ] Hopeful
Our touchpoint: ___________________________________________
Friction/pain point: ______________________________________
Action to move them forward: ______________________________
STAGE 3: DECISION
What they need to see: ____________________________________
What they're thinking: "____________________________________"
What they're feeling: [ ] Confident [ ] Anxious [ ] Impatient [ ] Committed
Our touchpoint: ___________________________________________
Friction/pain point: ______________________________________
Action to move them forward: ______________________________
STAGE 4: ONBOARDING
First thing they do: ______________________________________
What they're thinking: "____________________________________"
What they're feeling: [ ] Excited [ ] Lost [ ] Accomplished [ ] Frustrated
Our touchpoint: ___________________________________________
Friction/pain point: ______________________________________
Action to move them forward: ______________________________
STAGE 5: RETENTION
What keeps them coming back: ______________________________
What they're thinking: "____________________________________"
What they're feeling: [ ] Habitual [ ] Loyal [ ] Indifferent [ ] Exploring alternatives
Our touchpoint: ___________________________________________
Friction/pain point: ______________________________________
Action to move them forward: ______________________________
STAGE 6: ADVOCACY
What makes them tell others: ______________________________
What they're thinking: "____________________________________"
What they're feeling: [ ] Proud [ ] Grateful [ ] Part of something [ ] Showing off
Our touchpoint: ___________________________________________
Friction/pain point: ______________________________________
Action to amplify: ________________________________________
Checklist:
- Did you fill this out for ONE specific persona (not "everyone")?
- Is there a real touchpoint at every stage?
- Have you identified the biggest friction point? (Fix that first)
- Does every stage have a specific action to move them forward?
9. Crisis Response (Mad Lib)
Principle: Coombs' SCCT — first response sets the frame
Fill-in-the-Blank: First 30 Minutes
WHAT HAPPENED: ________________________________________________
WHO IS AFFECTED: ______________________________________________
WHAT WE KNOW RIGHT NOW: _______________________________________
WHAT WE DON'T KNOW YET: _______________________________________
IMMEDIATE STATEMENT:
"We are aware of [INCIDENT IN PLAIN LANGUAGE]. [WHAT WE ARE DOING
RIGHT NOW TO PROTECT USERS]. We will provide an update by
[SPECIFIC TIME]. [EMPATHY STATEMENT — 1 SENTENCE]."
CHANNELS TO POST ON: [ ] Website [ ] Twitter [ ] Email [ ] Slack [ ] GitHub
Fill-in-the-Blank: First 24 Hours
RESPONSIBILITY LEVEL: [ ] Rumor [ ] Low [ ] Shared [ ] Primary
IF RUMOR → RESPONSE:
"[THE CLAIM] is not accurate. [THE FACTS — SPECIFIC AND SOURCED].
[WHAT IS ACTUALLY TRUE]."
IF LOW → RESPONSE:
"[WHAT HAPPENED] was caused by [ROOT CAUSE — external/unintended].
[WHAT WE'VE DONE TO FIX IT]. [WHAT WE'RE DOING TO PREVENT IT]."
IF SHARED → RESPONSE:
"[WHAT HAPPENED] involved [OUR PART] and [OTHER FACTORS].
[WHAT WE'RE DOING FOR AFFECTED USERS — SPECIFIC COMPENSATION].
[SYSTEMIC FIX WITH TIMELINE]."
IF PRIMARY → RESPONSE:
"We take full responsibility for [WHAT HAPPENED].
[APOLOGY — GENUINE, NOT CORPORATE].
[COMPENSATION FOR AFFECTED USERS — SPECIFIC].
[ROOT CAUSE ANALYSIS — PUBLISHED].
[SYSTEMIC CHANGES — WITH DATES]."
BOLSTERING (USE WITH ANY LEVEL):
"[BRAND] has [TRACK RECORD — SPECIFIC]. [COMMUNITY CONTRIBUTION].
[PAST RELIABILITY METRIC]. This incident does not reflect [VALUE],
and we are committed to [SPECIFIC ACTION]."
Checklist:
- Is the first statement out within 30 minutes?
- Does it say "we don't know yet" for anything unknown? (Never guess)
- Does it prioritize user safety over brand reputation?
- Is there a specific time for the next update?
- Is the response consistent across all channels?
10. Audience Segment Profile (Mad Lib)
Principle: Psychological Segmentation + ELM + Attitude Functions + TPB
Fill one out per segment. Max 4 segments.
Fill-in-the-Blank
SEGMENT NAME: _________________________________________________
DEMOGRAPHICS
Role: ____________________ Industry: ____________________
Experience level: [ ] Beginner [ ] Intermediate [ ] Expert
Company size: _____________ Location: ____________________
PSYCHOLOGY
Processing style: [ ] Central (thinks deeply) [ ] Peripheral (decides fast)
Involvement level: [ ] High [ ] Low
Attitude function:
[ ] Adjustment (wants ROI, savings, efficiency)
[ ] Value-expressive (wants to live their values)
[ ] Ego-defensive (wants to feel smart/capable/not behind)
[ ] Knowledge (wants to understand how things work)
BEHAVIOR
Purchasing goal: [ ] Utilitarian [ ] Self-expression [ ] Identity [ ] Hedonic
Decision mode:
[ ] Extended problem solving (new to category, researches heavily)
[ ] Brand loyal (committed, needs reinforcement)
[ ] Limited problem solving (familiar, quick decision)
[ ] Habitual (repeat without thinking)
TPB BOTTLENECK
[ ] Attitude — they don't believe [PRODUCT] works
→ Fix: [SPECIFIC EVIDENCE TO SHOW THEM]
[ ] Norms — they don't think people like them use it
→ Fix: [SPECIFIC SOCIAL PROOF TO SHOW THEM]
[ ] Control — they don't think they can do it
→ Fix: [SPECIFIC ENABLER — TUTORIAL, SUPPORT, SIMPLIFICATION]
MESSAGING
They care about: _____________________________________________
They fear: ___________________________________________________
They aspire to: ______________________________________________
One sentence that would make them stop scrolling:
"____________________________________________________________"
One sentence that would make them sign up:
"____________________________________________________________"
CHANNELS (rank 1-4 by where this segment lives)
___ Paid (ads, sponsored)
___ Earned (press, reviews, mentions)
___ Shared (social, community, forums)
___ Owned (your site, email, docs)
Checklist:
- Is this a real segment (not "everyone")?
- Have you identified exactly ONE TPB bottleneck?
- Could you find 100+ real people who match this profile?
- Does the "stop scrolling" sentence use their language, not yours?
11. Pricing Page (Compliance Stack)
Principle: Authority + Scarcity + Social Validation + Anchoring + Commitment/Consistency
Template
# [VALUE STATEMENT — NOT "PRICING"]
[SOCIAL PROOF LINE: X users / companies / developers trust PRODUCT]
| [PLAN 1 NAME] | [PLAN 2 NAME — HIGHLIGHT THIS] | [PLAN 3 NAME] |
|--------------------|-------------------------------|---------------------|
| $[LOW] / [PERIOD] | $[MID] / [PERIOD] | $[HIGH] / [PERIOD] |
| [FEATURE] | Everything in [PLAN 1], plus: | Everything in [PLAN 2], plus: |
| [FEATURE] | [FEATURE] | [FEATURE] |
| [FEATURE] | [FEATURE] | [FEATURE] |
| [CTA: START FREE] | [CTA: MOST POPULAR — HIGHLIGHTED] | [CTA: CONTACT] |
[SCARCITY LINE — only if genuine]:
"[OFFER] available until [DATE]" or "[X] spots remaining in [TIER]"
[AUTHORITY LINE]:
"Built by [CREDENTIAL]. Trusted by [PROOF]."
[RISK REVERSAL]:
"[GUARANTEE — money back / free trial / no card required]"
[FAQ — address the top 3 objections]:
Q: [OBJECTION 1]? A: [HONEST ANSWER]
Q: [OBJECTION 2]? A: [HONEST ANSWER]
Q: [OBJECTION 3]? A: [HONEST ANSWER]
Checklist:
- Is the middle plan highlighted? (Anchoring — people pick the middle)
- Is the social proof number real?
- Is the scarcity genuine? (NEVER fake it)
- Is there a risk reversal? (Reduces perceived behavioral control barrier)
- Do the FAQs address real objections, not softballs?
12. A/B Test Plan (Mad Lib)
Principle: Experimental Method — change ONE variable, measure the effect
Fill-in-the-Blank
TEST NAME: ____________________________________________________
HYPOTHESIS:
If we change [VARIABLE] from [VERSION A] to [VERSION B],
then [METRIC] will [INCREASE/DECREASE] by [TARGET %]
because [PSYCHOLOGICAL PRINCIPLE — name it].
VARIABLE BEING TESTED (pick ONE):
[ ] Headline [ ] CTA text [ ] CTA color
[ ] Image [ ] Subject line [ ] Body copy length
[ ] Layout [ ] Price display [ ] Social proof placement
[ ] Other: ________________
VERSION A (control): __________________________________________
VERSION B (test): _____________________________________________
AUDIENCE: _____________________________________________________
SAMPLE SIZE (minimum per version): ____________________________
DURATION: _____________________________________________________
SUCCESS METRIC: _______________________________________________
CURRENT BASELINE: _____________________________________________
TARGET: _______________________________________________________
DECISION RULE:
If Version B beats A by [X]% with [CONFIDENCE LEVEL]:
→ Ship Version B as new control
→ Next test: _______________________________________________
If no significant difference:
→ [NEXT HYPOTHESIS TO TEST]
Checklist:
- Are you testing exactly ONE variable?
- Are both versions running simultaneously (not sequentially)?
- Is the sample size large enough to be meaningful?
- Is the psychological principle named? (If you can't name why B should win, don't test it)
13. Content Calendar (80/20 Rule)
Principle: 80% educate/inform/entertain, 20% promote. Violate this and engagement drops.
Fill-in-the-Blank: Weekly Plan
WEEK OF: ______________________
MONDAY — EDUCATE
Topic: _____________________________________________________
Format: [ ] Blog [ ] Thread [ ] Video [ ] Infographic
Channel: ___________________________________________________
Hook: "[SURPRISING FACT OR QUESTION]"
TUESDAY — ENTERTAIN
Topic: _____________________________________________________
Format: [ ] Meme [ ] Behind-the-scenes [ ] Story [ ] Pixel art
Channel: ___________________________________________________
Hook: "[RELATABLE MOMENT OR VISUAL]"
WEDNESDAY — EDUCATE
Topic: _____________________________________________________
Format: [ ] How-to [ ] Comparison [ ] Breakdown [ ] Case study
Channel: ___________________________________________________
Hook: "[X]% of [AUDIENCE] don't know [THING]. Here's why it matters."
THURSDAY — PROMOTE (this is your 20%)
Product/feature: ____________________________________________
Offer: _____________________________________________________
CTA: _______________________________________________________
Social proof: _______________________________________________
FRIDAY — ENGAGE
Topic: _____________________________________________________
Format: [ ] Question [ ] Poll [ ] Community highlight [ ] User spotlight
Channel: ___________________________________________________
Hook: "[QUESTION THAT YOUR AUDIENCE HAS AN OPINION ON]"
Checklist:
- Is only 1 out of 5 posts promotional?
- Does every educate post teach something genuinely useful?
- Does the promote post include social proof?
- Would your audience share any of these to look smart?
14. Influencer Vetting (3 Rs)
Principle: Relevance, Reach, Resonance + FTC compliance
Fill-in-the-Blank
INFLUENCER: ___________________________________________________
RELEVANCE
Their niche: ________________________________________________
Overlap with our audience: [ ] High [ ] Medium [ ] Low
Have they covered our category before? [ ] Yes [ ] No
Would our product make sense on their feed? [ ] Yes [ ] No
REACH
Follower count: _____________________________________________
Tier: [ ] Nano (<10K) [ ] Micro (10-100K) [ ] Macro (100K-1M) [ ] Mega (1M+)
Platform: ___________________________________________________
RESONANCE
Average engagement rate: ___________% (reject if <5%)
Sponsored post engagement vs. organic: [ ] Similar [ ] Much lower (red flag)
Comment quality: [ ] Real conversations [ ] Spam/bots (red flag)
VETTING
Recent competitor partnerships (last 6 months)? [ ] Yes (reject) [ ] No
Values align with brand? [ ] Yes [ ] No
Any controversies? [ ] Yes (investigate) [ ] No
DEAL STRUCTURE
Deliverables: _______________________________________________
Compensation: _______________________________________________
FTC disclosure: [ ] #ad in first line [ ] Verbal + written in video
Usage rights: _______________________________________________
MEASUREMENT
Success metric: _____________________________________________
Target: ____________________________________________________
Tracking method: ____________________________________________
Checklist:
- Engagement rate above 5%?
- No competitor partnerships in last 6 months?
- Sponsored posts get similar engagement to organic?
- FTC disclosure is clear and upfront?
- Success metric defined before the partnership starts?
Quick Reference: Which Template for What
| I need to... | Use template # |
|---|---|
| Write a blog headline | 1. Stat-Hook |
| Build a landing page | 2. Landing Page |
| Write an email sequence | 3. Nurture Sequence |
| Post on social media | 4. Social Post |
| Write conversion copy | 5. Four Walls |
| Make a big number land | 6. Disrupt-Then-Reframe |
| Plan a campaign | 7. Campaign Brief |
| Map the customer experience | 8. Journey Map |
| Handle a crisis | 9. Crisis Response |
| Define who we're talking to | 10. Segment Profile |
| Design a pricing page | 11. Pricing Page |
| Plan an experiment | 12. A/B Test |
| Plan a week of content | 13. Content Calendar |
| Vet an influencer | 14. Influencer Vetting |
Fill in the blanks. Run the checklist. Ship it.
BlackRoad OS — Pave Tomorrow.