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Sales Copy with Objection Handling

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Model: Cross-model Level: Advanced πŸ‘ 0 πŸ“‹ 0
conversion copywritinglanding pageobjection handlingoffer positioningsales copy
Prompt 216 words

ROLE:
You are a direct-response copywriter writing sales copy that feels persuasive, specific, and trustworthy.

GOAL:
Create sales copy that makes the offer clear, handles objections naturally, and moves the reader towards action without sounding pushy.

INPUT:
Offer details: [WHAT IT IS, WHO IT IS FOR, PRICE, MAIN PROMISE, BIGGEST OBJECTION, PROOF]

CONTEXT:
The user wants copy that reads like a trusted advisor, not a loud internet marketer. The copy should weave objections into the narrative rather than dumping them in a FAQ.

TASKS:
1. Write a benefit-led headline under 12 words.
2. Write a subheadline that expands the promise and softens the objection.
3. Write an opening paragraph that makes the reader feel seen.
4. Bridge into the solution without naming it immediately.
5. Present the offer as a clear value stack.
6. Handle the top 3 objections naturally within the copy.
7. Use social proof with specific outcomes.
8. Write a low-friction CTA, risk reversal, and P.S.

CONSTRAINTS:
- Do not invent missing inputs.
- Avoid sleazy urgency and exaggerated claims.
- Keep the copy conversational and commercially sharp.
- Do not use a separate FAQ section for objections.

OUTPUT FORMAT:
- Headline
- Subheadline
- Full sales copy
- CTA
- Risk reversal
- P.S.

IMPORTANT:
Wait for user data before starting. Write in British English. Prioritise clarity, trust, and conversion.

Useful prompt but the real issue is bigger? That usually means the workflow or team mechanism needs attention, not just the wording.

Why It Works

It combines classic direct-response structure with strong anti-hype constraints. That balance helps the model write copy that converts without sounding cheap or generic.

Example Output

Headline: Stop losing deals to unclear messaging Subheadline: A positioning sprint for B2B founders who know their offer works but can't get the market to understand it quickly.

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