Transcripts
1. Welcome to the ChatGPT Copywriting Masterclass!: Have you ever stared at a
blank screen for 45 minutes, typing and deleting the same
sentence over and over. And when you finally go
to ChachiBT for help, it spits out some robotic
junk that sounds like it was written by a toaster.
Yeah, I've been there. It's that painful moment
when you're trying to write copy that moves people,
but nothing's coming out. And that's exactly
why I've built this course because
here's the truth. Most people think
that persuasive copy takes years to learn, or you have to be
born with some kind of special gift or worse, suffer through 500 page books
and overpriced trainings. Well, what if I told
you that you could start writing high
converting copy this week, using proven
frameworks and copy and paste AI templates that actually
sound human. Hi, I'm Sumner. And I've personally
written copy that has directly generated millions
of dollars in sales. I've learned from the
greatest copywriters on the planet and condensed their years of learning into simple
systems that work, and I'm giving them to you. This course isn't another
Chachi PT prompt list or a three hour
video of a guy just reading the Wikipedia
page on copywriting, or regurgitating YouTube video. This is hands on, fast
paced and strategic. Inside, you'll
learn how to write sales pages, blog posts, websites, product
descriptions, emails, social media captions, and more. You'll also learn proven
frameworks like Ada and PAS, so you never feel stuck again, how to turn dull features into juicy emotional
benefits that sell, how to unlock Chachi BT's
hidden writing power. With battle tested
prompts and custom GPTs that consistently produce phenomenal professionally
written copy, how to master biopsychology and speak directly to what
people actually want. Build an entire copywriting
portfolio in a day, even if you've never written
a single word of copy ever. And by the end of this course, you won't just know
what good copy looks like. You'll
be able to write anytime, anywhere, and
feel confident doing it. So if you've ever said, I
don't know what to write, I want to earn a good
living as a copywriter, but I don't know where to start. Or I've used ChachiBT already, and the results were terrible. This course was built for you. So enroll now completely
risk free and learn how to write
copy that doesn't just sound good but sells.
2. How to Get the Most Value Out of this Class: Hello, and welcome to the Cha GPT copywriting master class. My name is Sumner Hobart, and I'm so honored
that you're here. You've made a powerful decision because by the end
of this course, you will learn how to craft clear and compelling
world class copy that sells in literally just minutes using the secret
power of ChachiPT. This will dramatically increase sales for your own business, and you high value
freelancing clients, and give you the
confidence to know exactly what to write,
no matter the situation. Are the same
principles, frameworks, and formulas that
have personally generated literally millions
of dollars in sales for my own brands and are used by the top 1% of
copywriters around the world. Now, this course is unique. So before we dive into the meat, let me show you exactly
how to navigate it in order to get the
most value. First, course is made up of
two main sections. The first, we dive into copywriting fundamentals,
principles, formulas, psychology and
audience research, understanding what
copywriting is, good versus bad copy, why it works and what
actually drives human beings. And in the next section,
I'll show you exactly how to take these proven
principles and formulas, strategically apply
them with Chachi PT with student exclusive Chachi
PT prompt engineering. In order for ChachiPT to produce top tier copy nearly instantly. And specifically, I'll
show you how to craft high converting emails,
blog sites, websites, social media captions,
sales pages, product descriptions, and more including your own
copywriting portfolio. So if you're brand
new to copywriting or still consider yourself
more of a beginner, then definitely get started
with the next video. Now, if you consider
yourself more of a pro and you just
want to learn how to apply your learnings
and your skill set with ChachPT and AI, then you can go ahead and
skip to that section. As a student, you
also have access to all custom hat PT
prompts and slides, which you can find in
the resources section associated with the
corresponding video. You also have access to our live Q&A community where you can ask any question that
you have and get a response in 48 hours or less. But the best way to use the Q&A section is if
you do have a question, go ahead and search
for that first because there's a good
chance it's already been answered and then
that way you get an instant answer to your question and
don't have to wait. Also adjust the speed and volume of each video
depending on your preference. Lastly, I've poured
my blood sweat and tears into this program. So if you find any
value whatsoever, which I firmly believe
that you will, I just ask that you would leave a quick and honest
review about the course. Not only will I
immensely appreciate it, but this will help
other students in finding the best
program for them. Again, if you need
anything at all, just let me know in the
Q&A you are minutes away from being able to create
copy that truly converts. So let's get to the first video.
3. Copywriting Simplified: All right, so first,
what is copyrighting? In order to learn about it, we need to actually
understand what it is, because there's a lot
of misconceptions. So if you Google this or go
to Webster's Dictionary, you'll see that copyrighting is the activity or occupation of writing the text of advertisements
or publicity material. Not really a helpful definition, which is often the case when it comes to dictionaries or Google. So here's my own
definition, okay, that I find way more
useful and practical. Copyrighting is using
words both written and spoken to increase traffic,
sales, and profits. Really, at the end of
the day, that's what we're trying to accomplish
with copyrighting. And I'll give you some uses. But there's this
misconception that a lot of people believe that copyrighting are just pretty words, right? If you read a piece of content, like a blog article or a news article or website
copy or whatever it might be. And it sounds really
pretty. It sounds nice. They use vivid language, which we talk about
later in the course, and follows maybe certain
copyrighting principles. But at the end of
the day it doesn't convince our target audience
to ultimately take action, then it's useless, right? It doesn't matter how
pretty something sounds. Yes, it is an important part
that we'll talk about later, but it's much more than that. So copyrighting is not
just pretty words. And to understand copyrighting, you need to understand
these four parts. So you have your
target audience. Target audience
has certain pains and desires that we
need to uncover. Once we understand our audience, the pains and desires they have, the buying stage
that they're in, Then we can finally actually
begin copyrighting. What a lot of people think
and fail in doing is just writing pretty words to a general audience
of what they think. Versus using actual data to guide their copyrighting And
actually have data backed, beautiful sounding copy so we understand our
audience and their pain. Copyrighting acts as the bridge
between them and action. So it can be really any action, but really for the
majority of you, that's going to be sales, right? Whether for your own business, for your client's business. Copyrighting is the bridge. Now in order for
that bridge to work, what is extremely key, this is just as important
as the actual copy, is understanding and
identifying the pains and desires of your
target audience. If you don't understand
your audience, how are you going to be
able to write to them? How are you going to be able
to convince them you can't, no matter how pretty
your copy sounds. And to get you excited, here's just a few examples
actually of copyrighting. So through this course and by improving your
copywriting skills, this is a meta skill
that is going to improve your E mails,
your public speaking, personal conversations
with friends and family, Youtube videos,
websites, blog posts, social media sales,
scripts, sales pages, infographics, product descriptions,
and your entire life. So I hope you're excited. There's a lot that
we're going to dive in. But just to give you
a brief overview and clear understanding
of what copywriting is before we get to it. So without further ado, let's go and get to the next video.
4. How to Know Your Audience Better Than They Do: So as we just covered
in the previous video, understanding your
target audience, or your customers better than they do is mission critical. Because if you don't
understand your audience, how are you going to be
able to relate to them, connect to them, and ultimately
get them to take action? This is the first,
most important step you can think about, the research phase
of copyrighting, or the data collection
side of copyrighting, which by the way, a lot of
people don't talk about. And yet it's just as important
as every other aspect of copyrighting is the same way of ingesting food or surrounding
yourself with good people. Eating good food is
ultimately going to impact you overall. And the same things
with data collection. The better data you put in, the better your
copywriting is going to be and it's going to make
sense as we go through. So let's go ahead and get to it. So how do we read the minds ethically of
our target audience? Like how do we actually
go about and do that tactically in order
to collect data? Number one would
be secondary data. There's two types of data, secondary data and primary data. Without getting
too much into it, because it's very simple. Secondary data is data that has already been
collected by somebody else. Let's say that there's
an archaeologist that digs something up and
makes a report about it. There's a scientist
experimenting a new drug, and they do some tests and write a report on their
tests or their findings. So if you research
these reports, look at these photographs,
things like that. You're consuming
secondary data, right? Someone else collected it and then you're consuming
the secondary of it and one of the
top places to find secondary information,
Google.com Right? Of course, when we have any
question, where do we go? Although that's going to change by the end
of this course. Maybe it'll go to something like Chat GBT or Claude, we'll
get into that later. Number two is primary data, which there are different
forms of primary data. This is where you actually
conduct the research yourself. You're actually, you
know, they're digging up, you know, dinosaur bones. You're actually there, you know, testing and talking to
participants in a lab room or whatever it might
be in this case. For our purposes, survey data is the most powerful form of primary research in our
relation for copywriting. Google Search survey data. Number three, we
have keyword data. So think about different
websites like Youtube, Google to Me, Skillshare,
other platforms. When you're typing in a
keyword into those platforms, you're looking for
something you have a desire that's
not being filled. For example, earlier today I went into Google
Maps and I typed in barber shop near me because I wanted to make
sure I had a great hair cut. For the videos, I had a
desire that wasn't met. I want my hair to get cut
and I need it to get cut, or I feel the need for it. So I turn that desire
into a keyword. So it's a different way
of looking at keywords. And I'll show you how to
actually access keyword data, which is super simple. It's actually a very,
very easy approach, but a lot of Youtube videos
or other content makes it seem really difficult
and complicated or scary. It's powerful, It's fun.
It's really powerful. So yeah, with keyword data, like I said, the user of these different platforms are turning their desire
into a keyword. So we're able to kind of
reverse that ruck, okay. If someone's typing
this into Youtube, for example, let's
say, you know, Youtube searches for like how to get rich online
are increasing. We know that there's
more and more demand. There's more and more
desire of people want to start a business or let's say it's an
Amazon business. Specifically the terms
Amazon FBA are increasing. We can see that desire is
increasing or decreasing. We can see other related topics. So someone's typing
an Amazon FBA. Here's related topics about it. So how to set up
a seller account. How to run Amazon advertising,
whatever that might be. Again, I'm going
into the weeds a little bit to give
you an example, but keywords equal desire. So that's going to
help us understand our audience based on
what they're searching online as the world is becoming more and more of an
online marketplace. And then last and not least, but actually the
most powerful in my opinion, is review analysis. This is really powerful.
So think about it. Number one, there are
reviews everywhere, right? For every store or shop online or in
person that you go to, there's going to be reviews
about that location, that business, somewhere
about those products, about the services
somewhere on the Internet, Amazon reviews, Google reviews, Yelp reviews, all of these
different form of reviews. Now think about who
leaves a review, right? Kind of similar with
what we talked about with keywords. Who
leaves a review? Someone who's either really happy or really upset
about the product. And this goes for all
different reviews. 1,234.5 star. So obviously five star reviews, hey, I love this so much, the world needs
to know about it. Like here's what I really love about this
product or service. Four star reviews are, I really, really liked it, but I wish they would do this one or
two things differently. A lot of times start looking out for four star reviews and
looking for the word butt. I loved XYZ, but da,
da, da, da, Right? So that word but in there. And then 32.1 stories, I was really unhappy with this. Obviously going further down, the more unhappy they are. But that is gold, because review data is free, That's public information,
anyone can access it. And you literally
know the desires and pains of our target audience, which
we'll talk about later. We have an entire
formula to go through. Then you'll know how well you know your kind
of target audience. So it's free information.
Very few people use it and it is
extremely powerful. My wife and I actually
sell products on Amazon and how we're able to develop products
like figure out, hey, what do people want is
we're able to look at Amazon reviews of
our competitors or existing products
and people say, yeah, I like this
about the product, I don't like this so
we write it down. Okay. So 1,000 people
said they like this. You know, 2000 people said
they did not like this XYZ. Then we make sure our product is better based on the data. And ultimately we've
profited from it pretty substantially over the
years and really powerful. So of the four, I would say
this is the most powerful. But utilize all four, even one of these
four is going to give you enough information
to really hone in, to understand your
audience even better than they can and ultimately
impact your results. So I hope you find that valuable already and
get really excited. We're going to dive into
each one of those now, moving forward and talk about the different stages of the
buyer in the next video. So let's go ahead and get to it.
5. Free Template: Buyer Persona: And because you've be
enrolled in this program, you're going to get my personal
buyer persona template for 100% free, which you can access in the resources section of this video. It'll come in the
form of a Google Doc. You can edit it here in
Google Docs or you can download it as a Microsoft
Word document and edit there. Or even print it off, whatever kind of workflow
works best for you. But you're going to get this and basically what the buyer
persona template is, is it's a way to track your market research,
your audience research, whatever you want to call it,
of your target consumers, your target
customers, the people that you want them
to take an action. That's who we're kind
of tracking here. The more that you fill
out this template, the better your
copywriting results are going to be and vice versa. So here you can see the template is divided
into two sections. We have demographics
at the top and psychographics To
keep it simple, demographics are what we can see about our target audience. Psychographics are
what we can't see. They're a bit more invisible. Now in traditional market
research, for the longest time, marketers really focus on
demographics, age, gender, occupation, annual income,
living conditions, relationship status, et cetera. These are some of the most
important questions to ask. Now, demographics
are very important. But what's even more
important, arguably, and obviously they're extremely important together,
is psychographics. It's those elements that aren't so obvious
to the naked eye. Like for example, if someone's
in a relationship we can see that where
someone lives, we can kind of see that, right? And that could be, you
know, they own a home, an apartment, more
rural, suburban. That's what we kind of
mean by living conditions. It's a bit open ended there. Annual income, you know, not that we should
be seeing this, but we could see
their pay check, their occupation, their
gender, their age, et cetera. Right. With psychographics, really important to understand, it is a little bit
more difficult to dig. But this is why I
reference, you know, looking at review analysis
is really powerful for this. But we have hobbies, interests, desires, internal
fears, external fears, pain points and obstacles. What phase they're
in which we're actually going to talk
about here in a second. So for example, what are some of the activities
that somebody engages in, like their hobbies? This kind of goes
along with interests as well. What are
they interested in? This could just be general
topics that you research, they consume on line, but don't necessarily
perform, right. Like someone could be very
interested in basketball, but they don't actually play
much basketball, right? Or they're very interested
in sports teams, right? What are your target
audiences biggest desires? What do they desire
most in life? Whether they're
working to achieve it, whether they haven't
achieved it yet. What are their biggest
desires fears? This is so powerful.
Again, we're not going to use this to manipulate
people, right, unethically. We're using this to understand, to make sure, okay, we have a product and
service that can solve this. Oh, and by the way, if you're going through
this and whether your own product or service or your client's product and
service doesn't meet this. You're like, oh, there's
actually a mismatch. That's something
you're like, okay, you either need to change the product or service before
you do any copyrighting. But you'll basically realize if you keep everything the same, we have our target audience, we have our product or service. It's not going to meet,
right? Because we know their fears and desires. We know what they want, we
know where they live and you know what we're
trying to sell them really doesn't work
for them actually, It's going to result
in error, et cetera. But hopefully, obviously
that's not the case. What I mean here,
because I do get some questions about this
internal versus external fears. It's just as it sounds. What is someone internally afraid of? Like oh, maybe I don't have the skills. I'm not qualified. Anytime someone
says me, you know, I'm afraid for whatever
reason, that's internal. External fears could be. I'm afraid of dogs,
that's an external fear. I'm afraid of heights, right? I'm afraid that the
market is going to crash. That's an external
fear. I'm afraid that I don't have enough money external because
it's not internal. The money isn't inside, the
money is an external source. So it's really important to
kind of differentiate that, that's why I want to have both. And as you can see here, if you go through life
and talk to people, you realize that people
have a lot of fears. And we tend to focus more on our fears than our
interests and desires. That's why I'm really
highlighting this. Fears are so important
to understand. Again, not to use fears. You could use it to
manipulate people. Many people have done that and made lots of money
by doing that. I'm not suggesting that at all, but understanding the
audience is going to help you to connect and
resonate with them better. Which we'll see later and it'll all make sense here
in coming videos. Pain points and
obstacles. What pain? Not necessarily a fear, but just the pain that
someone is going through. Either they bought a
product or, you know, they've tried to
work with a bunch of marketing agencies in the past and they've all got
terrible results. So they just have this pain
of like I keep, you know, or they've invested in
their own business multiple times and failed or, you
know, whatever it might be. They don't have enough
time with their spouse. It's literally infinite
what it could be. But what pain points are people going through
in their lives? You know, what obstacles
are they running into which are kind of
ca, joined together. And then lastly,
which we're going to cover in the next video, is what phase is your
target audience in? Because the phase
that they're in is going to dictate the type of copy and your overall goal with your copywriting with them. So are they cold, warm, or hot? So anyway, it'll make more
sense as we go through. And some of this is
pretty intuitive. But like I said, the more
that you fill this out, the more valuable and effective your copywriting is going
to be exponentially. And most copywriters
don't do this. They don't go through this
important step again. They just write pretty words. Words that they
think their audience wants to hear what they
think their fears are. But not actually looking at data and research
to figure that out. So this is literally going
to give you such an edge. As an entrepreneur,
I've had to do this with the own products and
services that I sell. And if I don't succeed,
I don't make any money. So it's very clear whether
I'm successful or not. So I know where you get more corporate or get into academia. You can kind of
get away with not knowing or just
writing pretty words. But I've had to write words
that have effect that have generated millions of dollars in sales using this
exact framework. So it works again, fill it out to the
best of your ability. It's there for you for free. Just because it's free, don't, you know, take it for granted. It is powerful and I could
be charging for this, but of course I
want to help you as much as possible so
you can access that. And like I said, next video
we're going to talk about the different buyer phases
of your target consumer. So without further ado, let's
go ahead and get to it.
6. 3 Stages of Buyers: Think about the best product you've ever purchased
that was amazing. Maybe you've even told
some friends or family. But let's say you were in the street and you
randomly went up to some stranger and tried to
sell them on this product. Obviously you believe in it, it's a great quality
product, right? But you try to sell
to them, what's the result they're not going to buy from you
or extremely rare. Right? And why is that? That's because everyone's in a different buying phase, right? Or a kind of a different buying mode is a way to think about it. And there are three main phases when it comes to a
purchase decision. First, we have the
cold audience, right? These people are unaware of the problem that
they have, right? So, for example, let's say
that there's someone who is, you know, getting thin
hair, breaking hair, right? Low energy, you know, nails are breaking, right? They're, they have a problem, but they're unaware of
what that problem is. Warm audiences, they might be aware of their problem maybe, but they're unaware
of your brand. And then a hot audience is someone who's aware of
both of the problem, and they're aware of your brand. They've heard about you, they've seen you before, maybe they even bought
from you before. But these are the
three main categories. And there's a little bit of
overlap between the three. But it's more of a
frame of mind to have when writing.
So think about it. If someone's bought from you before versus someone who's
never heard about your brand, they don't even know
they have a problem. Let's say they have a
magnesium deficiency, but they don't even know
that they have one. You're going to write to
them very differently, aren't you? Of course you are. So it's extremely
important to know what phase your audience
is in and then that's going to ultimately help convince them with your copy. All right,
what do we do? We kind of have a general
idea of where audience is, but then what do we write
or how do we write to them? With cold audience,
your main objective in general should be making
them aware of your brand. For warm audience, you want to get people interested
in your brand. It's like first is, hey, our brand exists very, very low. Kind of like selling. Maybe just even people see
your logo, your business. Very short blurb about it. Just kind of making
people aware, warm is you want to get
this group who's now aware of the problem that they have
interested in your brand. Your brand, your service or product can solve that problem. So you want to kind
of generate interest. So awareness is number one. Phase number two is interest. Phase number three is
convincing, right? So let's say someone is on Amazon looking through
different products. You want to convince
that person is on Amazon that your product is better
than all of the other ones, okay, so that's kind of the three main phases and
how to treat each phase now. Okay, we kind of get to how
does this work in real life. So let's give a real life
example of how this can work. So let's say that you're copyrighting for a
magnesium brand. So they sell, you know, high quality magnesium
supplements. They're the best in
the world. And then let's think about three
different platforms. You see here we have
Facebook, Google, and Amazon. So who's on Facebook, right? Are people going to
Facebook to buy something? Are they even looking to
research information? Not necessarily.
Right? Maybe sharing some photos or life
experience that they have. Checking in with
friends or family, wishing people happy birthday, giving their political opinions, whatever it might be, Right?
More content focused. But people on Facebook
in general are not searching for problems that
they have or products, right? They're not there to buy largely people that are on Facebook. This is a cold audience
on Google, right? Why somebody on Google
typing into Google? They're searching for a problem. I've identified that my
hair looks like crap. I need to get a
haircut. What do I do? I go on Google search for
a barber or you know, I'm wondering why do
I have, you know, breaking hair and breaking
nails, Why do I have it? And I'm looking for
information that leads me again to cut
magnesium deficiency. I dive more in, what is
magnesium deficiency? How do I know, what
can I do to treat it? I'm doing this all on Google. Now, I've realized I have
a magnesium deficiency. So I went from, let's
say Facebook to Google, and then Google to Amazon. And on Amazon I'm looking for magnesium because I
know I have a problem, and I need to find the best brand that's
going to help me. Okay, so that's a real
world example of how from Facebook ads to maybe blog content
on Google to Amazon. Where like with
Facebook, this could be a friend or family
member commenting. Hey, I saw you just
said you were kind of struggling with this issue. You might have a
magnesium deficiency. So that person went
from Facebook. Or maybe they saw a video that your brand
created that said, take this quiz to see if you
have magnesium deficiency. Yeah, thin hair, breaking nails, maybe you have a
magnesium deficiency. Take this quiz, take this
test. Read this article. They go from Facebook and it has your company's
branding very lightly, making them aware of your brand. It takes them from Facebook and then goes to Google, right? Maybe a blog article
on your website. Then they're on your blog
article reading through. And at the end you have
an Amazon affiliate link. They click on that
link to your brand. At the very end of the article, it takes them to Amazon
for you to purchase. So you see how you
kind of took them from Facebook to Google,
Google to Amazon. Now, these aren't the
only three platforms, but Facebook is the largest social media platform overall. When you combine Facebook and Instagram and Whatsapp together, which are all owned by Meta, Google is the largest
search engine in the world, and Amazon is the largest
e commerce marketplace. So that's why I use
them for this example. But there's obviously more
kind of search engines and marketplaces and
social media platforms. This is just a real world
example of how this can work. And by the way, we
track, we saw Amazon. We track our results,
and we can see people coming from Facebook to
Google, Google to Amazon. Sometimes it's from Facebook, people go directly to Amazon. But overall, this is the funnel, this is the process
from someone. Again, we go back a few not even aware of your brand or the
problem that they have, then kind of generating
some interest and intrigue in your brand. And then ultimately,
you know, looking at different options and then
your goal is to convince them. So this is kind of the framework to have and just kind
of keep this in mind. So when you create Facebook ads, remember what you're
kind of creating for Google content,
blog content, Google ads, and Amazon,
You know, bullet points, description, advertising, all of that kind of have
a better framework. Okay, now I know the purpose of each and kind of
how to write to each. And then also just a caveat, Keep in mind, right, your hot audience could be
on Facebook, for example. Someone who's already
purchased from you before could be
on Facebook, right? They're not in buying
mode, but they're hot. So they're hot on maybe
a more cold platform. So just kind of
keep that in mind. So let's say, you know,
someone was on your website, they were about to check out, they abandoned their car,
you know, they left. And at some point, you know, in the past few days,
they went to Facebook. You can send them
a retargeting ad. Obviously, you wouldn't
treat that the same. They're a hot audience
on a cold platform. Okay, so again, this is just kind of think about
the individual, not as much about the
platform, if that makes sense. Where is the individual in the buying process with
your specific brand? And then your copy is
going to kind of change and we'll give you some
specific formulas and frameworks that you can plug and play exactly kind of what
to do in each situation. So yeah, hope you find this valuable and are excited
to move forward. We've got so much more to cover and really, really
excited for you. So without further ado, let's
go ahead and get to it.
7. Introduction to ChatGPT: This video, you're
going to learn what HajiBT is, how it works, why it is the greatest
copywriting tool known to mankind currently, and how to properly
use and set it up. So if you're already
a huge Chachi BT officianato and feel
like you have a very, very good handle on Haji BT, you can skip through
this video to where I talk about
personalization and kind of customization or just skip to the
next video as well. If you're a bit newer,
I would encourage you to watch, and
we'll get through it. So first things first
is you'll want to sign up for a free
HAGBT account. They have both a
free version and actually a couple
paid version options. What I would recommend
doing is just get started with a free version, start using it, and then later
on, or if you're already, offering professional
copywriting services, I would recommend for
at least one month, pay for the pro plan, which is currently
about $25 a month. Use it. Compare the difference between the free version
and the paid version. And if the paid
version is better, which I have found and
attest to it absolutely is, then kind of continue and
see if it's worth it there. But you can get started
with the free version and do everything
in this course, create phenomenal copy
literally for free in minutes. So to sign up, just
go to chatchbt.com, if you can see kind of
in the top left here, click on SignUp for free,
and then from here, enter your email address and then just walk through
kind of the process. Now, of course, I already have
an account that I've been using avidly for years. And once you sign up, your account will look
something like this. They're constantly
changing and evolving. This is a new ish tool. So with that in mind, things won't maybe
look identical, but I'm going to constantly
be updating videos, both the prompts,
tutorial videos as time goes on to make sure everything's 100% up to date. And, of course, if you
have any questions, just let me know, and I'm
more than happy to help. So, what exactly is ChachP? How does this work? ChachiPT is the largest language model AI kind of deep neural net
that we currently have. Meaning, and this is a
really key piece that a lot of people don't know that I didn't know for
the longest time. But currently, and this
continues to increase, is that ChachBT gathers
data in two ways. Number one is they
have what's called their database or their
Knowledge Center. It's all the data that
they already have kind of archived inside of their deep
neural net that they know, you can access at
any given time. So just historic
data they have from all different kinds of
sources all compiled within, they just kind of
readily go and extract that information
and use to write, copy or whatever, you know,
your functionality is. Number two, is they can
live search the web. So you can ask hachBT to
search for, like, you know, as a realistic
example, you know, the best restaurants in my area that offer gluten options. Boom, kind of like a Google
search engine, right? I'll search. And then instead of giving
you websites to read through, it'll just give you the
answer directly there. That's kind of the key to keep
in mind because this will play into our later prompting is ChachV can pull Live from the web or historically
in its knowledge base. And for reference, many of these AI writing tools use
OpenAI's database, right? Open AI is the company that
created HCBT and SRA and, you know, these different
kind of platforms. So, you know, Open AI
is the big company. Kind of like Alphabet
owns Google and YouTube. You know, OpenAI owns HHIBT
and SRA and, you know, all these other tools Atlas and all the tools are coming out with that they'll discontinue, you know, as it
grows and evolves. But a lot of these other
AI writing tools use ChaBT's database and knowledge with different
kind of prompting. So you're basically
paying a premium for these tools where you can
just use ChachBT, right? So that's another
kind of really key point when it comes
to copywriting. And lastly, kind of
cool little tidbit is that if you were to take all the knowledge that ChachiPT has, write it in 12 point times du Roman font on
pieces of paper, you'd take all the pages, and they would go
from the surface of the ocean all the way down far past the
Titanic for miles. There is a ton of data here, and that's why we're using
ChachiBT because it uses, and we can use it correctly. If you're just going
in ChachiB trying to use it for writing, your writing
is going to be terrible. The copyright is
going to be awful. It's using the tactics and the prompting and
the customization, everything that
we cover here now and as it evolves in the future. To make sure that we craft
the best professional, polished, high converting
copy humanly possible. So that being said,
we've signed up. This will look
similar for a free and a pro kind of paid account. You can either use the
kind of general bar here, which is where we'll be
spending a lot of our time. You can ask anything
here in the bar, like, what are the top
XYZ in my area or, you know, whatever that
might be, anything. You can just type in there
just like with Google. Here, you can actually enable to actually speak and I
found that very valuable. You can do this and get
the app on your phone, which connects as well as
on Desktop. Either one. Click this button right
here and actually record and speak and
it'll transcribe. So another little hack
is one thing I've done, and this is relevant
for the future is, let's say that I
want to analyze or I want to improve upon
a YouTube video script. I can play a YouTube
video and, you know, hit this button
and have it record and transcribe and then,
you know, add to that. Like, Hey, like,
you know, analyze use the tone in this
video for my copy. Boom, hit the record button,
hold it up to the video. It plays, and then I
can kind of use that. So it's a little kind side note, little hack that I want
to share with you. So you can, you know, speak, you can type, whichever
is best for you. And it depends on what
I'm doing. I do both. And you can also upload
different things. So you can actually
attach, you know, CSV files, text files,
photos and images, PDFs, all kinds of
files, like, Hey, analyze these or read the reviews here or
whatever it might be. You can have analyzed
text and data, which is super super valuable, which we can talk about later. You can also include links, and that's really what we
want to focus on here. There's other things too that are kind of coming
and going that aren't that I haven't found to be super,
super substantial. And if they do, like these here, like creating
an image, right, we're focused on
copywriting, not as much, creating YouTube thumbnails
or shopping, right? We're not doing a
lot of shopping. That's not the purpose
of this course. So that's why I'm
going to focus on what's most important
for copywriting. And that's really
kind of how it works and where we're going to
be spending our time. And it'll make sense
once we actually get into the meat of the course. I'm going to show you exactly
how to use this in detail. But it's kind of
similar to Google. That's the best way I
can kind of describe it. Very simple, very user friendly, and it's all kind of right here, right? And the sky is the limit. Now, with that being said, that's kind of just the
overview of ChachiBT and all the different AI
tools that I've used, like Google, you know, Gemini
or nthropic by Claude, or all these other
ones that I've used. ChachiBT has produced the
highest quality results, and for some of
these other tools, it's even cheaper, right? So that's what I'm always
looking for is efficient. You know, I can do so much with HachiPT so it goes
beyond just copywriting, and that's why
we're focusing on. And in the next video,
I'm going to show you how to customize and personalize your ChahBT account for the best results possible.
So let's get to it.
8. Do This For Best ChatGPT Results (Settings & Customization): Now that you have your
ChaiBT account set up, I'm going to show you
how to customize and personalize it for best results. So what we're going to
do is scroll down to the bottom left to where you
see the setting section. Click on Mt. Click
on personalization. And now here, you can
actually customize Chachi BT for your specific
liking, which is really cool. And things have changed and evolved from the
last video I made, so this is actually
replacing that video. First of all, what kind
of tone do you want? If you're not really sure you're brand new, just choose default. For me, I like professional. Like, basically, how do you want Chachi BT to
interact with you? Do you want it to be
nerdy, efficient, quirky, candid, friendly? If you're not really
sure, click it, test it. If you don't like it, change it. It's that simple. I
like professional. For custom instructions for
now, leave those blank. The reason for that
is because you can put something in
here and it kind of constantly changes
ChachiPT every time you interact with it. So sometimes it
can be beneficial, but sometimes it can hurt you, because it's the same
thing every time. What I recommend
doing is start using Chachi PT in the way that we
cover here in the course. If there's anything that really
bugs you about Kachi BT, you're like it keeps doing XYZ, like it keeps using these ridiculously
long dash marks or overly uses
commas or whatever. I'm just making it up or uses certain types of language.
I'm so sick of it. Then say, Hey, stop doing this or hey,
stick to this, right? You can literally just say
whatever it's on your mind, just type it in here into
the custom instructions and then see the results change. But just keep that in mind that it needs to be a
continual thing that you see Chachi PT not doing well or that you want Chachi PT
to continue doing well, then you want to
enter that in here. But for me, honestly,
I just leave it blank, keep it simple because it also can influence your results. So about me, I can
have a nickname. Let's say it's S, right? We don't need to include
this information. If you want to give
TachPT, that's fine. I would leave that blank. I actually don't
think you should. Now, this is also important. For reference saved memories,
reference chat history, and reference record history, I recommend checking all of these to toggle them
into the on position, which is currently
like this blue, okay? And the reason for that is to enable Chachi BT to
recollect information, basically to remember, right? Otherwise, Chachi P is
going to have dementia. Literally. I mean, they're not going
to be able to remember, you know, not to be
crude or whatever. So leave these on. That's going to be
very helpful because Part of copywriting
is, you know, analyzing information, understanding our
target audience well, and then writing to them, speaking to their souls. And that's going to
help with this. You can click here on Advanced as well. And yeah, I leave
this unchecked. But go ahead and check all of these except for separate mode, and we're essentially enabling ChachiBT to access all
of its functionality, including searching the web, analyzing and writing code, which can be
beneficial even when we're kind of analyzing
different data sources, connector search to search connected kind of data sources. So in general, just leave
all of these on to give Chachi BT the full capability to ultimately get us
the best results. And also in the general section, small but still helpful. You can change your
appearance if you want more light or dark, which is what I prefer, your accent color, wherever
your favorite color is. Just a small little
thing that helps as we're using it, and
the other ones here. Also, I would go ahead
and check to show additional models just
generally to have access to all the toys in the Chachi PT playground that we can have to ultimately get the
best results for us. Of course, if you
have any questions, let me know in the Q&A, and let's go ahead and get
to the next video.
9. Let AI Analyze HUNDREDS of Reviews in Just Minutes! (Part 1): In this video, I'm going
to show you how to use chat PT to analyze hundreds of reviews in order to help you to really understand
your target audience. And this can be done
extremely quickly and bring about insights that even a human being
wouldn't be able to. This is extremely powerful, one of my favorite
applications with artificial intelligence and
particularly with chat PT. I'm going to show you a
couple ways of doing this. There's kind of like
a few different roads to get to the same outcome, but I'll show you
kind of the most efficient first and then
touch on the other two. So first of all, right, there are
reviews everywhere. Amazon reviews, Best Buy, Google, Facebook,
Yelp, trip Advisor, Glass door for almost anything, even for movies with
MBD or Rotten Tomatoes. So there are reviews for
just about everything. And reviews are basically
left by people who are expressing what they love and what they hate
or really dislike. Pain points and desires for particular
products and services. So I'll show you one example and show you how to
apply it to anything. But this works for all
different review sites, although it may be
slightly different for each depending
on the actual site. For this example we're
going to just look at, let's say we want to analyze, we want to understand the
audience of people who go to car washes
right in the Midwest. We can do the same process for a few different car washes. But let's start with
Mike's car wash here. Okay? We have 698
reviews to work with. Now, this process
works really well for any product or
service on any platform, Amazon, or Google, or
Facebook, or wherever. The key here is that
you want to have at least 100 reviews minimum, ideally 1,000 is what
you want to analyze. Minimum of 100 to have some
statistical significance, otherwise you're
just collecting data that's only true for
a very few people. Then number two is
you want to collect reviews that have some
negative sentiment. Meaning if you're
analyzing a set of data that has 4.9
average star rating, you're not going to
get a lot of good data in terms of the pain
points of your audience, but you might understand
that company really well. So you want to mix, like looking at 4.7 even as
good, 4.4 is great. 4.3 because the lower the review rating
means, the more pain. Just something to keep in mind. But the key here is the
quantity of reviews. And again, this
works for anything. I just chose this
random example. So let's start with Mike's
car wash. We're going to go, I'm here in Maps.google.com
You can go to any area, so you can choose some different cities in the United States, for example, or wherever
country you're in, type in a certain
type of business, maybe that's financial
planners, marketing agencies, restaurants, car washes,
mechanics, whatever it might be. You'll type that in
and then just find some options with a high number of reviews and mix rating. Click on Mike's Car Wash here. Next what I'm going to do
is whatever website I'm on, I'm going to try to
find the Reviews tab. Click on Reviews, right?
And then this is great. Now what you want to do, if you want to really take
this to the full level, is anytime you see
something's truncated, which means it's
not fully there, you need to click
on more, right? And that's going to enable our AI to analyze
everything fully. Otherwise it's only going
to be able to kind of analyze that top
portion sometimes. So that can vary.
So I just kind of quickly scroll through
any time I see more, I just kind of open those up. Right? And if you don't want to take your time, that's fine. Because if you're moving
in terms of volume, if you're analyzing
like a ton of different locations,
don't waste your time. But if you're really
honing on one location and it's
really important, then go through and
do that, right? So we'll do that for
several, although many, we don't have to do
that. That's fantastic. One star review, fantastic.
We want kind of that mix. All right, so anyway, and it's good to kind
of keep scrolling down because then more reviews
kind of load on the page. And just do this
again to where we have around 100 or so reviews. So just kind of
scroll down, right? And then you see
that moral loading. And this kind of
enables us for the AI to kind of pick up on all of
that and I'll show you why. Okay, so we've done that. Now what I'm going to do is I'm going to copy the full URL. So go to your kind
of search bar. You can't really
see it because it's kind of blanked out
here on the screen. And command seeds to copy. You're copying
everything there in the URL and I'll show
you where I pasted it. Then we're going
to go to Chachi Pt select Chachi pet four. And we want to make sure we have our plug in select
plug ins, which we have. Then in plug ins you want to make sure that you
have the scraper tool, and I already showed
you in a previous video how to actually use the
plug in store and find it. Any scraper tool, this is
the one that I prefer. It's called scraper, so
we're going to select that, then we're going to
make our request. Okay, so going back
to our buyer persona, where I think about realistically what are some
information that we can gather and what you can do is even just copy and paste,
you know, all of this. So let me just go here. It's not letting me do that now, for whatever reason,
there we go. Okay, if BD can't answer, it's just going
to tell you that. But hopefully can uncover
a lot of these insights. Here's how I like to word it. Hello, Market Research Expert. I have a mission for you today. Please analyze all reviews, and by the way, I'm going to have lots
of grammatical errors. I know this is a copyrighting
course, it doesn't matter. I just go through quick and I always have
grammatical errors. And it doesn't matter
because ChachBT picks up on that, which
is really amazing. Please analyze all
Google reviews for this. This business give me
a detailed summary of import and non obvious insights that you gain from the reviews. Anytime there's
something important, I like to put it in all camps. And yes, that does actually help AI understand a little bit more. Also answer every single one
of these questions about our target audience
in as much detail and to the best of your ability
based on the review data. Lastly, tell me the total number of reviews you analyzed. Go. All right, so here again, we're going to go back to our Maps.google.com command
C to copy the URL. We're going to paste
it right here. You can see right here, this is what it should look like if you're using Google Maps, okay. And then questions
to answer, answer. Go back to our questions again. Some of these realistically
chat is not going to be able to
answer because it's not really coming
out in reviews. But we're going to
see how many that it can answer command via to paste and hit Enter.
This is really cool. So let's see how
quickly chat starts, analyzing these reviews and
sees what it comes up with. When you're using a plug in, you should see the plug
in pop up here, so using Scraper and then with
this time that's going on, chat is using the scraper plug in to analyze these reviews, which should just take a second. And then it should
start generating, usually not too long there, links or the more data you give chat of course, the longer
it's going to take. If you're asking to analyze
like a bunch of links, it's going to take
a very long time. Generally, the maximum
number of links that I asked to analyze are about
five, sometimes seven. But when you give an AI to a little bit too much
data, at least currently, it breaks the system and it
Mrs. some of those links, so usually a maximum of
five links at a time, but ideally one you kind
of do one at a time. Or if you want to
kind of analyze multiple things at
once, you up to five. So I could include
five links here. I just did one. This is amazing. Okay. How many reviews analyze 698 reviews? That's amazing. Average review rate is 4.4 And
what I like to do is I ask acht these questions as a sort of attention
check question like, okay, are you actually
accurate, Right? We want to make sure
our data is accurate. So 698 reviews, right? Look at that, Mike's
car wash 698. So I guess we actually
didn't have to go down here, which
is really nice. You don't have to go down here and do what I did of, you know, scrolling through, letting it load actually used
to have to do that. So that's, it's
interesting that that's a pretty recent update,
so that's great. You don't have to do all that. You can just, you know, go to whatever Carriage
House Car Wash, Click on Reviews, copy and paste the link,
and go over there. And that's it. So it
makes it even faster. So that's great. 4.4
we go back again. Going back to Mike's carwash. 4.4 So so far the data is accurate that it's
pulling common themes, really cool vacuum issues. Multiple reviews mentioned dissatisfaction with
a vacuum service. So if you are copywriting
for your own car wash, hopefully write your vacuums
work. But that's at point A. We know this is a pain point
of our target audience, so we're really going
to hone in on that. Don't waste your money.
Vacuums that suck. Parentheses literally
come to our car. Wash, blah, blah, blah, right? That's terrible copy. I'm
just like spit balling. Okay? Drying concerns. The drying process is not
effective. It leaves them wet. Again, that's amazing
for us to know our audience and then to write directly to their pain points. Advertised weekly, monthly, customers have
commented on prices. That's not really helpful.
I would ask what it said. Businesses have been
advertising weekly, some customers have
commented on prices. I'm like, okay, that's useless. What have they commented?
Are they happy? Are they not happy or are they happy with
some and not others? Mixed experience with
staff, not really helpful. It's mixed satisfied with
the wash. Generally, customers are happy
with the wash. Yeah, it's 4.4 So yeah, age reviews do not specify
information on the age, right? Pretty standard gender,
not explicitly mentioned. What I would ask is look
at the first names, the first and last
names of people leaving reviews and use that to. And actually I'll
ask that right now, analyze all of the
first and last names of each reviewer to the
best of your ability. Tell me what percent are male and what
percent are female. Right, for gender question, if that's something that
you're looking for. So I'm going to go
ahead and hit Enter. What's really cool
with chats is that you have your base and you can work on that and you
can go back to it. Into the chats here
on the left hand side at any point, which
is really powerful. Okay. And it's telling me
like, okay, there we go. So it's telling me that now. Okay, look, total, it
analyzed 45678 reviews. Okay. Please analyze all
600 plus reviews. And then, so this is why I'm telling you GPT or AI
doesn't do everything. It's a good helper but
look what it just did. It just analyzed 645688 reviews and then told me the gender. I'm like, that's so little,
we need at least 100. So please analyze
all 600 reviews first and last names and then tell me what percent
are female versus male. To the best of your ability, go PS, don't list
every single name. Just analyze and give me the accurate
percentage breakdown. Okay. Anyway, I was
going to have that running while I was talking
about everything else. There we go. Now it's
using the scraper tool. Again, anytime that shows up, we know the tool is being used and hopefully it
gives us some info. But I'm going to scroll
back up here as it goes. All right, so
what do we have? We had gender, occupation. Understood. You know, no
specific occupations. Sometimes they are depending
on the reviews of course, annual income,
living conditions, relationship status, you
know, it's understandable. Now, what's interesting
about relationship status, it depends on the
product or service. Sometimes people say, you know, I bought this for my wife, my husband for my son. So it's really kind of
cool seeing some of that. And a lot of times Chip
will pick that up. But for these other ones, right, you have to think
about the reviews. Are people giving
this information? Reviews, if not in general, it's not going to be the case, but it kind of depends, but
it's worth asking, right? Worst that can say is, I don't have the data.
No hobbies, Yeah. What are customers
interested in, obviously? Car maintenance, efficiency and value for the money.
That's interesting. So we assume, oh, they're interested in keeping
their car clean, but they're interested
in obviously keeping their car clean or car
maintenance, but also efficiency. Speed and value for the money. Hmm, right? So they're going to
mike specifically for value and the speed. So do we offer speed
and value, right? That somebody kind
of think about for our, you know, services. So desire, what do they desire? They desire efficient service, effective drawing and value
for the money, right? So a little bit repeated there. No specific fears internally. Of course, I was so afraid and then I came
in blah, blah, blah. But again, certain
reviews will actually tell that external fears, there's concerns about
the effectiveness of the drying process and
dissatisfaction with vacuum. Really there's more pain points. But anyway, we can
dive into that. More pain points and obstacles. Inconsistent service, ineffective
drying, vacuum issues. Okay, we kind of already know
that mix of warm and hot. Now at this point, you know these people
leaving the reviews are a hot audience like
they are problem aware. They know they need
to clean their car, they know where to
go, they went to it. This is a hot audience, but we just included
that in there just to see what PT would come up with. Overall, this is good and
it gives us a conclusion. So Mike's car wash revealed a generally satisfied customer with concerns about
vacuum drying. There's noticeable interest
in value for money, right? And what's really cool
is this is just one, you know, service
that we analyzed. We could analyze 10100 more. You see how quickly we
can analyze as well. So we could include,
you know, let's say five links at a time. So analyze these five links,
then go to another five. Analyze these five,
go to another five, and before you know it, we have a huge data pool that
is extremely insightful. And then I can go
and say, hey chat BT I know you've analyzed, you know, these
businesses separately. Take your full analysis
together and give me a summary conclusion
answering these questions. And it'll update and say, okay, here's like the biggest pain,
the desires, all of that. And as we can see,
there's actually a glitch with the
scraper plug in. There's only able to access the first eight reviews,
which sometimes happens. You'll find certain
web pages will have certain restrictions
or if the data you're trying to scrape exists on multiple web pages that you have to manually refresh
and open separately, then scraper doesn't
work as well. But I recommend your
first phase using the scraper plug in because
it's the easiest and if it goes through it's the
best, it's the fastest. But in this case, because it didn't really work, we were not able to
pull all the reviews. We move on to method
number two of three, which is trusted and tried. It's the manual method
where we are going to go back to our reviews
which are here. And we're going
to scroll down to where about like 50 review. I found that you can only upload about 50 reviews
at one time into chat GBT without
overwhelming the system. So we'll go ahead and copy and paste in 50 reviews at a time. So I'm going to go start here, which I think is
around the 50 mark. We're going to scroll
all the way up. And we're basically
just going to copy all of this manually. And I know this isn't ideal, but it works and this is the default if nothing else
works using this method. Going back here to chat BT to the same chat we're
going to ask. Please analyze this
set of Google reviews. And answer the
following questions, and I just pasted them all here. One reviews. How many total reviews
did you analyze? What is the first name of the person who wrote
the last review? The reason I'm doing
this is it's always a good idea to ask specific questions or
attention check questions. We want to make
sure that the data that we're getting is accurate. So like I said, rather using the scraper
method, the manual method, or the next method I share, it's always important
to ask these questions like who is the first name
of the second review? Because if you get the
wrong answer right, then the data is incorrect. It's probably not
good to go off of, but if they give you
the right number of reviews that are analyzed, they're able to answer
these questions. It shows that they are
accurately able to go through. So just to make sure there's no glitches or
anything like that. Always important to do
that like nobody covers, but I've done it
many, many times and yeah, very important. So again, we could copy and
paste in our questions. Something else I'd like to do
instead of just copying and pasting is just
ask very specific, what are the biggest
pain points in order? What do customers like most about the product
service In order? In order of frequency? Any other non obvious insights to me to understand
this audience? Again, what percent of reviewers are male and
what percent are female? Analyze the first
name of each review and assign gender to the
best of your ability. Because again, the idea here
is just to know overall, is it majority male or female? Along with all of these
other questions that help understand our
target audience, right? Ignore names that aren't
obviously male or female, and then you can ask
any other questions. But I think this is
sufficient pain points, what they enjoy. Other
interesting insights. Gender, this is the
main information I generally try to
get from reviews. But you can just
copy and pasting the buyer persona in case there's that other data
nested within the reviews. It'll also pull that information.
This is good enough. Let's go ahead and hit Enter, and we are going to go,
it wasn't too much. So how many total reviews? 60 reviews in total. What was the first name of the person who wrote
the last review? Let's go check Patrick. Good. So that's a great
attention check so far. You can go and
check the number of reviews as well to double check, but it was right around
60, so that's perfect. The data is accurate.
It's working super well. This is great. What are the biggest pain point? Several reviewers
mentioned spots missed, insect debris left and
unclean rims, drying issues, complaints about the cars being wet or having soap residue after the wash. Pricing
concerns over price, especially for the
quality of service. Problems with the vacuum
service, similar to before. But now instead of just
analyzing the first eight, we have 60 that we're reviewing. Okay, then we can and get
the next 50 or 60 reviews. Upload those and so on. And then we can actually
tell chat BT hey, we analyzed the past five
set of reviews that I uploaded and aggregate them together and then analyze and respond if that makes sense. We just uploaded a set of
60 and asked for analysis. We can do that with another
60 and so on and so on until we have
hundreds of reviews, let's across ten different sets. And then we can ask chat GBT. Please analyze the previous
ten sets of reviews, Aggregate and analyze
them together, and then answer these questions and then answer the
questions that you want, if that makes sense. All right. What customers like
most about the product? Speed and efficiency,
friendly staff, multiple options,
overall cleanliness. So this is really insightful. This is really great
data that would have taken much longer if you
went through manually. It's still not ideal.
It still takes a little bit of time
to get to this stage, but it's way less time. Again, because AI is a helper, it's not going to do
everything for you. Other non obvious,
let's see what it has. Loyalty and repeat businesses. Many reviewers mention
being longtime customers or having unlimited
wash packages indicating a level of loyalty. Very interesting. I
wouldn't have gathered that many reviewers
are local guides, that's not really relevant,
that's just for Google. Some reviewers like the
additional services like ceramic sealant,
while others were unhappy. That's not really
insightful, that loyalty aspect is very
interesting that I might not have been able to pick up on
my own. Then here we go. What percent of reviewers are male and female
and look at this. Male reviewers, names like
Aaron, John, David Scott, Mark 11 female reviewers, an Teresa, Jennifer
Joy Christie, and then unidentifiable
Yoda Poncho, Cincinnati Wheels,
M, G, et cetera. Do you see how just
this intelligence, this is just a robot, Like
giving you a random answer. How thoughtful this
is. So of our sample, about 72% are male, were 18.19%, are female. That's really cited to know who's going to the
car wash as well. But this is fantastic. Again, this doesn't solve all of our questions that we have
about our target audience. There's still some more
research that needs to be done and questions that
need to be answered. This is amazing, this is gold. And you're using this
very inexpensive AI tool. And free publicly available
review data and gathering this I used to work in
market research for companies like Adidas and
Nike, and Proctor and Gamble. And this type of insight most of these large Fortune
500 companies don't even know is accessible. So I just want to stress
how powerful this is. So this worked super well. Awesome. So this was
method number two, not ideal, but this is
kind of the next step. And then I'm going to share
with you number three, which is actually
one of my favorites. If this scraper doesn't work, but it's a little bit
more complicated, you might have to pay, which is why I make
it number three. But usually if this
tool doesn't work, I move to this one, then
I move to the manual. Manual is always my last, just because I'm willing
to pay for tools. But I know a lot of you
kind of want to try things kind of for free and test it out first. So that's
why I have this.
10. Let AI Analyze HUNDREDS of Reviews in Just Minutes! (Part 2): Finally, let's get to
it. Method number three, right, scraper doesn't work. Let's say we don't want to
spend the time with manual. Are we having some issues there? Another option is
to go to Google and type in review scraper, Amazon review scrapers,
review scraper, Google review, trust, pilot review scraper,
whatever that might be. Just type in the words, review scraper, and
then you'll find it. So we have out Scraper, Scrape, Hero, Web Automation
Api, et cetera. So a lot of different options. Some of these will
have a free trial. Some of these will be 100% free. Other ones will be just paid. So you have to play around. And again, it completely
depends on the platform. But I went ahead and
this is brand new. I've never used this
tool before out scraper, so I'm not really
recommending it. But what we can do is like if the AI scraper
that we have doesn't work, we can use one of these that
is much more likely to work. And basically, we can
download a set of reviews into a CSV
file like this. And then we're going to
use code interpreter by chat GBT to analyze, which
I'm going to show you. Let's run through it real quick. We already know the
objective and everything. I signed up for an account. I'm going to go back
to Mike's car wash. Okay, I'm going to
copy the reviews. I'm going to go here to
the scraper that I just signed up for and I'm going
to command V to paste. There we go. So
I'm going to head over to our Mike's car wash, copy the link, paste it here we can sort by either
most relevant or newest. In case it's time sensitive, you want to see more
of the newer reviews or the most helpful, I'll leave his most relevant
review limit for one place. We'll just do 100 reviews here. All right. Then we'll
click on Scrape Reviews. All right. Confirm. And then
this should be creating a CSV file for us to
download and then we'll upload that into chat BT. So I'll go ahead
and check my e mail and get back into chat BT. All right, so I've
now downloaded all 100 reviews into a
CSV file on my desktop, which you can see a
little glimpse of here. All of them here
in the CSV file. Nice and neat for us, and you need to make
sure it's in CSV file. Because when we go
back to chat BT, what you want to do
is click on New Chat, select chat B four, then select Code Interpreter. With code interpreter,
we're able to then upload that
spreadsheet just like this. So we click on the plus
sign labeled it, Reviews. So we're going to
double click to upload. See by the blue status
that it is uploading. Then what's really cool about code interpreter is that
there are certain aspects or things you can do
with it that you can't do with a default chat,
which I'll show you here. I'm going to ask for very similar information to what we asked before
with some changes. First, I describe
the spreadsheet, just so chat can understand, the spreadsheet has 100 reviews from customers of
Mike's Carwash. I want you to focus
on the author column and the review text column. If we've looked at
the column like here, we see review text. This is the reviews
right here, right? So that's what we
want to analyze. And then also for
that gender question, we want the author title, which I can just copy here. And we want the, call it
the author title column. Okay, please analyze
both columns in depth and provide detailed
answers to the following. What's the last name of the first reviewer so we
can check their attention? What are the most frequently used words in negative reviews? What are the most
frequently used words in positive reviews? That's really interesting for us in terms of word frequency. To help get us an understanding
of our target audience. Describe the two biggest pain points customers
have with Mike's. Describe the two things
customers like most, what percent of the reviewers
are male and female? Tell me several non
obvious insights that will help me
understand the fears, desires, pain points, and
goals of the reviewers. And then please summarize
your findings and provide relevant visualizations
which you'll see using this approach. It'll take a little
bit more time. We'll go ahead and enter for
chat PT to analyze the data. But we're also going to begin
to get some interesting, additional insights by
using this approach. Awesome, let's dive into
the spreadsheet and dissect the reviews
of Mike's carwash. I'll load the data and
give you the results. And what's really cool
is you can actually see the work that chat
does in case you want to dive in and look at exactly what chat
PT is looking at. If that looks messy, you just leave it collapse.
It's no worries. It's going to describe what it's going through step by step. So basically it
just looks through, great. We've got
everything that we need. What's the last name
of the first reviewer? It's going to dive in,
so for every question it's going to red go
through the spreadsheet. So it's like diving into
water and then coming back. Diving into water, getting
the gold and coming back. So we're just going to give
it a little bit of time to run and then we'll get back
to it once it's complete. All right, so after letting it run for a few minutes,
here's what we have. So first name of
the last name of the first reviewer report is
correct. So that's great. I also ask for
frequently used words. And the reason for
this is sometimes interesting insights come up, sometimes like
this, like the two. And car wash, right? It's not very insightful. For example, this
was run one time for a collagen supplement and
one of the most common, frequently used words
and reviews was coffee. We found out that
people are or taking this collagen supplement
with coffee in the morning. We know
that it's okay. That helps us under they're
using this in the morning, I wonder why in the morning. It helps us understand
a different element of our target audience that
most people don't know, that you can uncover
with other data sources. So it's really powerful, but in this case, not really
that insightful. Sometimes asking
the same question for different audiences,
it's going to vary, right? So that's why I like to
ask all these questions. Biggest pain points,
what's really cool is there can be automatic
line graphs, bar graphs, depending
on the data. Also word clouds, which is very interesting of
negative review, word cloud and then
positive review. We can see some general
but specifically diving in aside from the
most frequently used words, this is where the
real gold comes in. The biggest pain point. Customers have incomplete or
inconsistent washing issues with specific parts
of the car not being cleaned and also
damages or scratches. Clearly it goes into the
actual washing of it, but incomplete or inconsistent, that's something that I
could really hone on. It's get the complete
wash with XYZ, get the complete wash
with summers car wash or in specific parts, same thing, it's incomplete.
That's really key. Also long wait times, issues with management and employees, problem with pricing. There's always going to
be some pricing problems. The long waiting times
and slow service if people are going there for convenience and it's
not convenient. So we can say come to
summers car wash for the true complete,
convenient wash. I already a brainstorming
ideas of how I know how to position myself because I know what my audience
really care about. What they like most is obviously the wash quality not
really insightful. They like the different
wash options. They like that there's
different packages, interesting and specific
cleaning features. They like the cleaning
features and the options, but they want to make
sure, hey, that it's done completely
because it was missed. Also some like the
customer service, I'm sure it depends on the customer service
they got that date. They liked the efficiency, when it was inefficient.
They didn't like it. So what does that show me?
They care about efficiency. They care about efficiency. And when the efficiency
is met positive, review when the efficiency
isn't met negative. So speed, convenience,
that's important. Big, big, big gold key
that we uncovered here. And then in terms of what
percent are male or female, we have about 64% male, 37% And the key here
isn't exact percentages, it's overall right, because
we also don't know, we just guess based
on the first name. So we know that the
majority are male. That's a key insight there. Okay, we know that we're writing
to men and not to women. That's important, right?
Overall, maybe we have separate copy for male
and the female or not. It could be the same for both. It depends on your objectives. For other additional insights. There's an unsatisfactory
exit experience. The word exit was included with a lot of negative reviews. That's interesting, I
might dive more into that. Also, brushless or
prewah also showed up in negative reviews
of the word sucks, reflects strong
negative emotions. Okay, yeah, we know PT. Thanks. Then positive insights, paying and promotions were actually associated
with positive reviews. Words like God and dream, Someone used the word God or
dream, that's interesting. And then wet and animal for particular details, I'd
have to dive into that. I would actually ask like, hey, expand on that more because this doesn't really
make sense to me. Which you can just do and
add another message, right? And then we have a
little summary here. So as you can see
way more in depth, Some of it not really
helpful, others gold. And that's how it is.
It's like panning for gold with review insights. But yeah, this is the
longest video in the course. Good job for getting through it. Yeah, those are the three ways to analyze reviews as well as other datasets using AI like BT. I can't express to you
how powerful this is, but I hope that you
see the power here. And yeah, like I said, to recap, use PT number one,
use the scraper tool. It's going to be the easiest
if everything works well, great, that's the best. If not, I prefer to
use a tool like this where I download a CSV
file and then upload. Sometimes that costs money, but I really don't care because
it's so valuable to me. And then number three is if
you want to save on money, either yourself or a team
member needs to go through and manually copy and paste the
reviews in different sets. And again, you can
title it, set one, upload, set two, upload, set three, upload, and so on. So let's say you have
ten sets of reviews, of 50 reviews, each as PT. Please analyze the
past 500 reviews that come in the following
sets, set one through ten, and then answer these
questions, right, so there's multiple ways to get to the same outcome At the end. You want to make sure it's
statistically significant. You want to make sure you're
asking the right questions, which are all included
in the buyer persona. If you have any
other questions you don't like what chat BT does. It's almost a living entity where you can talk
to it and say, hey, this wasn't really clear or I didn't really like the
way that you did this? Or how do I know that
you're giving me the accurate information?
It's all there, right? Because every situation is going to be a little
bit different. So yeah, I hope you
found this valuable and you're trooper
getting through this, you're definitely
going to get rewarded for implementing everything
that you learned here. Now, further ado, Let's take a break and get
to the next video.
11. Read Minds With Google: This video, I'm going
to show you how to use Google keyword data to help
you understand the interest, desires, and fears of
your target audience. Now we have a lot
of different people who are taking this
course, right? Freelancers and entrepreneurs, content creators,
social media marketers. So because of that,
certain tools are going to be more effective depending
on your objectives. So if you watch this
video and you're like, I don't really see how it could apply this to my business. It kind of depends. For
some of you this is going to be extremely
valuable and practical, and for others
maybe not as much. So it's ultimately
up for you to weigh. But it's another tool
that you can have in your arsenal to pull out
whenever you're ready, really ramp up your
copywriting effectiveness. So I'll run through a couple of examples with
two different tools. The two tools we're
going to be using, first is key search, which is right here
on the screen. And the second is Answer
the public Answer. The public is free, but you
only at least currently get two free searches per day
where key search is paid. I believe they
have a free trial, but either way it
I'll have links to both of these tools in
the resources section. And again, you can only use them if you find them valuable. First example, let's say that you are either a blogger
or you're creating blog content for a food blog and you want to understand
your audience, right? Let's say blog is centered around African
food recipes, right? So we can put in African food here into the search
bar and key search. We're going to leave
at all locations and have related keywords. And we're going to go
ahead and hit search. And basically what this tool and other similar tools
do is they find keywords that are similarly related to this keyword that are being searched
for on Google. Because remember, when
someone has a desire, they search for on Google.
And it's really powerful. As you can see
here on the right, we have 700 keywords
relating to African food, and we can organize by
search volume volume. When we click on this,
it goes highest to low. Basically, what is
significant about this, we have the keyword and
then we have search volume. Search volume means the
number of times on average, that this keyword is searched
per month on Google. What does that mean? The
higher the search volume means. Higher demand, right? Higher desire. When we're
going about creating content, we want to make sure we're
creating content and copyrighting to the desires and interests of our audience. We can see what is more interesting and less
interesting to our audience. Also, sometimes
certain keywords come out where you can actually see the fears of your audience, which I'll talk about
in a second here. Some of it actually most of the keywords aren't really going to be relevant
because they're, again, very broad and general. But right up here, one
of the top keywords we have is South African food. So if I'm going to
create blog content, I know that my audience right here is interested in
South African food. That's one of their biggest
interest, so I'm going to go ahead and write that down next. We have fufu, which I
believe is Nigerian. That's obviously a big interest as well, so we're going
to write that down. Ig soup near me. 9,900 searches. Obviously people are
looking for this, right? And when they say, you know, Igo Soup near me, they're looking to purchase
it at a restaurant. But maybe percent also
want to make it right. Let's say your food blog
focuses on recipes, instill, and so on, right? So pretty straightforward, very simple, but very powerful. And it definitely varies
based on the keyword. You can find some really
interesting insights. But sometimes honestly
it's not as helpful. But I use this tool weekly for all different kinds of purposes when I'm doing
product research, when I want to
understand what kind of product does somebody want? What are some of the specific elements
they're looking for? Like what materials
are they looking for? What colors, things like that. This just one kind
of general example. Another one could be if
you're creating content for a travel blog or travel videos like we
do, let's say Thailand, it's a popular
destination, Thailand, all locations
related keywords and we're just going to
see what happens, what gets uncovered. Now what's really
cool about this tool is click here on Filter. You can actually filter
by a variety of factors on show keywords that
contain XY and Z, negate certain keywords only show keywords that are between this many words to
this many words. Minimum and maximum search
volume and so on, Right? But these are the
most important. For example, we see a lot
of one word things here. We'll want to maybe
set that to two words. Hit Filter, and
it's only going to filter keywords that
have two or more words. Again, hit the search volume. So we're organized
by search volume. And this just basically shows us the more words
someone types in. Those are called
longer tail keywords. You have shorter tail and
longer tail keywords. The longer the keyword,
the more information, the more data we can, right? If someone says, you know, how can I stop my
dog from peeing all over my sofa cushions
versus dog training, Right? One is much longer
than the other, right? We can get a lot more data or inference from one
of those keywords. That long key search or keyword search
versus the shorter. In general, we like
to look at longer, so like two or more
searching by volume. Again, people going to Thailand, what
are they interested in? Right, we go back to
our buyer persona. What are these people interested
in based on actual data? What is their
interest and desire? Well, here's some locations
they're interested in. Visiting Changi,
Kosmo Bangkok, right? And so on. They're
interested in news, okay. That's interesting,
like what's going on in Thailand and this
could also relate to fears and this could
actually make us go down this hole of the rabbit hole of
different searches. Because this is unlimited, you can search as much as you want. So for example, my wife
and I were creating travel content for
our Youtube channel, which by the way, we use
copywriting heavily to write all of our scripts that then are
the basis for our videos. And obviously if we
didn't have the copy, then we'd get no results. And we were doing this for
the country of Georgia, which is kind of in
between Turkey and Russia in the caucus mountains. And one of the top searches was, is Georgia safe because of the Russia Ukraine
war at the time? Then a lot of people
are wondering, is it safe? Well, guess what? Aha. For my target audience I know an external
fear, is it safe? Are Russians going to invade? So that's great.
When I'm creating content or even just
whatever my purpose is, trying to understand
my audience, I know that that's a
fear that they have. So that's an example of
how fears can come out. And like I said, it's like
it varies quite a bit. But what I want to
kind of point out as well is kind of
using our two sense. So we have PP here
60,000 searches, which is quite a
lot. 60,000 a lot. So PP versus Bangkok,
Thailand, you know, 201,000 There's more
interest overall in Bangkok than there is
in PPP Island, right? Same thing. Changi
versus Changi, which are very close
to each other, 90,000 people are
searching versus 400. Is that 450,000 If I'm
reading the digits correctly. So way more, right? Five times more, for example. So the more searches
means more desire. And it gives you a, it's taking something that's subjective
and quantifying it. So you can now see
what are people interested in and how
interested are they? And it might test
certain assumptions. You may think, oh, people
are really wondering if it's dangerous I can go and
actually check through. So it just really interesting
what can come about. And I find that
this tool is really effective for more
digital based businesses, e commerce businesses, blog
content, things like that. Local businesses can still get a lot of value out of that. You can still use this tool
and type in, you know, whatever your local business is to see what people
are searching for, what they're curious about. Like if you're a local
mechanic shop and you're like, you know, what are
people's fears and desires around mechanics, Right. You can do that as well. So I find it works better because obviously it's
an internet based tool. So it works better for
internet based businesses, but it can work for all
different kinds of businesses. And like this is one
of the most powerful tools that I ever use. So yeah, it's key search. Now moving to quickly answer the public,
this is a free tool. This is actually a
reverse search engine, where on a traditional
search engine like Google, you type in a keyword
to look for answers. This is going to give you questions and I'll
show you how it works, going back to African food, for African food, or
even Let's try this. Let's try a mechanic,
different example. I'll try to incorporate as
many examples as I can, but I know some will be
more relevant to others. Select your country,
in this case we'll say United States language. Let's go ahead and hit search. You want to make sure
it's one to two? Just give it a second to load. There we go. Okay, go
ahead and accept that. What I really love is
this visualization here. The same idea is that
you can actually see the most commonly
asked questions about mechanics, for example. Which mechanic makes
the most money? This is actually clearly someone who's trying to get into
becoming a mechanic. What mechanic is best, like, how do we know it's the best,
what gets paid the most? What mechanic tools are best? So it seems like mechanics are
actually looking for this. We have here over the most frequently search
keywords with the word how, how mechanics make money,
how mechanics help us, how mechanic shop, how
mechanics spell, right? People just spelling mechanics. Again, whenever you are
looking for data and research, almost never the gold is just going to be right
there on the surface. You kind of have to pan a
little bit for the gold. You have to dig
through a little bit. So, so far if I'm
a mechanic and I'm trying to understand
people who use mechanics. What's their fear and desires. This hasn't been very helpful thus far, but I
just got started. You need to do some digging, you will Mechanics in a
bottle cleaner carburetor. So that's interesting specifically
for carburetor, right? Mechanics who come to you. Interesting. So there's clearly people who
are interested in mechanics who
actually come to you. So yeah, over here, where over here,
over here mechanics, can you see how each one is broken out
by words and so on? And it shows in the darker means the
higher search volume, and the lighter means
less search volume. Okay, that's really what
you want to focus on. Again, this is a free tool so I highly recommend a is giving you a try that questions
for mechanic. Scrolling down, we have
prepositions for mechanic, you can see here with two. So mechanic near me of course,
that's very important. So what this shows
me right here and this is a very common thing
to search into Google. But clearly what does this mean? Someone's going into Google
and typing mechanic near me. What is their desire?
Convenience. They value and desire convenience, right? Why won't they look a
mechanic far from me? Well, obviously because they want a mechanic close to them. They want to save time. So
convenience is important. So they're looking for
someone near them. It also indicates
they probably want this resolved quickly.
So what does that mean? If I have my website, maybe I'm not just the best mechanic, but I'm the fastest
mechanic, you know, My mechanic shops are
located, you know, in the most convenient locations across the United States. By the way, that's actually
Walgreens marketing strategy on the corner of
happy and healthy. That's kind of subliminally like there's always a
Walgreens near you. It's all about convenience
for Walgreens, obviously there's other
points there that are being made in their
marketing and advertising. And they can obviously
shift with time, but convenience is a huge part of their marketing strategy, which obviously relates to their copywriting and
their copy strategy. So you can go ahead and posit a screen and kind
of look at some of these as well just
to kind of see, you know, what people are
specifically looking for. So if you're creating content, let's say blog content
for mechanic shop, social media content
for mechanic shop. This is really going
to help you guide in knowing what kind
of content to make, but then also
understanding, you know, what's important
to your audience, which both go hand in hand. So yeah, hope you find
these tools valuable. Like I said, I use
them often really, really powerful for a
variety of features. Give them a try, see how much
value you get out of them. And if not, you know there's
other tools that you can use and other formulas
and frameworks that we're about to get into. They're going to be
really powerful for you. So without further ado, let's go and get to the next video.
12. IMPORTANT: Features vs Benefits: This video may be the most important video
in the entire course. We already have a very
good understanding of who our audience is. Now we need to understand
what our product or service does
for our audience. And then our copyrighting
is going to bridge the gap. So we have one side of
the equation, right? We understand our audience, now we really need to
understand the value of the product or service
we're trying to promote. And our copyrighting is
going to bridge that gap. And this video is
going to highlight the single biggest mistake
that so many copywriters, I would even argue most
marketers are making. That it's keeping them from
viral success frame of mind to have Frodo is your customer and
you are Gandalf. Okay? Your customer is the
hero, you are not. You are the guide and
they are the hero. A big mistake that so many, especially larger
corporations tend to make is talking
about their accolades, how long they've
been in business. They talk about me, me, me, if you've ever been in
a room with somebody else and they've only
talked about themselves, they don't ask you
any questions. You know, they brag about
how much they're making and all the things
they travel to and their family or the
car or whatever. You could not want to get
away from them faster. You're like, get me out of here. You could care less your
customers the same way. The more you talk
about yourself, the more you're
building a magnet that repels your customers. Discuss your customers. By doing this, I cannot
stress this enough. It's easily, easily fixed. Now, most businesses do this in order to show
their authority, right? They don't come from a place
of ego all the time, right? It's kind of like
hey, we've been in business for a while,
we can help you, We have this great product
or service, You know, it's cutting edge,
it's all this stuff. But we'll be very careful because the more
you talk about you, the more you repel the person
you're trying to sell to. So instead, by shifting the frame of mind,
you're the guide. You're the guide that helps
the hero along their journey. Okay? Everything that you say should be about
them helping them. You want to focus
on words like you. Your avoid words
like me, us, we, our, all of that like
literally in your copy, just by changing
those words around. Not literally just changing the word and leaving it as is. But instead of focusing
on you and your brand, focusing on them, immediately, your results will increase with doing nothing else
different. All right? So really powerful.
With that in mind, based on a lot of
recent research and specifically
consumer research as it relates to psychology, there's a very interesting
phenomena that happens. There's a lot of ways
to look at the brain. There's all different
parts. And it's this deep chasm that we're
still learning about. And it's fascinating. But one very interesting
and consistent activity that happens when someone is making a purchase
decision, okay? Whether online or in person, it doesn't matter. There's
two parts of the brain. There's the Limbic System
and the New York cortex. The Limbic System is
associated with emotions. The neo cortex is associated with motor skills and
rational thinking. Talking, deliberating,
weighing the options, right? You can think of
like rational and the other one is
much more emotional and touchy feeling, okay. What's very interesting,
when someone buys something or they're in a
decision to buy something, their allmbic system activates first before the neocortex, always the limbic system lights up and then the New
York cortex does afterwards. What does that show us? And it's just kind of goes back
to some common sense. But we are emotional creatures. Okay, emotional
first and foremost, we may want to think
that we're so, you know, evolved or so devoid of emotion. Everybody, every
person, and then therefore every
corporation in government, which is made up of
people, are emotional. So you want to hit on
their emotions, okay? If someone makes a
buying decision where their emotional brain activates first before they're neo cortex. What does that mean
for your copy? Your copy should follow suit to where your
copy will first focus on the emotional side of the purchase decision and then back it up with
features and benefits. It's like, for example, this
product will save your life. It's like whoa. Like, you know, if you don't take this
product you will die, right? Whoa, like, all right,
I'm emotionally hooked. My emotional brain
is triggered now. It's active but my neo cortex, right, my rational
brain is not like now. Okay, now, like I'm hooked. But you got to tell me more like I'm not ready to buy yet, so you need to activate both. Sometimes people do make emotional purchase decisions
for lower priced items. Let's say something
you know less than $15 and that's obviously
increasing with inflation. Sometimes you don't
really need to convince both the limbic system and the neo cortex for
someone to buy from you. But in general, especially
if you're trying to sell a product that's $100
$1,000 $1 million. Much more important that both of these systems need
to be activated. Where a lot of times people
only focus on the neo cortex, meaning they only focus on
features of the product. Here's how great a product is, you know, here's
what it does, here's the material
it's made of, here's the color
or your service. Right? Here's how long
we've been in business. Here's how many
assets we have under management, et cetera, right? You want to make an
emotional connection first, then back that up. Rational copy, Okay, again, we're kind of looking
at psychology and data. Then letting that create the formulas and the frameworks that we use with copywriting. And I love this quote,
it's an amazing quote. Don't take a screenshot
of this, memorize it. You can take a
screenshot, that's fine, but make sure you
memorize this features, tell while benefits sell, Understanding features
and benefits its key. You cannot be a
professional copywriter and not fully understand what
features and benefits are. It is the base of everything
you're going to do. Feature benefits sell. Why? Because benefits
are emotional based. Specifically, what is the difference between
features and benefits? You may have heard about
them before. What are they? Features basically, it's
what your product does, It's how it functions, it's how fast it is. And I'm using the
word product here because saying products and services all the time
gets a bit long. And essentially it's
like the same thing. So it applies to
services just as much as products,
whatever your brand is. So what do you do? What
does your product do? What does your agency
do? Right? That's what your features are, right? It's this color, it's this size. Here's how long we've
been in business. It's all rational, factual, Objective benefits are what your product or service
does for your customer. How are you servicing
your customer, okay? It's that deep and the best way to think
about this, right? Because this is
where, like I said, this video is maybe
the most important. It's where I see so many copywriters
and marketers getting stuck is getting stuck on features. It's like
the single thing. So the best way to
get out of this is, so describe your product or service to a friend
or family member. Just describe it. Then
have that friend or family member sit on
the opposite side of the room and ask the
single question. So what? So for example,
it's like, oh, you know, this sweater is made out
of cashmere from India. So well, it's super rare. So it's like it'll
keep you warm, so who cares if
it keeps me warm? It's like the more that
you ask that question, the more you get from a feature and it turns into a benefit. Okay? So you know, ultimately, and we'll talk about
this in the next slide, just start off with your
features because that's obvious. You know, what's unique about
your product or service, What's amazing about it? What's cool about it? Write all of those down, like
five to seven. Okay. Write them down. Then you can either ask
yourself or even better, have a friend or
family member sit across from you and ask what. Okay. So you know, it can hold 2 terabytes of data. So it's like, so how
does that relate to me? How does that benefit
me? Again, it gets down into the emotional
level, to the limbic system. So you'll have both are important features and
benefits, by the way, to make it very clear you want to use them together,
they're really powerful, but you want to
start with benefits and then go to features where a lot of people either go to features and the
benefits and guess what, if you start with
features, you lose the person they tune out
for most of the time. Or they just focus on features and never really talk
about the benefits. And then you've
completely lost, right? So ask the question. So what? And basically starting from
whatever feature you have, just color and material, and how long you've
been in business, and experience and clients
that you have and all of that. It needs to get down into
one of these eight, okay? Then this is when
you know you've identified a benefit.
Okay, that's the key here. So a benefit almost
all the time, 95% of time, should be
one of these eight. Now what you're looking
at here on the screen, that what's called
the Life Force eight from the book
Cash Advertising, which is a brilliant book
which I highly recommend. Basically the author of
Cash Advertising has identified eight different basically
human building blocks, elements that come from birth. We don't need to
learn about these, these just come kind of pre, built into each human being. And these are deep
within emotions. Okay, so here's like the basic
building blocks of humans. That's eight things that
we desire and fear. So number one, survival enjoyment of life.
Life extension. Does your product or
service help someone enjoy their life more,
Extend their life? Help them survive
in difficult times. Once you really drill
down into that, that's when you've
identified a benefit. Number two is enjoyment
of food and beverages. Actually enjoying it,
not about, you know, losing or gaining life because of what you
eat or what you drink, But just purely the dopamine rush or the serotonin that you get from consuming
these freedom. Number three, freedom from fear, pain, and danger, right? So we go toward pleasure and we go away from pain
as human beings. So how does your
product or service, I know I'm saying both now. I'm just going to stick to it. Help someone achieve freedom, avoid fear, pain, and danger. Number four, sexual
companionship. Obviously, this
is built into us. If, you know we didn't
enjoy sex or we didn't go after
sexual companionship, I wouldn't exist.
You wouldn't exist. So obviously it's
pre built into us. Not just obviously in the doping rush that
you get from it, but also in the kind of longevity element that
you get from that. Survival, food, freedom,
sexual companionship. Number five, we have
comfortable living conditions. We want to live in
comfort so that you know, things like air
conditioning, refrigerators, you know Uber eats, which I'm about to use
here in a little bit. All of that helping us
to be more comfortable. Number six is to be
superior or winning. Also known as kind
of keeping up with the Joneses is kind of
an American expression. Being a master in our field, being viewed as an expert, that is something else
that's deeply human. Number seven, the care
and protection of loved ones probably goes
without saying, right. And lastly, number eight is social approval being
accepted by our tribe, by those around us, by
those who we admire, being accepted by them,
being liked by them. As you can tell, the eight as I went through, you're
probably like, oh yeah, yeah, like no,
these are obvious, of course, every human being. But it's really helpful to have, you can download this and have
this to always go back to where you know your product or service better opponent
and at least one of these. Now obviously, let's say you
sell a certain type of food, Let's say it's like
I'm making this up, Let's say it's a matcha
latte or bucca buck. It's a fermented tea
drink basically. And let's say it tastes
amazing and it helps you live longer by helping your microbiome or
whatever it might be. So with your product or service, you can actually tap
into multiple of these, which makes it even
more powerful. So imagine your
product or service can tap into all eight, how powerful that is, that product or service, right? Extremely so the more it
taps into, the better. But don't try to force
something in there. It needs to be at least one. So it's kind of like
a checklist like, okay, at least one of these. And make sure you hone in. So for example, like Mcdonald's doesn't
hone in on, you know, survival, enjoyment, life
extension, and food, right? It really focuses in mostly, and there's other
elements here too, like convenience,
but really hones in on enjoyment of
food and beverages. Okay, so they really
dominate that. And they do a very
good job of that. So in the end, right, you want to identify your
features and benefits features. What is your product?
What does it do? What does it look like?
Write those down. Then take each of
those and figure out what is the
benefit of those. So what, right? And each one of those features, those five to seven, should turn into one of these, right? It should help your
target audience survive. Be superior, take care
of their loved one, you give them freedom
from fear and pain, et cetera, right? At
least one of those. So I know there's kind of a lot, I repeated myself a
little bit just to emphasize how important this is and to really make
sure that you get it. So this is, yeah, like I said, it's
super powerful. This is going to give
you such an edge. I'm so excited to share
these secrets with you. I, you know, zero
fear. I want to give everything to you because
it's extremely powerful. So, yeah, I hope you
find this valuable. If you have any
questions about it, let me know in the
Q and A section. I'll be more than
happy to help you now. With that being
said, let's go ahead and get to the next video.
13. Defining Your USP (Unique Selling Proposition): As we covered in the
previous lecture, we know that all humans
are actively trying to move away from pain
and toward pleasure. And ultimately, our product
or service should be the guide that goes in and helps the hero on their
journey from pain to pleasure. That's another way
to think about it. So with that in mind, we're going to quickly focus on USP, also known as unique
selling proposition. So this is something that
every business should have, but not every business
or brand does have. Before you engage in
copywriting or start anything, you need to identify what your brand's unique
selling proposition is. What is that exactly? So again, you can look at different
definitions on line. The one that I find
the most helpful is, what does your brand
solve for your customer? That nobody else solves, right? Or that no one else
does? What do you do? And I stay away from
the word just do. Like what do you do? It's
like who cares what you do? What do you solve, right? How are you helping
someone increase pleasure, decrease pain in their lives? Based on the life foresight that we covered in
the last video. Right? So what do you solve
that nobody else does. That's your unique
selling proposition. Maybe you have similar food
but you're more convenient or that you are similar taste but healthier option,
whatever it might be, right? Depending on your business, there's something unique you need to solve that
nobody else solves. Otherwise, if you're not unique, then why would anyone buy from you if you're pretty
much the same? Now let's say again, if
you have, I was, you know, in Turkey going through
the bazaar and let's say that everyone has
the Turkish delight, has these different
tea sets or whatever, But there's only one
place with Turkish rugs. So maybe someone else in
another part of Turkey, far, far away, sells
these beautiful rugs. But let's say I'm looking to buy a rug, it's convenient for me. So it's a similar
product, right? But it's convenience, right? That's something unique
that no one else has. You know, they sell these rugs that targets their audience that let's say they've
identified that, you know, we're
interested in drugs, that no one else does, right? Then that's pretty much
it, really simple. The key here to keep in mind is if your product or
service is crap, it does not solve any problems, it does not help
a target audience move away from pain
and toward pleasure. Then you're going to
get terrible results. You will never get good results. So like I said before, we kind of have the copywriting
bridge up to this point. Now we've identified who
our target consumer is, our target audience is, and hopefully by now
we've also identified what value does our brand
provide that no one else does. So we have kind of the
sales end, you know, figured out, we have our
target audience figured out. And finally, now we
can actually dive into the copywriting of
being the bridge, because think about it. If you don't really know
who your audience is, how are you going
to appeal to them? If your product or service
that you're copyrighting for or that you're doing
marketing services for, isn't that great? It's not unique. It's generic. It breaks. It's,
you know, whatever. Why would anyone buy it, right? You could try to convince them. By the way, this is
another little tip. This is very true with e commerce businesses
because of returns. So you could try to sell a crap product like we had before and you could
get some sales. You'd get a lot of
sales, but guess what? You're also going
to get a lot of returns and a lot of
negative reviews, and that's ultimately going
to hurt all future sales. So the key here, by
the end of this video, is just for you to
really understand. You need to understand your target audience
better than anybody else. You need to have
a better product or service than anybody else. Number one, that's going to
make your copywriting easier. But number two is you're
actually going to have results because if one of those pieces is missing, you'll guaranteed, I guarantee you, you'll
get terrible results, whether that's in
the short term or in the long term or
realistically both. Not something to be afraid
of, just something to be prepared for
and to get excited about and to have all
the framework in mind. With all this being said, we're finally ready
to start diving into the different formulas
and different kind of techniques and
elements to include inter copywriting.
Hope you're excited. Let's go ahead and get
to the next video.
14. Six Ways to Persuade Anyone: In this next section
of the course, you're going to learn specific copyrighting elements
that you can immediately implement
into your existing copy to see dramatically
improved results. And if you're brand new to copyrighting the order
that we're doing, this is first learning
about a few of these individual elements
and ways that we can improve our copyrighting
before getting into copy and paste
formulas that you can use and know what to
use and when to use it. Basically, we'll take these
elements and then weave them throughout our formulas
in the next section, first beginning here, we're going to begin with
the six elements of persuasion by American
psychologist Robert Aldini. Basically, these are six
psychological principles or elements that increase our conversion rates with
copywriting or essentially get more people to take
our desired action. So the first psychological
phenomena is known as liking. We are more likely to buy from someone or take action
from someone we like. Hopefully you have a good
relationship with your parents. If you love your mother, right, and she tells you
to do something, you're probably going
to do it, right? Or this even extends
to celebrities, right? Not just friends or family, but like someone like
Chris Pratt, let's say. Someone who's really well liked. If he is promoting a product, you're more likely to buy it than if it's some
random stranger. So another kind of key principle
here, an underlying one, is we are more likely
to buy from someone who we feel is from
the same tribe as us that we feel
is similar to us. So maybe they look a
little bit different, but if we feel that they're
similar to us, right, or we just like
them, maybe they're complimentary to us and
we just like them a lot. We're way more likely to buy. So pretty typical, right? We kind of understand it. It's
not really rocket science, but it's really important
to keep in mind. And that's the whole reason
that influencer marketing, celebrity endorsements
work because of this single
principle of liking. Number two, we have
authority, right? Someone who is a Dr. a dentist who has 30
years of experience, who has won certain awards. This is powerful for authority. Again, we're not going to
make this, the whole focus of our copy talking about us, but using authority
because like, hey, we know that you need
someone you can trust. We've been doing this
for 30 years and here's our results
for you, right? Kind of making sure that when you bring in
these elements, you're targeting your
specific audience. So authority is, yeah, it's simply someone who
has authority. So maybe this used to be
government officials. I think they've lost
a lot of authority in more recent years to the
majority of the public. But think about people who
have authority in your life, have experience, who have
titles that you also respect. Because if you
don't respect them, then obviously it's useless,
right, to try to convince. But someone with
authority, like a dentist, nine out of ten dentists recommend this
toothpaste, right? They use that data like
Procter and Gamble and Crest, and oral B in order
to sell toothpaste. For example, number three, we have social proof
reviews, right? This is the best example
of social proof. You're more likely to purchase something when other people
have already done it, right? You're way less likely.
It's like, hey, we have this brand new
pharmaceutical drug. You could be the
first one to try it. It's like, I don't know, I a little bit more skeptical. When you know that
1 million people have taken it with
zero side effects, you're much more likely to take it and buy that medication. And that applies to
anything, right? You're going to a new
restaurant, you want to go to. A restaurant that has zero
reviews on Google or that has 1004, 0.7 star reviews. Right. It's pretty obvious,
but it's really important. That's why on a lot of websites, and this is why Amazon and
Utomine Skillshare and many, many platforms utilize reviews because social proof
is extremely powerful. And again, any one of these is extremely powerful when
you combine them together, which I'll show you how
to do in later videos. Specifically, the magic
sales letter formula is going to be super
powerful for you. It implements many of these
elements of persuasion. So next we have scarcity. So this is usually, especially when it comes to on line is like time sensitive. So let's say, you know, this
offer ends in 24 hours. So act now we actually use
that with our Etsy shop. Again, this relates to copy, but instead of running
deals like every week, and then we have a countdown
timer that shows up by nets. We have one of our team members reset
the timer every 24 hours. So basically every morning
she sets the timer, then it runs down 24 hours. Then she recess it the next day. So instead of doing it every
week or every month, right? So it's like the sale
ends in 30 days. It's like, okay, but the
sale ends in 24 hours. Whoa, it's scarce, right?
It's about to end. Act now. All right. So scarcity can obviously
be real like gold. There is literally only so
much gold or like platinum and silver in the world
that is literally scarce. Or it can be artificial
like diamonds, right? There's a plethora of diamonds. You can make diamonds and labs, but it feels like
they're scarce, except for the
fact that once you buy, this is totally off topic. But this might be
beneficial to you. If you buy a diamond ring, it immediately loses value
as soon as it leaves. If you buy gold, that's
goning to retain value. For its lifetime.
It'll fluctuate a bit. But that's because of real
versus perceived scarcity. And the reality is, when it comes to persuading, it doesn't matter if scarcity
is real or artificial. All it matters is
it's perceived as being real to your
target audience. That's all that matters,
right, to the viewer. So again, use with caution, but the reality is, you know, you have a percentage off sale that's going to last for
a certain period of time. It's not going to be forever, so it's naturally
going to be scarce. So it's kind of a mix between artificial and real, like
you're making it up, but you're only going to
run it for so long it can't go on forever. So
those are some examples. Another example would
be birkin bags. If you don't know about birkin
bags, not that you should. They are these kind
of limited edition, I think bags made from like ostrich skin by like French
craftsmen or whatever, you know, very, very scarce, intentionally kind of makes it that artificial because they use kind of more rare
scarce elements. And then they make
a bag out of it and then the bag
itself is scarce. So yeah, some different
ways of using scarcity, really simple and
really powerful. This is something that's
pretty easy to implement a, especially with websites and on that kind of lower
end of the funnel, if we remember back
in the hot end, really, really
powerful for that. Next we have reciprocity. I've come to realize in recent years how
powerful this is. I've always used reciprocity in our different marketing
and copywriting efforts. Reciprocity is extreme, way
more powerful than people. Think an example, if you go to Kroger, Costco,
Safeway, whatever, any grocery store chain, you've likely run
into somebody giving free samples of
something, right? You may be wondering why
your first thought is, okay, they're providing free
samples because I can try it, then I can buy it.
No, that's incorrect. Costco, actually I think I
have a statistic for this. I don't cosco specifically, they're running some statistics. If you try a free
sample of something, let's say it's a cheese or a sauce, it doesn't
really matter. But because obviously
if you're trying the free sample, you're
interested in that. Like if I don't like cheese, I'm not going to eat a
free sample of cheese. If I like cheese, I
might try the sample. So if I take that cheese,
I take the free sample, obviously I get to kind
of like try before I buy. But that's not the power here. The power is this
subliminal thing. It's this kind of duality
that exists in life to where when you are given,
you must give back. And when you give to someone else, you
expect something back. This is innately human. This is really, really
deep and powerful. And with free samples
at grocery stores, sales can increase
by 600% right? So just by someone
sitting there giving out free samples of a few
little pieces of cheese, sales for that cheese
increase by 600% or more. I think there's even one case of 1,000% increase, massive. And it's not because you
try it before you buy it, that's a little bit, but it's because of this feeling
of reciprocity. Oh, they gave me
something for free. You're not consciously
aware of it, you're not even
thinking about it. You think you're buying
because, oh, I like the cheese. No, you're buying it
because you feel in debt. That's the key that I
want to bring here. So different ways of
doing reciprocity, for example, when it comes
to digital marketing. Because I know
many of you are in that space giving
away free guides, Like here's like a free guide, a free spreadsheet that
you can use to track your goals or to free recipe
or whatever it might be. When you give away
these free products to people or free information, free content, people
feel indebted to you, even in a small way, and they're way more likely to buy from you. That's why social
media content is so powerful when you actually
have really good content. Like a really long step by step blog post or like this Youtube video
tutorial of like, here's how to change your oil. It's like, oh my gosh,
thank you so much. And let's say that the
Youtuber like, you know, tells you to subscribe or tells you to buy the specific oil
that they're partnered with, you're way more likely
to buy that oil that the Youtuber is recommending and you're way more
likely to subscribe. Why? Because they gave
you a bunch of value. So now it's your turn
to give value back and that's something that you can
escape even if you want to. So it's really powerful. So I think I touched on that enough. And lastly, here we
have consistency. So we are much more likely to buy when we know what
we're going to get. So we don't just go to Mcdonald's
because it tastes good. We go to Mcdonald's
and Chipotle in places like this because we know
what we're going to get. The reality is that human
beings, it's kind of funny, but this is a fact, and it goes into kind of casinos and apps and social
media applications. But human beings are wired that we much prefer
something that's okay, but we know what
we're getting versus something that's great
sometimes and bad other times. So let's say this right. You go into Chipotle
and sometimes, you know, your
experience is great. You have like great food,
great customer service. But other times it's like bad. But on average it's okay, right? Like it averages out to be okay. Like it's sometimes
good, sometimes bad. But on average it's in the middle versus let's say you go to Poli
and you like it. It's good. It's okay.
The service is okay. The food is okay. But
you know what to expect. So in both cases, the average is okay.
Right? That's the average. But all human
beings are at least 97% We'll choose the consistent. Okay, Versus the variable. Okay. We'd much rather know what we're getting
than being surprised, even if it's a
pleasant surprise. So that's, again,
really powerful. So that's why it's
very important when it comes to your branding. So when you're writing copy, make sure you have
a consistent tone of voice through
everything, right? You don't want to be
changing, especially if you have multiple
people on your team. You want to have
consistent results. Okay? So it's something really, really important
to keep in mind. And that's why kind of, you know, with this
whole presentation, I'm not changing colors,
I'm not changing font. I'm wearing the same
shirt even here. I'm keeping this in
mind and applying this to everything I do,
including my copywriting. So yeah, some really
powerful elements and yeah, you can go ahead and
write those down, memorize them, you'll
use them for the rest of your life in all forms of marketing,
including copywriting. And that leads us actually
into our next video, which we talk about the
most powerful words to use in your copy. So if you have questions,
let me know in the Q and A. And without further doo, let's go ahead and get
to the next video.
15. How To Infuse Your Copy With Emotion: This is a beautiful quote by Dale Carnegie that
goes as follows. There is no word sweeter in the English language than
the sound of one's own name. So think about it.
How many people call you by your first name? Only the people that
you've allowed in general into your life to
get you know you enough. Now obviously we sometimes
have coworkers or people that we don't
really like that address this by your
name of course. But in general it's
people that we like, It's people that we
feel comfortable with. So when you use someone's name, you're significantly more likely to get them to take action. Now in a lot of cases, you may not have access to your target audiences
first name. But for my e mail
marketers out there, which I know some of you
are taking this course, it's always important on your landing page when
you're collecting customer information to make sure you also collect
the first name. So in all e mail
marketing that I run, where I'm able to kind
of use the first name, I use it and you will find
if you haven't already, you can see the result of this. And again, E mail
marketing is just kind of a common example
of a way that in marketing where
you're more able to use the first name and
most other advertising, it's a bit more
difficult, right? Or other copywriting is
a bit more difficult if you're sending obviously
direct letters by mail. And you have access to
first name as well, use the first name like it is. So you've gotten
messages before e mails or hey there, blah,
blah, blah, blah, blah. And then there's like the
message, you're tuned out. But it's like Hey Sumner, Hey John, Hey Tiffany. Or, you know, whatever you're
much more likely to read, to be engaged, and then
ultimately take action. So basically at the
end of the day, if you have your target
audiences first name, use it. You'll see the results
before and after measure the results and you'll see that it
has improvement. Also along with using
the first name, the words you and your being extremely focused on
the individual are extremely powerful and will ultimately sky
rocket your results versus using words like your company or
your brand name us. We, our, the default for writing of any kind tends to be
focused on us, right? Because in our eyes we're
the hero of our own story. That's our natural tendency as human beings is to be
selfish and self centered. Which is understandable.
Because if we're not selfish,
then we die, right? Because we don't look
out for ourselves, because that's in
our natural wiring. We really need to
fight against it. So what I like to do is have a posted note to where I have, you know, don't use these, like do not talk about yourself. It's okay if you do,
but like I said, the tendency is to use
words like your company, your brand, us, we our more than you and your in the
first name of the person. Because that's the tendency you want to like really
have it on your mind, put it on a post it note to really reduce as
much as possible. Because if you kind of
think about it as a scale, if you reduce like
we us in our words, more and increase you and your just by doing that one change like we kind of
mentioned before, you'll get more people
to take action, more people will be engaged. And you'll be significantly more effective with
your copywriting. Really, really powerful
and super simple. It's one of the easiest
things that you can do to improve your results. And talking about
words in language, what you also want to
make sure that you do, which is a bit more difficult, this just takes
practice as part of the skill in art of
being a copywriter. Or you can bypass and use
artificial intelligence, which does this for you,
is to use vivid language. I have a couple of
examples here and actually move myself
out of the way if I can to just show you the
use of vivid language versus more typical
language that many copywriters use,
typical language. Our invention allows you to get vaccines without the
need for injections. Straight to the point,
Makes sense, right? Very feature base,
like here's what our product does,
right? It's features. Now, taking that same concept right about like our invention. It allows you to not need
injections or even if you said you don't need
painful injections, it's very, very bland. If someone tells me
that it's like, okay, that's cool, but it
doesn't get me hooked. A little kind of litmus
test to perform when you're writing copy is go into
your audience's shoes, going into their mindset,
read through your copy, and then feels like, okay, does this get me excited? Does this get me emotional? If your copy doesn't
get people emotional, it's bad copy, period. There's different tones.
Don't get me wrong, right? So there can be more formal, more informal, you know more, you know, humorous versus
more serious tones. There's different tonality
with your copywriting, but at the end of the day, it better be emotional
and exciting. Well, not necessarily exciting
but emotional, right? And get people agitated a bit, whether based on fears, based on, you know, solutions,
whatever that might be. But people should get
emotional if they don't, the copy is not good, right? And you can test it
for yourself and see. But here's an example of the same concept expanded
using vivid language. This is language that paints a picture in our minds
and gets us excited. So you're, so you can
say a picture of this. You're in a sterile, icy room. The needle creeps ever closer
to your vulnerable skin. It's cold, Metallic surface glints under the harsh
fluorescent lights. Yes, your heart
pounds in your chest. The moment arrives, the
needle's cruel bite. A searing sting that punctures not just your skin but
your peace of mind. A foreign substance invades
your body and violates you. Feeling helpless and violated. A violation that leaves you feeling helpless and
violated the fear, the anxiety, the terror,
all for a vaccine. But what if there is a way to shatter this horrifying cycle? A way to step out of the shadows and into the light
of protection. Our revolutionary invention is your beacon in the darkness, your fortress, against the
paralyzing fear of injections. Right Now in some cases
this might be over the top. This is purely made
up and the purpose of this copy is not to get
you to buy any product. It's just to illustrate the
idea of vivid language. And for reference, I did
not write any of this. This was completely written
by Chat BT specifically, but artificial intelligence,
I just asked it to take this and write it
with more vivid language. And this was the output
really powerful. There can be ways to
improve upon this, right? We'll talk about this
in more in depth. But the key here is,
just like I said before, our default is to
talk about us and not the customer,
the individual. Our default is also to be simple and just say,
here's what it is, right? Just basic, like here's what our product does,
it's cool, whatever. Add a few other words in there. But the key here is, in general, throughout your copy writing, throughout the formulas that
I'm going to share with you, to use more adjectives, describe things a bit
more by doing this. If you're trying to get
across a certain fear, you're going to
amplify the fear. If you're trying to get
across a certain solution, you're going to
amplify the solution, if that makes sense. Okay, so I'll go through one more example that I
think we can all relate to. By the way, little fun fact. The most consumed food
in the world is pizza. Or I should say, the most widely consumed
food in the world is pizza. So I'm using it
for this example, Typical language bite into
a slice of our delicious, cheesy New York style pizza. A lot of people say,
oh yeah, that's good. Copywriting, You
know, that's good, I like it, that's
horrible copywriting. Does that get you emotional? Does that get you excited
to eat a pizza, pizza? It makes you think about pizza, you're like, yeah,
that sounds nice. Does it get you emotional?
Because it doesn't get me emotional at all.
It is so bland. So what do we do to
fix this, right? What do we do when
we read through a copy and we're like, you know, maybe I followed the formulas in the course and I applied
some of the techniques. But at the end, it
just falls flat. It just feels, you
know, like, you know, if you've left Coca Cola open all night and it's completely
lost its carbonation, that's what this is
right here on the left. So here on the right,
we're going to take the same concept and add a
lot more vivid language. So imagine a hot slice of New York style pizza
fresh from the oven. The golden bubbling cheese. A molten sea of flavor dotted with islands of
succu***t pepperoni, the crust, a perfect symphony of crunch and she dusted with
a light snowfall of flour. The aroma, a tantalizing
dance of fresh dough, tangy tomato and rich melting cheese that fills the air,
beckoning you closer. And then the first bite, the cheese pulls away in
a long, gooey strand. The sauce bursts
onto your tongue, a riot of sweet, tangy, and savory feel. The crunch of the crust, the perfect counterpoint to the soft Uzi cheese and sauce. This is not just a pizza, this is an experience, a journey of flavor. A slice of heaven. Dang. I'm
gonna tell you right now, I'm ready to eat
a piece of pizza. And I didn't even
write this right. Again, this was written by
artificial intelligence. But you can see if you're trying to sell your pizza, right, simply by adding
more vivid language, you're significantly more likely to convince the person
to take action. So again, we're
combining literally all of the best elements
of copywriting. So you know what type of
words to use, like you, your and first name,
using vivid language. Using the elements of persuasion being benefits based, right? And then adding in
features later. All of these kind of combined. It's this one of the most powerful skills and
things that you can do to increase your sales and
improve your marketing effort. So again, the two kind of
keys here are, number one, when you feel like your
language is a bit bland or flat, use more adjectives. Make it more vivid and lively, and artificial
intelligence is going to help you do that
literally within seconds. Number two is use the words you, your address people
by their first name. If you can, those two things alone dramatically increase
your results, right? So go ahead, implement this
with your existing copy, see your results, and start implementing more because
we've got a lot more to cover. So I hope you're excited.
If you have questions, let me know in the
Q and A section. And with that being said, let's go and get to the next video.
16. Write For 8th Graders: In copywriting, there
is something known as the Flesh Kincade Scale. This is basically to
****** like reading level, like a third grade
reading level, an eighth grade reading level, 12th grade reading
level, et cetera. And to keep it simple, the more complicated
your language is, even if it doesn't seem
complicated to you, let's say you have a
Phd and you tend to use more academic language that's actually
going to hurt you, even if you think
it sounds better, it's more accurate language. The more complex, the
higher the reading level is of the language that you're
using above eighth grade, The lower your conversion
rates are going to be, the less engaged your
audience is going to be. Because the reality is, and this is true of any country, that the higher
the reading level, the less people have
achieved that reading level. That's why there's
literally levels, right? So the higher the reading
level in general, the worse your performance
is going to be. But to a point, right, Because by the same standard
it'd be, oh, it's right. At a first grade reading level or at a kindergarten level, we'd be like just having nouns and like nothing
else, like red apple, blue, or sounding like caveman, but it's kind of debated a bit. But in general, the
idea here is right between a sixth to eighth
grade reading level. Again, in general,
how do we do that? Right, So you can use
the Flesh Concad scale or what you can do is use a free app like the
Hemingway Editor app. It's both an application and
you can visit the website. I have a link to this in
the resources section. Like I said currently and for the longest time it's been free. Basically what you do is
after you have a set of copy, go ahead and take that copy and put it into
the Hemingway editor. And it's going to
tell you, as you can see here on the far right, that this current copy is at a seventh grade reading
level, which is good. It'll show you the readability. And if the readability exceeds an eighth
grade reading level, the app is going to give you specific recommendations on
what to do to reduce it. You can do this manually or when using artificial
intelligence. You can just use or
tell the tool, hey, make sure that
this is written at an eighth grade
reading level, okay? Because like I said, the more complex the more people
are going to tune out. They're not going to
understand. Or also, maybe even feel a
little bit offended. Feel like, you know, they're
not the right audience. Like, oh, you're trying
to appeal to, you know, professors at universities,
not someone like me, right? So I'm not the right
person, even if they are. So just in general,
around a sixth to eighth grade reading level is
a good thing to shoot for. Where it's articulated enough to where it sounds
professional and well done, but not too complex to where people don't understand
and tune out. And like I said,
the Hemming Way app has been very, very
helpful to us. But by default, you know, a lot of artificial
intelligence tools kind of incorporate this
through their copywriting. So yeah, really important
kind of point to make, just make sure
that all your copy follows this along
with everything else. And with that being said, let's go and get
to the next video.
17. The MOST Important Words You'll Ever Write: In this section of the course, you're going to get six
proven copy and paste copywriting formulas that
are going to give you structure and give you a step by step process of what to write, when to write it, how all that's going to be answered
here in this section. But basically the bigger kind of building blocks of your copy. Because before we talked
about those smaller elements that you can kind of weave
through and include. Now I'm giving you kind of the structure to write with
that's really going to make things easier
because it's really easy when you kind
of know what to do on a piece of paper or
going and typing on line, versus trying to come up with
something new every time. First things first, talk about the most important copy,
that is headlines. Headlines are everywhere,
both on line and in person. So you know, e mail, subject lines,
product detail pages, even in print advertising, Youtube videos, they'll
have different names. But in copyrighting,
these are all headlines. They're the first kind
of big piece of text that anyone will read before they read the
rest of your copy. So they're the most
important for two reasons. And they have two purposes. So headlines wherever
they may appear. Right? That kind of, that first big line of text anywhere, whether that's an ad in
a blog article anywhere, is number one to grab attention. Okay. If you don't grab someone's attention,
then what happens? They leave and go
somewhere else. They don't even look
at what you have. Then think about all the
effort that's wasted. Right? You have the most
beautiful copy ever, but your headline
sucks. It's all gone. The primary goal is
to grab attention. Some different ways of grabbing attention are include numbers. Okay. So you can kind
of write this down for your first line of
text is your headline. What do you include
in your headline? Some different ideas, it obviously depends
on your purpose. But numbers, the
person's name benefit, so a big kind of benefit or
a big pain point, right? So highlighting your pain, Highlighting this amazing
benefit, including their name. This is especially
true with you e mail subject lines, numbers. And the second goal is to get the reader to read
the next line, right? And that really goes in
tandem with the first of grabbing their attention because the purpose of every single line of copy that you write is to get the reader to
read the next line and you know what
the next goal is. The whole purpose is to get them to read the next line and next line all the way through. And once they're finished,
to get them to take action, you only want to write
enough copy to where someone understands
they're compelled and they're ready
to take action. In certain cases, what
we call long form copy, the longer it is,
the longer form it is, might require more. So the more expensive a product or service
you're selling, the more copy you're
going to need, the less expensive a
product or service is, the less copy you need. Shorter form. Right?
And sometimes you don't hardly need any copy, you can just sell
it with images. But in general, right, that's kind of the
two things there. But you're going to
write enough copy to get someone to take action. But again, just like
with the headline, you're goal the headlines
to basically like a magnet, you're going to
suck in attention and funnel them into
the rest of your copy. So it's like a magnet.
Suck in, take them down. You suck the reader in,
take them down, and so on. Right to read the next, and
the next, and the next. But the headline for these reasons is the
most important copy. So if this is the
most important copy, because remember if
you have, again, going back to the e mail
with a subject line or a Youtube video with a title, or a Facebook ad for example. And you can't grab
someone's attention with the headline of your copy. They're not going to read
the rest of your copy. They're going to tune out
and go somewhere else. So think about what most
copywriters do is they spend the majority of effort
on the body of the copy. You know, kind of the long form, all of that follows
after the headline. Just all the remaining copy is where all their effort goes. And then at the end of the
goal, here's a good headline. You want just as much effort
put into the head line, If not even more
effort. That's right. Even more effort into the headline than
anything else because, and I'm going to repeat it
because it's so important, if it doesn't grab attention and get them
to read the next line, it's useless, then everything
else you have is useless. Yeah, it's like super,
super important. And I wish someone would
have told me the sooner. I don't know why more people
aren't talking about this in the copywriting
world, but headlines. The first line of text
that someone sees, that's what a headline is, and that's the purpose of it
and why it's so important. That's the first building
block that we have. Again, in order to make
a headline effective, consider adding in numbers, someone's name, or
addressing them by you. And your highlighting a big
benefit or a big pain point. This is really going to grab
attention and can you use your own common sense look
for headlines that exist. And I'd recommend that you
do this like I've done here. Anytime you see a
headline in any form, online or in person, you take a screenshot or cut it out and have a folder that you keep headlines that you can always refer back to
to give you inspiration. So you're like, wow,
all these headlines. They grabbed my attention,
they got me interested. Even if you're not
their target audience, you can recognize good
copy when you see it. Anytime you see it, it exists
in all different forms. Keep a file and you can have
headlines folder, boom. Fill that folder with headlines. And we'll talk about
bullet points called the actions ata pass,
all these other things. You have folders for them, you can take those elements. You can have, you
know, for Youtube, for e mail, for blog writing. Right. And just have that
basically vault that you can go through before you start writing copy to
give you inspiration. And it's really going to kind of help you
with that process. So yeah, I think
I've stressed enough about the headlines and
with that being said, let's go ahead and
watch the next video.
18. Shoot With Bullet Points: All right, so we've
already talked about the importance
of headlines. And now we're going to cover an also very important building
block of copyrighting, which are bullet points or
also known as bulleted lists. If you've been
anywhere in the world, especially in the online world, on e commerce sites, e mails, blog posts, social
media captions, Facebook ads, you'll find bullet points everywhere,
bulleted lists. And very simply, what bullet points are or the purpose of them
is any time that you're trying to convey
several features or benefits to your target
audience, use bullet points. That's pretty much it.
And the reason for doing this is the concept that
most human beings are lazy. We're lazy readers, right? We want the information
that we want, but we want it in the easiest
way, digestible possible. So because of this, on average 97% or so of humans will
prefer reading a list of bullet points that contain
basically conveying the same information versus several paragraphs
of information. Why? Because it's easier to read. So obviously, pretty simple, but a really important point
to make I bullet points very often in a lot of my own
copy across multiple sites. So it's really powerful
when writing bullet points. One of the key points
that I want to bring out is this idea of the seven
plus or minus two rule. There's this phenomena in psychology where
most human beings are able to remember seven plus or minus two pieces
of information. Another way of saying
this is most people are able to remember five to
nine pieces of information. If you ask someone, for example, hey memorize these five digits, right, these five numbers,
most people can do that. Then we say hey memorize
these seven numbers. It's like, okay, about 50%
of people can do that. Then we're say hey memorize
these nine numbers. Then about 25% of
people can do that. The more information, again, that you ask people
to memorize in their short term memory or long term memory, it
doesn't really matter. The more long that is, the less it's going to be
retained and remembered. So because of that,
we want to keep our content short.
Not too short. We're not able to convey any
information or any value, but short enough to
where we can convey the information that
we need without overwhelming the reader. So pretty straightforward. So that's why as a
very general rule, when writing bullet points, I recommend 5-7 because most people can remember
this information. The only time that
this is different is when you're in sales mode. And let's say you're just
trying to show your, you know, target audience. That you just deliver
so much more of your product and service
then your competitor. That could be a
good opportunity to where maybe you just bold like the first five or the
most important kind of pieces of information or selling points are right
there at the top, those five kind of
pieces of information. And it may be a little
bit less bold, Lighter, you have like another five or so pieces of
information below that to where you're kind of intentionally overwhelming
your audience, showing them, there's
just so much like, so much value that they
can't even remember. That's really the
only realistic way. And there's probably
other instances where you want to kind
of break this rule, but overall five to seven
bullet points when writing. Super helpful. Like
I said with this, I use bullet points
all the time. And you can see it for yourself. Look at content long content that doesn't use bullet points. And look at that, that does. And then you can tell me
which do you prefer reading. So again, we have the headline first we have some
copy which will actually show you
some other formulas of knowing exactly
what to write. And kind of within
that, you know, after the headline and
before the next element, we have kind of bullet points
depending on the ***gth. There could just be one set. Sometimes there's no
need for bullet points either depending on
what your content is. But the longer your content is, the more likely you're going to need to use bullet
points somewhere in that content to help break up the information and make
it easier to digest. Also going back to
our Amazon example, Amazon is the largest e commerce marketplace
in the world. One of the most valuable
companies and revenue generating companies on the
planet in human history. And what is the
most important copy for an Amazon listing? By the way, this is even
more than the title, although it should be. But that's a copy, It's the bullet points that
you see right here. So the bullet points are
right next to the images. They're right next to the Add to Cart button on Amazon
or the Buy Now button, which are the most important. So you know, Amazon has done
a lot of market research. They've spent tens of millions of dollars
on market research. And they've concluded, you know, this is the best kind
of copy for us to have in order to get
people enough information, but summarize it to get
them to actually buy. So again, headlines are still
the most important, right? First, whatever that first line of texts that
people are reading. But also very, very important
to use our bullet points. And again, there's
a lot of data that backs this up in psychology, it's not just for
no reason, right? So yeah, I hope you find
this valuable and helpful. If you have questions,
let me know and let's go ahead and get to the
next building block.
19. Always End Your Copy With These Words: If you've been in the
digital marketing world for any period of time, you've likely come across
this acronym known as CTA. Kind of confused
about what it is, what it stands for,
how to use it first. Cta stands for Call To Action. And it's very
simple. All this is, is telling the viewer
what to do, right? So for example, add
a cart. Now buy. Now learn more
book consultation. Send us a message. Click here. Listen. Now all forms, just telling someone to
do something, That's it. So it's very simple, and all of your copy should end with some
form of call to action. You can also incorporate call to actions within your copy, but always end with
a call to action. Why? Because there have been numerous studies on the power and impact of call to action. Basically, you know, AB
testing, meaning like having, let's say like a blog
post or a Facebook ad or some kind of content that does
not have a call to action, No button, no text
that says what to do. And then sending
50% of the traffic, or for 50% of the experiment, having a call to action and looking at the difference
of the results. And of course, the easier it is for someone
to take an action. Let's say they're watching
Youtube video like, hey subscribe now, it's
like, oh easy, boom. You know, versus hey, go
buy this $1,000 product. Right? It's going to be less
people doing that, right? The easier the action,
the more action is taken. And the more difficult
or the more sacrifice that's needed from the viewer, the reader, then, you know, the less the action is taken, you know, and that's
pretty obvious. So because of that, this
ranges quite a lot. However, at the bare minimum, if you're not using
called actions already, in your copy you will
see anywhere from a 34% to 121% or
even higher increase of people taking
your desired action. What does that mean?
So if you have a blog and you want to get
more subscribers, right? 30 to 121% more subscribers, just including a call to action, which is what could say, subscribe to your
newsletter for, you know, weekly valuable tips on ketogenic diets or
whatever it might be, or add to cart now or
buy now, Shop now, book a consultation,
even view the menu, whatever that action is that you want your viewers to take. In that stage, you're going to dramatically increase just by having that short text. You should always
have it at the end now, like okay,
somewhere I get it. Like we should always
have a call to action at the end of our copy, you just telling someone to take an action that we want
them to take. I get it. Because by telling
someone psychologically, we're just more likely to, we actually like to be governed, we like to be told what to do. There's actually this
very interesting without getting
too much into it, in Norwegian experience,
or I believe it was somewhere in one of the
Scandinavian nations, of course. And they did an
experiment with kids. They put kids into a playground and they had basically
two sets of kids. They put kids into a
playground that had no fences and a playground
that had fences around it. So kind of like a playground
that was more open Right. And more free. And
the other playground where is fenced in and they put kids into the playground with fences.
Kids kind of played. They went on the slides and the monkey bars and all
that kind of stuff, and had fun with the playground
that had no fencing. The kids actually tended to congregate in the center
and not really do anything, just kind of like huddle
because there was this fear. And we actually kind of like
having those guard rails. And we actually like
being governed. We like being told what to do
to an extent which is very, very interesting, contrary
to what we might think. But again, we're
kind of, you know, hitting that emotional brain and then hitting
the rational brain. So anyway, adding a call
to action at the end. Do this with all
of your content, you'll immediately
increase sales and subscribers and you know, whatever your desired action is. And also what I kind of want to mention here is I mentioned, you can also use this throughout your content and you
may be wondering, okay, aside from just
using it at the end, which is pretty simple, like the last line
of text should be, your call to action
isn't longer copy. For example, a blog post
article because I know a lot of you that are watching
this are blog writers. Is if you have some
kind of relevant, valuable call to action
that you can include. Like for example, it's a blog article about
financial freedom. And there's actually like, hey, step one is
make sure you know your personal expenses
and you kind of have a little blurb in
your blog article about tracking your
personal expenses. Here's how to do it, Here's
a bullet point list of here's the main expenses that most people have to make sure you should be tracking. And then with that for a call
to action for that section. So it kind of ends
that little section and then the blog
article continues on. Is you click here to get our free financial track
or Google spreadsheet. It's like a free
Google sheet tool that users can use to
track their expenses. So that's great. And basically
they give their name, their e mail in return
for that free tool. Instead of just taking that
and including it at the end, it's actually really relevant to that section on
tracking expenses. So you want to include it in that section so just
in case you have longer copy and there's
certain kind of call to actions that
make sense within, you can kind of include that
somewhere within the copy. But if you're not
really sure, just make sure you
include at the end. And again, what are
call to actions? Any of these and more, just telling someone to
take an action. And it can literally
be two words long or a little
bit longer as well. And by the way, if you go
ahead and take a look at this course description as well as the bullet
points and tell me, do I have a call to
action at the end, right? And there's a reason
for it. So yeah, I hope you found this
valuable, super simple. All these little elements and building blocks that we
add are just going to increase and increase
the conversion rate and the power of
your copywriting. So Yeah, hope you're finding
this valuable And Yeah, just kind of recap. You
know, we have headers. That first line
of text, the most important sucks in the reader, grabs their attention, gets them in somewhere within
our longer copy, we'll have bullet
points at the end. We always have a call to action. Now as you can see here from these building
blocks, it's like, okay, so should all of our
content just have a header, a set of bullet points,
and a call to action? And that's it. Of
course not, right? There's a lot more that
kind of goes into it, but those are kind of some
basic building blocks that I like to use that
kind of makes sense. And I'm actually going
to share with you two super important
formulas to where you know exactly what to
write, when to write it. So instead of like
getting a piece of paper out or you're on your
laptop and you need to kind of write copy
for a sales page or for an e mail newsletter and you're not really
sure what to do. I'm going to show you
exactly how to eliminate writer's block forever
using a couple of formulas. And we'll learn more about
Ata in the next video. So let's go ahead and get to it.
20. Eliminate Writer's Block With AIDA: Let me know if you've ever
run into the situation, you have a blank page or a
blank screen in front of you, and you have a project
where you need to write some amazing copy regardless
of what it's for. And you just look at the
blank page and stare at it, not really knowing
how do I start this? What's the next thing
I write after this? How do I know that the copy that I'm writing is
structured the best? How do I know it's
the most convincing, persuasive, and the
best that it can be. And you basically take
forever to start writing. And as you're
writing, you're not confident in your
writing, right? So every writer has come
across writer's block. And especially true
with copywriting, and that is because we lack proper frameworks
that we can use to essentially copy and
paste into our writing. So I'm going to
cover a couple of frameworks where we take
these frameworks and we apply the building blocks and the elements that we've already covered here in the program, and then kind of merge them
here into these frameworks. And we'll basically
know, you know, kind of overall what to
write for every situation. And the first one we're
going to cover is called Ida, or Ada. Attention, interest,
desire, and action. This follows the
psychological flow that someone goes through
before they take an action. Whether that's purchase,
whether they subscribe, whatever, that
might be attention. Right, Step one is we need
to grab people's attention. Again, going back to
the headline example, how can we really grab
someone's attention? Next is we need to
stimulate their interest. Get them interested in
our product or service. Next, once they're interested, right, then we need to
increase their desire, right? So they're interested,
then we're like, okay, you're interested,
you're hooked. Boom, Let's just lay on
the value of they're, wow, okay, I'm super
interested in this now. I have a bunch of desire for
this product or service. Then what do you do
with someone who has a lot of desire to purchase or to take
action for something that you have. Then you
tell them what to do. Right, here's what you do, starting obviously, it
starts with a headline. It ends with a call to action. And in the middle,
there's a good chance we'll use bullet points
there somewhere. But this is the overall
framework and the best way to show you is to give
you some real examples. These are completely generated by artificial intelligence. I didn't edit these at all. Here we have an
example of Ida for pest control service and specifically an eco friendly
pest control service. All right, and the very simplest
form fed up with pests, but worry about
harmful chemicals. Our eco friendly pest
control service uses safe, non toxic methods to
rid your home of pests. Imagine a pet free home without compromising the health
of your family and pets. Call us now for a free
consultation to reclaim your, your peaceful pest free home. Okay? Right. Really
straightforward. And what I like to do, and
this is really kind of an important overall kind
of writing secret is what? A lot, another kind of
chal***ge that a lot of copywriters run into is trying to make things
perfect as they're writing. Big mistake just even
if you think it's crap, write down your copy, just write down your overall framework and it's
going to sound awful. There's going to be grammatical
errors, all of that. That's fantastic. Write it down. Kind of get it out
of your head first and then improve upon it. Or better yet, just have
an A. I do all of this by kind of showing
you both the manual and then how this applies to AI, But yeah, just kind of write
this down so you can see. It's like, okay, maybe for a short kind of copy of Facebook
ad, this would be great. But you may also be thinking
maybe this isn't enough though for my target
audience to ultimately, you know, call us for
free consultation. So if that's the case, then in each of these sections, what needs to be added, right? Do you know, is the interest
side a little bit lacking? Then we know we need to increase that side and maybe
add some more copies. Just some additional
lines of text we need to, you know, include in that literally kind of, you
can see that section. Or maybe it's the desire,
or maybe it's all of them. A little bit more
to grab attention, a little bit more in the
interest, more for the desire. And then maybe we keep
the action the same. So just get it out even though
kind of the bare bones, just the basic, even
if it's fairly short. And then go in and kind of expand on each section
and play around with it. Again, that's kind of the
old traditional manual way, but I'll show you how this
is done way better with AI. We're just giving you kind
of a real world example. So I hope that
makes sense, right? Just when you don't
really know what's right, use the Ata formula and you
know your target audience, Know what platform they're on, what kind of action you're
trying to get them to take. And then, you know,
use the Ata formula. Expand on it if you need. If not, keep it as is. It can be as short
as four lines. All right, next. This is, let's say we're trying
to sell some headphones. Okay, On line. So frustrated with poor sound quality
from your headphones, experience the
immersive, crystal clear sound quality of our high
performance headphones. Imagine losing yourself
in your favorite music with every note perfectly
delivered to your ears. Order your pair to
day and elevate your audio experience
to new heights. All right, so there
are some ways I think I would kind of
improve upon this a bit, but just to give you a
very simple example. And then our last example here is for an AI
copywriting course. Who would be crazy enough to
create that first attention? Tired of spending hours writing copy that doesn't
convert interest. Discover the power of A I and copywriting with our
comprehensive course. Imagine crafting compelling
copy in just minutes, boosting your
convergence and having more time to focus on
growing your business. Enroll in our AI
copyrighting course today and revolutionize your
copywriting process. And by the way, go ahead and look at our own
course bullet points, our description, our subtitle, and you let me know
if you see some of the formulas and
the elements that we've covered up
to this point in the course being used
in the course itself. That's why I kind of
wanted to add this in here as a real world examples
that you can actually see. So yeah, I use the
Ata formula a lot. I'm also for those of you who are writing kind of sales pages, long descriptions to warmer audiences that
are ready to buy, I have an entire template for you that sort of
incorporates Ata, but really blows it
up and maxes it out, which will cover in a
few videos from now. But this is a great,
great starting point. Literally by applying this
framework as well as the next couple frameworks that
I share with you here, you'll never have
writer's block again. You'll know exactly
what to write, when to write it, and yeah, improve your results builds your confidence, gets
better conversion. So yeah, it's really amazing. It's actually probably one of the most powerful
parts of the course. So yeah, I hope you
found this valuable. Of course, if you have
any questions as always, let me know in the Q
and A section of that. Being said, let's go ahead
and get to the next formula.
21. PROVEN Copywriting Formula #2: PAS: Similar with the Ata formula. One of my favorite
copyrighting formulas to use is the Pass formula, also known as the problem
agitate solve framework. Basically, I showed you Ata and now I'm showing
you a new framework. And you may be wondering, you're showing me two
different frameworks. Which one do I use? How
do I know when to use it? Basically what I
encourage you to do is create two versions. Whatever copy you're writing, have one version,
follow the Ata formula. Have the second one follow
the pass or problem. Agitate, solve
formula, and then get into the mind and the heart
of your target audience. Using the research that
we already conducted, get into their mindset and their emotions and then
read both to yourself and determine which one
is more persuasive or if you're familiar
with AB testing like I hinted on before. Where you basically
50% of your traffic, you send to one set of copy and 50% see the other and you see which one has higher
conversion rates, higher click through
rates, all of that. If you have access
to AB testing, then you can AB test with both and see which
is more effective. Sometimes eight is going
to be more effective. Other times pass is
going to be also, for certain people, eight
is going to be better. And for other parts of
your target audience, pass is going to be better. So it's like a mix of both. But basically what I'd like to do is create two versions of copy using those two overall
different frameworks. And then I wonder myself in
my target audiences eyes, which is more compelling to me. And then I kind of move
forward with that, or sometimes I'll
get into mixing things, but it's not
really necessary. You can just follow and
stick to one framework. Okay, so how does this work? Again, best way to learn
is by actual examples. So pass problem. Are you tired of your smartphone constantly running
out of battery, just when you need it the most? Yes. Imagine being stranded in an unfamiliar place with
your phone's battery dying, Leaving you without
access to maps, contacts, ride handling apps. The anxiety, the helplessness,
the frustration. It's a nightmare that no one
should have to experience. Our ultra long
lasting smartphone ensures that you
never have to face the situation with
the battery life that lasts up to 48 hours
on a single charge. You can navigate, communicate, and enjoy your favorite apps without worrying about
running out of power. Stay connected. Stay safe with our ultra durable
smartphone add to cart now. Right. Very simple. And again, each
of these sections can be blown up a bit more. I'm just keeping it very simple so we can really highlight each and another point
that I want to make here. So obviously our first line
of copy is our headline. So right there in the headline, two really important things
I want to note in general, like I said before, using numbers is really powerful
to use in headlines. And also asking questions
as you've seen also in the Ata examples is really powerful addressing people
by their first name. If you're able to or
really dive in like are you a struggling freelancer
who is trying to X, Y, Z? It's like, oh, that's me, right? And so you have, you
know, let's say, one form of copy
targeting freelancers, another one targeting,
you know, entrepreneurs. Another ad that's targeting, you know, I don't know who
else, College students, right? So different groups and then you have slightly
different copy even though they all
have the same pain that kind of tailors to them. Getting a little bit more
advanced here, but yeah, using numbers and questions
and really directly, you know, targeting
your specific audience are the best headlines. And again, really sucks in the reader, grabs
their attention. Because in general, humans, humans experience more fear from pain than they do
happiness from pleasure. That makes sense.
So for example, when someone makes $100 the
amount of happiness they feel is smaller than the
amount of pain they feel when they lose $100 right? Losing $100 generates more
emotions by about three times. It's kind of difficult
to exactly quantify, but you feel more pain than
you do happiness basically. It's the same reason with a
lot of Youtube thumbnails. As a random note that you'll see a lot of people with
like sad faces or like, oh my gosh, you know, it got scammed or whatever happened. But more kind of playing
on people's fears or emotions or negativity because that can actually
have way more impact. So yeah, so really
highlighting people's pains is extremely powerful way to
hook people in, right. Subconsciously, they're like, oh my gosh, you get my situation. Like you get it like
it's almost like, you know, you're their friend or their
guide and you're like, oh my goodness, like I'm going to listen to you
because you get me, you understand me, and my pain. So that's why the market
research side is so powerful. Quickly run through
a couple other examples going back
to pest control. Are you struggling with a pest infestation in your home, right? You just boom, there's a
problem. Picture this. You're enjoying a quiet evening at your home when you spot a cockroach scurrying
across the kitchen floor. The side of pests in your
home can be unsettling, disturbing your peace
of mind and making you question the cleanliness
of your living space. Our comprehensive pest
control service is your shield against these
unwelcome intruders. We use eco friendly
solutions to eliminate pests from your home and
prevent future infestations. Restoring your peace
of mind and ensuring a clean pest free environment
book for a free call now. And lastly, babysitting service. Are you finding it
difficult to balance your work commitments with the need to care
for your children? Problem agitate, right? Imagine the stress of juggling
important work calls and meetings while trying to ensure your children are
safe, fed, and engaged. The constant multitasking
can leave you feeling overwhelmed and
exhausted and guilty. Our professional babysitting
service is your life line. In these chal***ging times, certified babysitters
provide safe, engaging care for your children, allowing you to focus on
your work without worry, enjoy peace of mind, knowing
your children are in good hands with our reliable,
experienced babysitters. And click now to
learn more, right? So the only other note I
want to mention about past, which as you can see,
it's really powerful, really engaging, is for that S section, sometimes
it's not enough. It's like, hey, here's
what we do and it's really great to kind of like hit
on, hey, here's what we do. Here's basically our unique
selling proposition. Here's how we're unique
and how we can help you. It's like, great, I get it. But they still have
some questions are I get what you're saying, but you need to back it up. So maybe with some
testimonials, right? Social proof, with some
additional bullet points of features or benefits that you have that you offer,
that no one else does. Maybe a risk free promise. Again, going back
to our principles of persuasion or a collection of those things which we're
actually going to cover more paths is really great. Again, it really depends
on your objective. But many times I find that for that section a little
bit more is required. And that's why I've created
this next framework that builds off of path
that I use often. Anytime I have
product descriptions, I'm writing website copy like a salespage
or a landing page. I'm creating a promo video
like for this course. I use this for sales focus content that I'm
about to share with you. Which, which is really powerful and it builds off
this framework. But just letting you
know that, that section for this solution, right? You got to think how convincing
is this to my audience? Is this convincing
enough for them to click down to learn more or
do I need a little bit more? So maybe I have
click down to learn more and then you
continue on with, you know, he's
raving testimonials. If you don't believe
us, you know, here's some additional
things that we do, whatever that might be, okay,
and it'll make more sense. And this is why I really like this next formula that's
a bit more custom, not a common copywriting formula that you're
likely going to find anywhere else that I find extremely powerful that
builds off of this. So yeah, hope you're excited. This is super powerful
stuff and some of the most helpful content
that has helped me personally to generate millions of dollars
from copywriting. So that further to do, let's go ahead and get
to the next video.
22. Magic Sales Script (Inside): I'm extremely excited
to share this video and this template with
you because this is my favorite sales
script overall, kind of copyrighting formula. Basically, anytime you're
trying to sell something, which will happen at some point, whether that's let's say
you have a sequence of E mails and the last E mail
you're trying to sell, or you're creating
a landing page to sell a product or service, or to get people to book
an appointment with you, or it's a product description
or a course description. Or maybe you're making a
promo video that you put on Youtube or that you use on your landing page,
whatever that might be. I use this all the time when
trying to sell something, and it also works
for other actions other than trying
to drive a sale. And it'll make more sense
as we get through it. So this is what I like to call the magic sales script formula. Now before I get into it, I just want to give a quick
shout out to Jim Edwards. Jim Edwards is the author
of Copyrighting Secrets. It's one of my favorite
copyrighting books of all time. And I have a list of my
top copywriting resources at the end of this program, and Copyrighting Secrets is one of the books that
I highly recommend. This formula is based on a lot of kind of formulas that
he has talked about, but I've kind of
manipulated a bit and ultimately improved upon. I'm really excited to
share this with you, okay? So I'm going to go through
the formula first. It'll somewhat make sense,
but then it'll really click when I show you a
real world example, okay? And like I said, I use this all the time and it works so well. I love it and it's
so easy because when you have a lot
of copy to write. When you break down
that copy into small sections where
you just have to focus on one section at a time. It makes everything way easier. Instead of like you
have to write all this, it's like, I don't
know what to do. You have a formula to follow. Okay, so let's go
ahead and get to it. So of course what
do we start with? Right? This is a compilation of everything we've
learned in the course, basically put into one template. That's why I really like this. So first we start with what
our most important copy, which is the headline and a good overall way to
structure is this. How without blank specifically how to achieve desired goal in just short period of time
without thing they fear most. How to achieve
financial freedom, Eliminate financial stress in just 30 days without any accounting
experience or whatever. Next, subheading this works, even in second thing
they fear most. Again, you're writing toward
your target audience. Remember, if we go back to our customer
research spreadsheet or target audience spreadsheet, we have internal
and external fears. What is the biggest internal
fear that your audience has? And what's the biggest
external fear? These are the two biggest fears. And you want to touch on
both internal and external, which is why, you know, I included it in that template. So it obviously varies. Sometimes your target
audiences biggest fear is going to be internal,
sometimes it's external. Either way up here you're
going to have, let's say, internal fear and then down
here is external subheading. This works, even if you
are drowning in debt. Let's say again,
just as an example. So the second thing they fear, most headline, that
grabs the attention, here's what you're
going to accomplish, here's what you're going to learn or what
you're going to get. And it works even XYZ, okay? Now sometimes I just
want to say this. This is just an exact formula
and framework that I use. If you're using this direct, this doesn't really work so much for my specific instance. It really doesn't
make as much sense in certain cases you
can do without this. So like I said, create the
full kind of sales script, follow exactly
this step by step, and then create a
version where you delete the subheading
and the heading, and then you use the shocking
statistic at your headline. Which still works really
well because it has numbers in it, it
asks a question. It's really powerful. Use this
headline and sub heading. But depending on your situation, because this copy can be written in a number of
different platforms, try also a version
where you just begin here. This is in part one. This is the headline,
or have the headline, this and the shocking statistic and so on, if that makes sense. So anyway, headline makes
sense. Subheading this works. Even if XYZ, okay, then we begin with the
shocking statistic. Did you know that 80, 81% of Americans don't have enough money to cover a flat
tire, right, in their bank? Something like that. Something that shocks
like financial, shocking. Or don't have enough
money for retirement, whatever that might be
and little side hack. Odd numbers are more
compelling than even numbers. So if you have the
opportunity, for example, 79% is more eye
catching and ultimately more convincing
and effective than 80% Even though 80% is more, you know, let's say 79% of
Americans or 80% of Americans, 79% of Americans is more. Why is that? Because
it's an odd number. Why does that work?
Don't really know. It's one of those
psychological tricks. But just in general, again, going back to price, Never
sell something for 20 bucks. Sell it for 1995 or 1997, or even 1999. Why? For whatever reason,
ending in odd numbers, increasing sales and results. So just as a little side hack, I love sharing this with you. Use an odd number for
the shocking statistic. So what is you can go on
Google search for some kind of statistic that relates to your audience and ask
them a question like, did you know that this many
people suffer from this? Did you know that you're not, you know, whatever it might be. So you kind of like really cast their attention like whoa. And I can tell you I've looked at a lot of different
copy and did a lot of different testing and this works really well. It's
really powerful. Did you know that 79% of Americans don't have enough
money to cover a flat tire? The problem is that
blah, blah, blah. And then you agitate their pain. So use visual imagery, write a lot of adjectives, and really dive in and
agitate their pain. How long should this be enough? As short as you need to be, in order to really agitate, be your target
audience, Read through. And you should be
reading through and really feeling that
pain come about. You're like taking the
pain that's already there. You're not creating
pain or creating fear. You're taking the existing
pain or fear that's there and you're bringing it
to the surface, right, For their own good. Hey, you're
struggling with this, you're trying to put
it off to the side. We're going to bring it up and then we're
going to solve it. We're going to solve
it together. Right? You're the hero and we're
your guide to helping solve this problem.
Shocking statistic. Then we're going to
agitate the pain. Now we've got them hooked. We've got them in
this kind of motive, like I'm looking
for a solution man, like I'm glued to this. I need to keep reading to
find a solution. Well, good. Let me introduce you to X, Y, Z product as the solution. Right? Let me introduce you to the Bridgewater Associates group that can solve your problem. Okay, Then we're going to
state our main benefit, which is our unique
selling proposition. So again, taking that
element and putting it here, what are we going to
help them do the most, what is most important to them that we're
really going to help? It's like we're
going to completely, we're going to
create a plan that eliminates your
financial stress. So by partnering with us, we will eliminate your
financial stress. It's like okay, sounds good. But I'm still not sold.
So like you've hooked me emotionally, the limbic system. Now you need to know, basically satisfy my rational
desire with the neo cortex. So then we get into our
five to seven key features. Again, we're just packing
everything we've learned, boom, boom, into
this sales letter. So list five to
seven key features. And I'd like to use
bullet points for this, so like they're sold
on the benefit. They're like, okay, I get it, I agree with it, but like
how do I believe you? Your features are there
to help them believe. Like we're going
to do this first, we have a personal
one on one call based on your
personal experience. Then we create this custom
plan, blah, blah, blah, blah. You know, whatever
that might be. It kind of like it could be a step by step process or it could just be here's
what's included in our product that no one else has or that
we do really well, whatever that is, just
your key features. Now think about this, this
is with any form of copy. Well, I should say this,
you'll rarely ever have 100% of your target audience read through your entire copy. There's always going to be
what's called drop off. Some people that start reading,
they read the headline. Some people are
going to stop here. Some people are going to
get to the subheading, some people are going to make
it to point number three, some to number four and so on. And the further we get down, the more and more runoff there's going to be
that's just unavoidable. But the less runoff or the
less drop off that you have, the better your copy is, obviously because more
people are engaged, more people are reading, and that means more
people are going to take action at the same point, even if there's a few
people that remain. Those people who
make it all the way through are your target, that they are the
most interested. They're in buying mode,
they're ready to go, that's your most
valuable people. Just kind of keep that in mind
the further someone gets, and that's in watching a
video that's in reading copy. The deeper they get, the
better prospect they are, the more powerful data that is. So just kind of keep that in mind, both of those
things are true, people are going to drop
off and the people that continue think about it, right? So we now have made them
aware of the problem. So maybe they were problem
aware, maybe they weren't. But regardless, they know the problem now and they
know why it's important. They also know, remember
they are problem aware. Here they are now
product or brand aware. And here are the features
and benefits. Now what? Right? So we have
awareness, interest. And then now we have desire. Now they have a desire for it. So cold, warm, and hot. Think about both of those.
And the next element we need is credibility. Both from our own words as well as the words
of our customers. And for some reason, this credibility section
got shifted down. I had to kind of
remove it, which is why I didn't see it earlier. But it'll be updated on
the official template. So credibility simply state what makes you credible
and obviously back it up. This many years of experience, again this is appeal
to authority. And we're only doing
this after we've talked heaps about
them, their problem, and now they're at the
point where we're like, okay, we've talked
enough about me, I need to know a
little bit about you, about why you're credible
and how you can help me. So we have a short
blurb about us, right? But in general, we're
talking about them, so you simply state what
makes you credible. Then you include five to
seven customer testimonials, I have to say certain formats, you have to use text. If you have like a website or a landing page where
you're able to use video, short vertical videos of just
asking your past customers, hey, would you mind
recording like a short, either vertical or
horizontal video? Just kind of like on a
phone or it could be on their like laptop or a camera. Of your experience with us, hopefully positive that we
could use on our website, that'd be awesome and many of your customers will be
more than happy to do that. So those are the most powerful. Is those short, what are called ugly testimonials
or ugly videos, Not these highly produced. You know, when people can
see it's authentic and raw, that is more convincing than something that's
pretty and articulate. That almost seems like
maybe it's faked. Simy here, don't use
fake testimonials. Use real testimonials if it's a bit too complicated or you can only use text, you
stick with text. You can basically treat these
as like bullet points where each one is like a
different bullet, which I'll show you how to do. Or having video is actually
really, really powerful. Can have a short little kind of section where we have like three or five videos where highlights that
those are really powerful. But ideally five to seven
testimonials to back that up. And next, this section
here is optional, but if you include it,
it's extremely powerful. It's going to
absolutely increase your conversion rate and that is to add some
kind of free bonus. This could be a free,
valuable service, a free product of some kind. So for example, it could be
like a free consultation. So something that you
would normally charge for, you're giving just part
of that away for free. And a side hack is obviously the most important research that you do is for your customers. But the second most
important research is for your competitors, right? And naturally, if you've been
in business long enough, you are familiar with
your competitors. You know what they do, you
know how they operate. And what's a really
amazing hack is to take your competitors
unique selling proposition. Take one of the key
things that they sell, like their core sale, and add it for free as a
free bonus if you can. That's really powerful
because what does that do if someone's looking at two
different websites, right? Or two different ads or
whatever it might be, and they see your
competitor is selling you a 30 minute consultation. That's what they're selling. And you give away a 30 minute
consultation for free. Or someone else is trying to
sell, you know, their pizza. You give away a free pizza for the first time they come in. Right. Something like that. That is extremely powerful. And what I've done is, for example, for this course, there are other
copywriting courses that just basically, well, in my view, they
don't even cover nearly as much content
as covered here. So I basically give away, right, that content away and then add in that
whole other A I section. Like the whole AI section we have here is an entire course. But I added a whole
other course in a way kind of for free or included,
if that makes sense. Anyway, it's kind of optional. Other ideas are kind of free. Digital products like free
valuable guides or books. Right? The list goes on. There's no right answer. It just trying to think
of something that's valuable to your audience that you could give
away for free. And what's that going
to do? Oh, so you know, if you know, sign up
now or you buy now, you'll get this for
free. That's amazing. You're going to get more
people to purchase, kind of taking
them over the edge or kind of knocking
the horn off, as we'd like to call here
in this last section. So you know, some
people will get sold based on the testimonial
or I'm going to go, I've heard the testimonials, I've seen them, I'm ready to go. Let's
go ahead and do it. And they'll go ahead and
use the call to action. But some still need a little bit, a little bit
more convincing. We're getting closer
and closer to the end convincing more and more people
that are reading through. So free bonus is optional, but it'll definitely
help you if you have it. I'd recommend it next. Definitely encourage
you to have, this is extremely
powerful and important. If you believe in your
product or service, why wouldn't you have
a money back promise? And you may think like, oh like well yeah, if we
gave, let's say this, like enjoy your meal or we
give it to you for free, but then everyone would come in, eat for free, and then
just leave, right? First of all, most people won't, but second of all, there will be a percentage of people who do. They come in, they
eat the sirloin, the potatoes, the
apps, everything. And then they're like,
oh, I didn't like it. That's where you have
some stipulations, but there's always a way to have a risk free
trial of some kind. So software companies do this
really well where you can try the tool completely free for 30 days, then
you start paying. That's an amazing
technique, okay. So this works with anything. So it could be, hey,
come into a restaurant, if I'm probably talking
about it because I'm hungry. But come in as long as you
eat less than, you know, only like 20% If you can take a few bites of your
food and if you don't like it, we'll
give you a refund. Right? If you eat 70% 50% of the meal, you're not
getting a refund. Right? So you can have that
stipulation there as well. Right? So just
keep that in mind, but find a creative way of
having a money back promise. One that I really
like in general, especially for products, is a 30 day money back guarantee. If your product is defective, if it doesn't meet
your expectations, get your money back
within 30 days with no questions asked, right? So something like
that, that is so powerful because the people
get to this point, right? And everyone else
is going to help as well to get them
to take action. This is eliminating
every barrier because that's what
copywriting is, is. Step one, grab attention. Step two, break down
the walls, right? So whale number
one, we broke down with kind of, you
know, our benefit. Then we break the next one
down with the features. We break the next one down with credibility and authority. We break it down
with social proof. We break it down with a
free additional bonus. We break it down with
a risk free promise. And by this point,
basically it's like, okay, you've helped a lot
of people like me, I trust you, you're
knowledgeable, you understand my pain. I believe that you can
actually help me achieve, you know, X, Y, and Z result. You're giving me
added free bonus. You know, there's no risk to me, it's just like we're
knocking down everything. By the time someone
gets to this point, it's like I'd be an idiot
not to sign up, right? And then there's
the last section and these kind of
go hand in hand. It's scarcity with
call to action, Find a way to create scarcity. And keep in mind,
most scarcity is artificial, diamonds
are infinite. We can create diamonds and labs, it's artificial
scarcity that there's only a few diamonds. Diamonds
are really valuable. They're not valuable, they're artificial to where
they become valuable, but they can easily lose
value in the next ten years. Or same thing with, you know, like we're at coals or
like a Adidas or whatever. You know, store Black
Friday sale ends here. Why does it have to end? Why can't it go on forever or why not like
change the dates? It's all artificial. That's
a most scarce ideas. The only scarcity
that's not is like precious gems or gold. There are other kind
of natural resources. It, that's pretty much it. So find a way of like, you know, this week only or
even better yet, today only there's
a countdown timer. So if you have a website having a countdown timer or in your e mail having
a countdown timer. Super powerful, okay? If you have that ability,
go ahead and include it. But or you have to very as say this offer is going to end
soon, so leave it open ended. You know, you're not going
to have the offer forever, but create some kind of offer. 10% off, 20% off, 90% off. It depends, right,
what you're selling, but have it for a limited
time and create it. Keep in mind, all
scarcity is artificial. You've bought based on scarcity.
Include that in there. That's going to dramatically
increase the number of people because the longer someone waits to
make a decision, the less likely they
are to make a decision. So they're sold,
they're ready to go. And now they're like
they're ready to go, but now we're making
them ready to go. Right now, they're
ready to buy now or sign up or whatever. So
then how do we end it? Right, We started
with the headline. We have bullet points, right? And our features, our
testimonials, what do we end with? Called action, right? We have the pass
formula here, right? So you kind of see
how everything pass. Shocking statistics,
agitate solution. So you kind of see how we're implementing all of
these different kind of techniques into one single
powerful sales script. And we end with order now, shop now, book now,
whatever that might be. By now they're ready. We've
knocked down all the walls, so Yeah, I know this is a lot. I know been talking, you've probably seen
how excited I've been getting about this
because it's so powerful. Like I love this
so much, it's like my favorite
copyrighting formula. You're probably like overall
thinking this makes sense, but let's see it in action
in a real world example. Okay, so we're here on the top selling
Amazon FBA course basically that teaches people how to sell their own
products on Amazon. I'm definitely not trying
to promote this course, I'm purely using
this as an example. But this is an amazing use and a really easy way to
display the Soap, right? We have our title here, our subtitle here
for the course, we have our bullet points. As you can see, many
e commerce platforms use bullet points right at the top of some of the
most important copy. Because it converts so well. It's the best, it's better
than traditional descriptions. But think about this. We have a promo video here on the right. We have a title and subtitle, and we have bullet
points all here, what's called above the fold. Above the fold just means
it is at the top of the page on desktop, right?
It's above the fold. We can see it without scrolling, I here's everything
above the fold. I can pretty much
read everything. And I can buy if someone scrolls past all this,
where does that show me? What it shows me is this. All of this is not
convincing enough. They need more. That's
what this shows me. So they're scrolling down. They come here, they can actually view the
course content, so they can actually see
what they're getting. You know, wow, look
at all that I'm getting like all the
content, this is amazing. If they keep scrolling,
what does that mean? That means that they still
need more information. So that's where the
description comes into play and whenever basically
if you're on a platform, because I know we have a
lot of copywriters here who optimize for different
websites like C and Amazon, and Fiber and Upwork, and Tom and their own websites and all these
different platforms. Whenever you have
a section, you're given a section for longer copy. This is a great copy and paste formula in general for
a lot of those sections. Right. And it's good to have either just as your website or a dedicated page on your website or you have a landing
page that you're driving, Facebook ad or Instagram add
traffic to is to have this. This is so powerful, okay? And to make it more powerful is you basically
take this script, you know, again, going a
little bit above and beyond. Record a video and then
your kind of website is you have the video up here,
right, like right at the top. And then you have your sales
script right below it. So you basically have
a video version for people who prefer watching
instead of reading. Then you have the text version. For people who
prefer reading over watching or people wanting to do both, you have
it there for both. So it's like super
powerful to basically have a video version and
a written version. And obviously the
written version can help you with SEO as well, which we covered later
then anyway, okay. Let's go and get to it.
So we was step one, remember I'm doing this
to help you remember, step one we have headline, and then the subheading headline is how to generate real income every two weeks by
creating and selling insanely profitable
Amazon FBA products without any skills
or experience. Okay, So how to achieve your goal in a
short period of time, two weeks, without
the thing they fear. Most skills or experience. I've never sold on line, I've never made products, right. Because they're basically
producing products in China or Vietnam or India, and then selling those products on Amazon kind of in bulk. So it's like I don't have
any skills or experience. That's their biggest fear.
Can this work for me? Yes, I can work for me. I started from nothing and
just like everybody else, we're not born with skills. We have to learn them. So that's our headline then
what's our subline? Subheading this works. Even if you've tried to sell
an Amazon before and failed, or have never sold a
single thing in your life, that's the second
thing they fear most is they've actually
tried before. They're like, yeah, I've tried this whole thing
before, it didn't work. Boom. That's the second thing, based on audience research. And by the way, if this
isn't resonating with you, which there's a good
likelihood it's not, that's because you're
not my target audience. So just keep that in mind. Copywriting is not pretty words. It's, you know, a bridge that
is specifically directed to take the desires and pains of someone and take them
into action, right? It's the bridge between those. And the key here is
a specific audience. So if you don't
find this relevant, it's not intended for you. And that's why. All right, so we have headline subheading. What's the next step? We need a statistic. Shocking statistic. Did you know that
only 2.4% of people were able to quit the job
that they hated last year? Wow, that's crazy.
And by the way, by adding statistics, you grab people's attention
with numbers. And you have a sense of authority that you know
what you're talking about. You have data to
back it. And again, of course, use real statistics. Don't make anything up like
use actual data, of course. So it can be found through kind of a fairly
simple Google search, or you can do your
own survey data. But Google's amazing.
So the problem is that everyone you know, your friends, your
family, professors, coworkers, et cetera,
are lying to you. And most don't even know it. They tell you bullet
points, right? Work your butt off in school. Graduate from a prestigious
university with an overpriced degree that holds less weight
than ever before. Try to get a job that you think you'll love but
turn out despising. Because you hate
the people you work with and you don't seem to have any time to enjoy
what you truly love, Meagerly, invest in
the stock markets. You can retire at age 65 when you have little time
and zero energy left, and then you take your final
breath full of regret. Sounds pretty
depressing, doesn't it? What am I doing here? It
should be pretty obvious. I've stated the pain with
a shocking statistic. I'm agitating as little
text as I need to agitate. That's what I'm
going to have, and I'm really agitating
the pain here. Yet most people feel privileged
to live a life like this. If you want more out of
life, there is a better way. If you want that
life, stop reading. This isn't for you, but if you want more out of life,
there's a better way. And then I'm introducing
the product as a solution. Let me introduce you to
the amazing escape plan. It's the name of the course. Once we introduce,
then what do we have? Our unique selling proposition. Our main benefit in this comprehensive
five in one course, you're going to learn every single tool,
template resource, that you need to achieve financial independence
starting this year. What's the main benefit here? Achieve financial independence
starting this year, which is 100% doable for people to actually go
through and implement. Though unfortunately, like people who read
books, go to university, take courses online, the
majority don't end up doing it because they
kind of just took it for fun and they
never followed through. I recommend that you do.
That's the main benefit. Limbic System. Now
what do we need? Neocortex with features. So I listed what I know are the most important
features using numbers. Because this is actually
a step by step process. If this wasn't
really step by step, it was just kind of, let's say, random features, I would
use bullet points. So these are bullet points,
just numbered bullet points. So product research secrets, cheap quality product sourcing. Amazon SEO master class,
Amazon product launch, profitable Amazon PPC scaling
secrets and even more. Right, I just listed six. So instead of listing more and more to where
people will forget, I just had even more
training tutorials that are not find anywhere else. Okay, so headline subheadline, shocking statistic, agitate, pain product solution,
main benefit features, what's left, authority, right? Our credibility
with our own words, and then credibility with
the words of our audience. Unlike other online growers
that fake screenshots, I've never actually sold
anything on Amazon. I've sold over $1 million in my own private
label products, starting with only $700 and literally zero
experience. All true. My Amazon business has
allowed me to literally quit a horrendous job that literally brought me to tears,
blah, blah, blah, right? Giving my authority and showing number one how I relate to them and also I have the authority to teach them like I have some level of success. There might be people who
are more succesful with me, that's fine, here's
why I'm successful. And some people are going to say they're skeptical
and they're like, okay, prove it like sure. Even if you have this result, how are you going to help me? Here's some raving testimonials and I literally copy and
pasted these in here. Right. So it's just the testimonial and then
the person's name. Now you, to me, this is the
platform I'm writing for has limited the amount of emojis or characters
that I can use. Otherwise I would have made these more bullet point format instead of just paragraphs
like what I had were kind of like five stars here and then the testimonial
five stars here. Then the testimonial to make it visually kind of pop
and separate more. But that's why I'm sure this
is an example you kind of have to work with
what you have here. I have 123456. Yeah, seven, several to just hit home cause I know my audience
for this really needs a lot of convincing. In other cases, I may use
less because they need less, we just pummel them with
testimony like okay, I get it. Also, usually what would I have here after
the testimonials? Right? We can go and kind of see it but it's not popping up. I would need a bonus. You and me made me remove
the bonus section, so I had to kind of get rid of that wording, so I
had to leave that. But again, that's
kind of optional. After the bonus, then
what do we have? We have our money back promise. So if this course doesn't completely change the
trajectory of your life, you and me will refund
your entire purchase within 30 days, right? So try it. If you don't absolutely love it or completely
transformed by it, you'll get your full money
back within 30 days. Pretty good offer, right?
Like that's not bad. You have nothing to
lose and so much to gain added cart now
to get a freer, happier life than ever before. Right now, the only thing
missing from here, again, is the scarcity that I would
usually right in here. But can you see where
the scarcity is? Right here, 5 hours left. So that's why I didn't include here in the copy
because it's here, right above the
added cart button. Right, Because it's
automated through you to me. So that's why I want to
kind of show you that. A lot of times when you get certain templates or formulas, a lot of times instructors will not even show you a
real world example. Those give it to you in theory, but when you put it in reality, again, this is a good blueprint. But that doesn't mean
it's going to be exactly the same in
every situation. Every time you can follow it exactly word for word
and be successful. But as you get more experience, you're going to kind
of have your own ideas like and know your
audience and be like, okay, I'm actually going to change these
elements a little bit. Maybe I'll change the
order of this a little bit and feel free to
experiment with it. I'm telling you if
you plug and play, you'll have results you
want to experiment. You can get even better
results as well. So it's a win win either way. So yeah, there's a real world example and
I can show more. I know this is already
kind of a long video. If you'd like more
examples, let me know. I'd be happy to provide them. But hopefully this
kind of gives you a really good understanding
of how this works, helps you see how
powerful this is. And like I said, I've seen
the difference between trying to write sales copy on my own versus
using this framework. This framework has
been so helpful, I'm really thankful to Jim
Edwards for kind of showing me toward this path and obviously kind of
evolving it from there, but really, really powerful. So yeah, hope you
find this valuable. Like I said, the
magic sales script will be in the resources section of this video, which
you can access. Once you click on the link, go to File and click
on Make a Copy. To make your own copy that you'll have for the
rest of your life. Again, that's a free
bonus that I've added for you to enjoy, to use and see
amazing results from. So I know this is a lot. If you have questions, please let me know in the
Q and A section, and I hope you're excited for the next video. Let's
go ahead and get to it.
23. Write Stellar Social Media Captions With ChatGPT: Video, I'm going to
show you how to have Chachi BT generate viral
social media captions for you, as well as how prompts
work with Chachi BT. And these work with all similar artificial
intelligence tools. First, we're going to have several ones
of these templates. These are free included with
access to this program. And I actually sell
these on their own and you're getting them
basically for free included. They're extremely powerful. What you're looking at
right here on the screen, which you can access in the resources section of this video, is a prompt for chat BT to
generate viral captions. Basically, I've actually
created this exact formula. I'm sure others will likely
copy this formula because it's the best that I found after a lot of experimentation
and research. But basically, if you scroll down here, right,
we see all of this. This is a single
question or prompt for chat BT in order to generate social media captions
of a very high caliber. Because the reality is
when you're using chat PT or other AI tools
and you say, hey, here's my topic, generate five amazing social
media captions or Instagram captions for this. Your quality is
going to be okay. That's why so many
people when it comes to copywriting with chat BT
and other tools are like, oh, they don't do
a very good job because they're not
using the right prompts. So here's how our prompt works. First we start with
the objective. So all of this, we're
literally going to go all the way
down here to go. We're going to copy this and
paste in the chat BT and it's going to create captions for us with almost no effort. That's what's crazy here. So
first we have the objective. All right. Social media
copywriting superstar. Your mission today is to craft of the most compelling,
interesting, hypnotic, and eye catching Instagram captions the
world has ever seen. Oh, and by the way,
sometimes we'll be some spelling errors as I'm kind of playing or
tweaking with this, which are completely
irrelevant to AI. And as long as the
final result is grammatically correct
in everything, it's all that matters. But I'm constantly kind
of playing with these to constantly improve
them as I see fit. So you will create the most
compelling, interesting, and hypnotic
Instagram captions in the world by reviewing
our post information, following every
single do and don't, and reviewing the good and
bad examples we've included. Okay, so what you see here in the salmon
color is what you edit. Okay, so it's not full work. Whenever you hear like
oh chat BT you know, created this for me, it
created most of it for you. Obviously, you have to
give it some framework. Because how is chat going to know what your
target audience is, what you're selling
or promoting, right? You don't really know. So for objective
brand name tone, target audience, content
overview and other information, these are the only parts
you need to fill out. So just give it
basic information, almost like if you're
telling you a team member, hey, make us a social media
post for this, right? And you give them
the information. It's the same thing. That's
why people are kind of saying that chat BT is
replacing a lot of jobs. This is kind of how
it's happening, but it's the reality of it. And you can use it
to her advantage or kind of get run down by it. So with the objective, what are we trying
to accomplish? Let's say announce a
new vitamin C serum. Our brand name is
beauty, Our tone, we want to be happy,
personal helpful, and excited like you're
hearing it from a best friend. All right? And by the way,
this is super important. How you fill this out
completely changes the output. So the more information
you give, the better. But this gives you the
ability to kind of like steer the ship however you
want the ship to move. And the result to be, you
have the power to do that. Target audience, again, this is totally made up
just as an example. Let's say middle aged women who want to feel
invigorated and look better than they did when they
were 20 content overview. So we're introducing
our new vitamin A serum that naturally
eradicates wrinkles, makes you feel fresh and alive. New years will get
10% off this week. Only order from our Lincoln bio. Basically, if you're just a
kind brainstorm like, okay, let me write a social media
caption. You write it out. It's not really
the best written, it's grammatical
errors and all that. That's all you need.
Just write it out there. Very little effort. And if there's other
information you want to give, you can do that here
then, as you see here. So this is all you need to edit. So we have, here's the
overall objective, here's our custom information that we can change
on an ongoing basis. Here's what Chad has to do. All captions need to be
70 to 100 words long. They need to hook the viewer. They need to have
intrigue, suspense, or curiosity in the first
125 characters, et cetera. Basically, what I
did is I've done a huge analysis and I've actually used
artificial intelligence to analyze a ton of data relating to viral
social media captions. And what makes them
better or worse. This is specifically geared
toward Instagram because that's where most content
is kind of created, one of the larger platforms. So you can kind of manipulate
this a little bit. So you can manipulate
any of this, Right? This is not set in
stone, it works as is. And it's specifically
designed for Instagram because that's
the most popular. But if you're trying to
create posts for Linked in or for Facebook or Pintrest
or other platforms, you can manipulate this a bit. You know the number of words, types of hash tags, or no hash
tags, all of that, right? So you can read through yourself and see what
you want to change. Otherwise, this works
perfectly for Instagram. And overall, this
can work really well for other platforms. If you're using for
other platforms, all that I recommend
is do command F, type in hash tags. And if other
platforms, hash tags aren't really relevant,
go ahead and delete that. So like here I would delete
this. And delete this. Right, but you get the picture. So anyway, if you're
using Instagram, which I know most social
media managers are This is going to be
super powerful and we're going to show you how
it works in a second. So, use emojis, educate,
use formatting. Use words in a evoke emotion,
blah, blah, blah, right? So a lot like it has to
do all of these, okay? Really, really important.
And then also important. Don't do these. Don't have long paragraphs without brakes. Don't use generic over
used irrelevant hash tags. Don't exceed 20 hash tags, which is important
for Instagram, avoid being inauthentic or
overly promotional, et cetera. And then what we have.
So here's the objective, here's our custom information, here's what you should do, here's what you should not do, and then here's good examples of either hash tags or content. And here's bad examples. Okay, and then we
have just, you know, a repeat now with all
the criteria above, create the most
compelling, hypnotic, eye catching, unique
Instagram captions. The big mistake that
a lot of people do with Chat BT and AI tools is they kind of do
this over and over like they rewrite everything
over and over again. The key here is to
create a prompt, which is what you
see here in front of you that works time and again to where every
time you use chat BT all you have to do is
edit this information. What both people do is they write all of this
out over and over again. So they write this
and then rewrite this and then
rewrite all of this, and then rewrite all of this. And it's such a waste of
time, it's very inefficient. This is much more systematic. So what do we do
with this, right? We want to create social
media captions and we want to create for Vitamin
C serum and all of this. Watch the magic. I'm
so excited for this. We're finally getting
to the command C to copy all of this here. We're just going to copy
from this Google doc. To make a copy,
simply go to file and then make a copy in
the top left corner, which you'll see when
you access the link. Copy head over to chat BT. If you have chat BT four, use that because your results
are going to be better. But chat PT 3.5
still works, right? We go down here to send a
message command V to paste, you see all of the
information is right here. And then just hit go.
Give it a second. And watch. Actually
we'll scroll down. Here's the caption. Literally,
in seconds feel 20 again. Unveiling Beauty's
Vitamin C serum, your secret weapon
to naturally banish, wrinkles and awaken
your inner glow. Remember the radiance
of your youth? It's not gone, it's just been waiting for
this for this week. Only grab your bottle at 10%
off and let your skin dance. Enjoy. Click the Lincoln
or Bio and embrace the new U and then
the hash tags. And what's great is okay, again, this is a good
overall template. Number one, you can edit the
template because you're oh, I want to manipulate
some things at something's changed
and I no hash tags or want the number hash
tags to be differ, I want the ***gth
to be different. You can edit it here and that's going to
change the result. Also, let's say, you know you want to change
anything about this. Like I can say this
like please break out each sentence into
a separate line. Whatever you want, whatever
your heart's desire is. Because remember,
AI is a helper. Ai won't do everything for you, but it's going to do a
lot of the work for you. That's the way to view it. Because a lot of people
view AI as you know. It's going to do
everything for me here. Obviously, there's some
work that I have to do, but it's doing it way faster. Okay, so really powerful or if you're not happy with the
hash tags or whatever, you can edit directly here within the chat or
you can go back and edit the original template which then affects
the performance. So yeah, but overall, I
mean really well done. So this helps you move through
and if you be like, hey, create seven posts
about this topic, seven different posts,
it'll create seven at once. So this can save a lot of time
when it comes to creating all kinds of content
on social media. And this is really powerful. This, by the way, has taken me a long time to generate
each of these prompts. I don't just kind of create
it, I have to create, test, do different research. So like I said,
this is literally like worth quite a bit
of money on its own. And you're getting it
as part of the program. So I hope you find it
valuable and actually use it because it's super powerful. Do not resell it.
You are not allowed, you do not have
permission to resell. I've had to shut down
a couple of others who tried to resell
our digital products. So I don't want to have
to do that with you, but I assume that's
not the case. So anyway, I hope you
find this valuable, and this is just the beginning. This is actually
probably the least impressive of what we're
going to show you. So without further ado, let's go ahead and get
to the next video.
24. IMMEDIATELY Improve Writing Quality with Custom GPTs: In this video, I'm going
to show you how to immediately increase
the outputs from ChatBT by using custom GBTs instead of the standard
chat bar like you see here. So as we have covered
slash WIL Cover, depending on where you
put this video, right, we have these proven prompts for different types
of copywriting, like email writing or
social media captions or sales pages or scripts
or whatever it might be. So here we have our kind
of email prompt, right? And what I would
do is, you know, go through tweak this a bit
with my own information. Command C to copy, go back and then Command
V to paste right here in ChatBT regardless of whatever version it
will be at that time. So that works. You
can keep doing that. That's do that with
your free account. But also what's currently
included with your free account and how to get better results is by clicking here on
the Explore section under GBT, so click on ExploorE. Now, think about the type of
copy that you're writing. So if that's email writing
or blog writing or whatever, we want a GPT that
is specific to that. Okay? For example,
let's say email. Let's say email writer. So right there in the search, I'm going to ye in email
writer here we go. Email and mail writer,
I'm going to click. And what I like to
see is exactly this. So at least 4.4 stars or higher. If it's 4.3 or lower, that usually means that
it's not the best, even though it
might sound great, it doesn't actually
perform the best. And I like to see thousands
of conversations. So 900,000 conversations,
that means. A lot of people are using this, a lot of people
are reviewing it. It's pretty solid. So that's one option here, which
I'll show you in a second. If we go back to Email
writer, we can click on here. Here we have 4.5 with 600,000.
This is actually new. I haven't seen this before,
which I'm going to constantly update and change
for the better. So this is great.
So this is 4.5. I prefer that over 4.4. I'm going to start
a chat with this, okay? I want to write emails. So basically what this is, if I click on Start Chat, is instead of the generic kind of typical chat bar,
which is general, we actually have a custom GPT that is like Chat GPT honed
in for specific purpose, and this purpose
is email writing. So when I'm writing emails,
I'm going to go here. If I'm writing something else, I'm going to go somewhere
else and so on. I'm doing audience research, I'm going to go and find, for example, let's go to Explore. We can either type here
or let's say I'm doing, I'm analyzing reviews or doing some kind of
competitive analysis, SWAT analysis, whatever
that might be, I click on Research
and Analysis. Right? And then here,
marketing, research, and competitive analysis, that could be great for that purpose. So it depends on
what you're doing. And this is for anything, right? Copywriting and non copywriting related, super, super powerful. And what I'd recommend
is testing this for yourself and seeing the
difference of outputs. Like, for example, right,
Let's go back to our. I've actually lost it, so
we'll go back to email, email. Their AI email writer. We start chat. Okay?
We're back here. Like I said, I copied this. I pasted in here,
hit Enter, right? And the custom GBT is
going to analyze and it is going to go
ahead and write. And I have updated these
prompts, actually, to make sure that it asks important questions before
moving forward, right? So, if there's anything
that's missing, Chachi B is going to ask you, Hey, before I get started, I need these things in order to make this as
good as possible. So it's very professional. I found the results improve. So if you do notice that any of these prompts
are slightly different or even majorly different from what
they were, you know, when you viewed them
in a particular video, that's because I'm continually updating to get better
and better results, which, of course, you're free to take and edit as you like. But I want to make
sure I give you prompts that are ready to go, that work, like, you
know, immediately. And, of course, as
Chat VT evolves, which, of course, it will, to make update videos
about that, as well. So just kind of keep
that in mind that there will be some of
this dynamic change, of course, with both the prompts and with
some of these lectures. And I'm doing my best to stay on top as much as possible as I use this literally on a daily basis to
write copy every day. So anyway, so that's number one. So I recommend doing is finding a custom GBT for your
specific purpose, like I just showed you
in the Explorer tab. Number two is taking this a step higher that so
many people don't do is go to Newhat
Command V. Okay, we're going to put the same
prompt, hit Enter, right? And then you can
compare, you know, two different ones, and you can choose whatever's
better for you, right? So imagine this. Let's say that you
have two options. You can either hire a
professional copywriter, so professional copyrter A, or you can hire two
professional copywriters, and the price is the same. So, it's 25 bucks, I'm making this up $25, you have a professional
copywriter right next to you, right, that's going to
do everything for you. Option B is you
have two for $25. Same price. Why
wouldn't you use two? So it's just kind of a mindset
shift, very small thing, but very powerful is have
two different chats, okay? So you can then check, right? This one didn't ask any follow up questions,
which is interesting. But you can look at the results here. Oh okay, there we go. Versus the results of our previous which
is right here, okay? And we can kind of
compare the results. Another little side note. This right here, I use for a lot of research
and analysis, actually really like this one
for just general writing. I've also found this is
really good for copywriting. So it's called marketing research and
competitive Analysis. For whatever reason,
I've just found it does a really great
job with writing, maybe because of how it's
programmed, and understands. So sometimes it writes
better, for example, just to show you sharing all
my secrets here, Shan GPT. This one's a popular custom
GPT for copywriters. I have found that the
results here they're good, but a lot of times they're
lacking a bit weak, where this one right here, this marketing research
Competitive Analysis GBT actually so far has produced better results.
But things can change. That's why it's always
good to have a couple. And you can just take
the same prompt, put it into both, look at the results and just
choose your favorite. Whatever one just feels
better, sounds better. You know, with all the
principles that you've now learned and have, you
know, been taught, you'll know you're thinking, Okay, I just like
this one better, oh, I love this one, but I like how this one
had the PS section. I'm going to add that
to this, actually. And it's really powerful
to kind of level up. So, you know, long
story long with hachBT it's better to use a custom GBT versus the
general search bar. Both work. You can get great
results with both, but test and see for
yourself and just kind of kind of showing
you how to get the best results as I'll do. So of course, if you
have any questions, let me know in the Q&A, and
let's get to the next video.
25. Increase Your Email Open Rates With AI : In this video, I'm
going to show you how to use AI tools like chat PT to create extremely
high open rate, high click through rate, e mail, subject line and bodies. Using this prompt that
you can copy and paste. Again, linked to this will
be in the resources section. Now if you're skipping
through the course, which I know some
people are doing, and this is the first video
that you're watching. Make sure you go back and watch the other videos on AI
that we have particularly, I showed you in
the previous video exactly how chat
BT prompts work. And what you see here is
another example of a chat BT prompt for e mail marketing to where you have this
copy and paste prompt. All you do is edit this section here with
the salmon colored fat. That's all you have to edit and chatty BT does the
rest of the work. So again, if you haven't
seen that video, go back and watch. But it works very similar. So we already covered
social media captions and now from my e mail
marketers out there, I love this so much. Okay, so what we're
going to do is first open up the prompt, which again will be linked
to the resources section. You'll see a button up here. Click on File and then make a
copy to make your own copy. Once you have that, then scroll down. We're
going to edit. Tone of use tone to use
target audience, E mail, objective and other details tone to use whatever
this is like, what kind of tone do you want to get across to your audience? In this case, let's say
friendly and upbeat. Our audience is middle aged
female cat lovers, okay? Or let's say cat
owners is better. E mail objective. We are a veterinary clinic and we want to get our
past customers to schedule a check up
for their kitty. Right. We want to get
them to come back in and then other
important details. So tell chat, hey, we have the names of each cat in our database as well as the
first name of the owner. So that's kind of
important, right? What other kind of
custom information do you have? This
can be anything. So just think about it. If you were going to
tell a team member, hey, we want to send
out an e mail, blast, what would you tell
them of like hey, this is important
to make sure you include or this is some
important information to have. Whatever that would be.
You're basically doing that because chat BT is
your helper, okay? Everything else,
all this criteria, right, all of these examples you see all here,
this is done for you. You don't have to
do any of this. Okay, so what we're going
to do is up here at Greetings all the way down
to Go Command see a copy. Then we're going
to go to chat PT. Again, you can use either 3.5 or 44 overall is going to work way better, so
that's why I recommend. But 3.5 free version works the exact same
as what you see here. We're going to command V to
copy here in the chat and hit Return to Enter. And
then watch chat. Do the magic. Specifically, you see here your mission today is to create five e
mail subject lines and three e mail bodies. Now, if you want more
subject lines or less, right, We just want to have some different options
to choose from. Because what chat PT does is
creates different versions. And then we can select
whatever version that we believe is the most kind of convincing and the
most compelling. Just just another kind
of general tip is it's a good idea to
create multiple of any type of content with chat PT because we have
multiple to choose from, one is definitely going to
stand out among the others. So anyway, everything
else is done. We scroll down, Look, we see that Chatty has
already been working on it. So first we remember we asked
for five subject lines. Here they are, Catamogy,
then cat's name. Time for a perfect check up. Exclusive offer inside
only three days left. Only three days left sumner. Ensure that. Ensure
pepper's health. Now is pepper happy and healthy. Find out with their
special check up, 50% off kitty checkups
this week only you know. So what's great is
some of these two. Using any AI tool, you may not view as perfect, but it does most of
the work for you. So number one, you've had to basically tell us some
basic information. They have some really
great subject lines. You might want to tweak
them a little bit, but you can choose from any of these or you can
use all of them. Right. They're
already done for you. And it also writes
the entire e mail and tells you each section. So number one, Hi
Sumner Emma here from, you know, whatever company is. And we entered
that in. We notice it's been a while since
Pepper had a check up. How's our furry friend doing? We understand life gets busy, but Pepper's health is vital. That's why we're
offering 30% discount on checkups for the
next seven days, Join hundreds of
satisfied cat owners who trust us with
their beloved pets. Click here to schedule
Pepper's appointment. Now spots are limited. I'm going to tell you as an e mail marketer
myself, this is awesome. Like this is a really
great example and this is just a random example that I
use for teaching purposes. This is a really great e mail. Again, you can edit
as much as you want if you said something like, you know, if there's anything you want to change about this, which I don't really know
what it would be is like, oh, add this detail or whatever
you can ask Chachi Bet to do so I think it's already pretty personal
but you could say, let's see for this one, where's e mail body number two? Dear Sumner, Emma, from
company name here. Remember when Pepper
was in was last in? We missed that adorable face. We value a
relationship with you. So let's say it's too personal, like hey, great job. But this is a bit too personal to where
it, which it's not. I think this is
really well done. But say it might freak
out the recipients. Make it a bit less personal
but still very friendly. Just do this for e
mail body number two. It's literally infinite. What you can do, this
is just an example. Whatever you want changed your
wish is Tributes Command. Let's tone down the
personality of notch while still maintaining that
friendly vibe for e mail. Number two, it's like talking
to somebody. It's crazy. Hi there, cat lover
Emma, from company here, we miss seeing all
the adorable faces, including your special
friend we value or relationship with our
clients, blah, blah, blah. And you can see the results
for yourself really great. And it literally breaks down intro relationship
building value prop, it tells you the different
sections as well. So yeah, this is super powerful. I hope you see the value in
this like it's pretty crazy. So this alleviates
a ton of time and also it can help you write copy that you didn't
even think about. So really, really
powerful stuff. Again, the student e
mail marketing template can be found in the
resources section. If you have any questions
about this or anything else, please let me know in the Q and A section and hope
you're super excited. We've got more to come,
so let's get to it.
26. Done-For-You Facebook Ad Copy: In this video, you're going
to learn how to create killer Facebook ad copy using our unique
prompt and chat BT. So let's go ahead and get to it. So first in the
resources section, go ahead and access the Facebook
ads copyrighting prompt, which will look
something like this. First, before we can copy and paste this prompt into chat BT, What we need to do is fill out this information that is here in the sort
of salmon color, orange color, what
I like to call it. First, what is your offer
and objective, right? What are you offering?
What is the ad about? Obviously, AI needs
to understand, otherwise it's not
going to be able to complete that objective
because it doesn't know. Next, some basic
audience information. If there's multiple age ranges, you're targeting the input
multiple what location, right? This can be country
as well as more rural versus urban interests. Fears, pains and obstacles,
goals and desires. As you can see, the
more detail the better. Because AI is going to
pick up on that and be able to generate
and everything else. You can just leave as is. It's set up for you to
use just like the other prompts right here at the very top. We're
going to start here. Go all the way down to the
end command V to paste. Open up chat GPT. Again, we don't need to
have anything enabled. Just prefer four. But we
can also do this with 3.5 command V to paste, hit Enter, and we're going
to watch the magic happen. All right, we'll scroll down. First chat is going to create some headlines
that we can use, so we can AB test with all of these or
choose our favorites. And then it's also going to have a list of descriptions
as you can see here, and then also what description aligns with which headline. But of course, it's up
to you to mix and match. If anything here you
have some questions on or you think could be added
a little bit more like, hey, maybe some more detail, maybe some more character count. What you can do is either ask Chait here, hey, love this one. Expand it out, make it longer, x ***gth, or whatever
it might be. Also, just like the other
prompts, if you go here, you can see these are general best practices
for Facebook ads. However, of course, depending
on your specific case, you may want to
change something. So for example, we have certain character limits
for the primary text, the headline, right, and some other things here.
As well as the structure. You can change any of that
that you want and it's going to automatically
update the output, but this is very good
Facebook ad copy. As you can see here, you can
pause to read, but yeah, so access the Facebook
ad copywriting generator in the resources section. Let me know if you
have any questions. And let's go ahead and
get to the next video.
27. Your Sales Person Who Never Sleeps!: This prompt right
here is going to generate the entire copy for a full high converting
sales page for you with just some basic information that
you need to input. So this prompt is actually
taking me one of the longest along with the
blog article prompt and a lot of back and
forth because it is quite an extensive output that you want to
generate using AI. And because of that,
anytime that you want to generate longer copy using
artificial intelligence, the input is also going
to need to be greater. Okay, so just keep that in mind. You know, if you want
chat and PT to generate one line of text, I don't
need to tell it too much. It's probably not worth
your time to give it a whole spiel about your
audience and everything. But if you want Chat BT or other AI tools to
generate a full sales page, blog articles, things like that, more information is needed. So just like with all
the other prompts, you can access the magic
sales script formula in the resources section. And basically, if you remember the magic sales script
formula we covered earlier, again giving credit to
Jim Edwards where I first kind of learned about this
and have expanded upon it. I have taken that formula and basically
infused it here into this prompt for chat to automatically generate
entire sales pages for you. This is actually probably my
favorite and super exciting. So once you access, go ahead and scroll
down until you see this orange salmon color text. This is where we want to
edit with our own info. I've just included
this as an example, so you know sort of
overall what to write. But please keep in mind this is just an example, this
is not real, okay? So product or service, Let's say that we're
selling personalized retirement investing
planning, right? Enter in our unique
selling proposition list, our main benefits, our top
five to seven features, explain why we're credible. Then we also need information
about our target audience. So kind of like
here's what we are, our benefits and features,
why we're great. Also, here's our target
audience, right? Who are they? What do they fear? What's their pain point, their demographics they
desire, and their goals. If you have testimonials,
include them here. Because obviously if you don't include testimonials
for whatever reason, even if you tell
like Chachi BT hey, don't generate
fake testimonials, it will. So just
keep that in mind. You don't want to generate fake testimonials
obviously, right? You want real ones. So make
sure you include those there. If you have any
kind of free bonus, free addition to new
clients or customers, or subscribers
include that here. If you have a risk free
guarantee, what is it exactly? Because I know, right,
just a 30 day money back guarantee is only applicable
in certain cases. So describe that a
little bit more. There's any scarcity
and call to action. So I can see quite a lot of information and you may be
thinking like somewhere, okay, if I enter in
all this information, why don't I just
go ahead and write the entire sales page? This still saves
you a ton of time, even though it is quite a bit of work. But think about it. The more effort that
you put into this, the better your output
is going to be. So this is going to still save you a significant
amount of time, even though it almost
feels like you're writing the entire
page right here. But this is all you
have to do and you can have misspellings. You can, you know, just kind of brainstorm and
not be super articulate, so it's way less brain activity even if it
was the same amount of time. Because you don't have to really focus in on using the right
words and structuring everything and just kind
of blurting everything out here and letting chat
do all the hard work. Once you fill all that out, well, we do as usual. Go to the very top here. Hello, sales,
copywriting, Master. Scroll all the way down to the
end, which there is a lot. Very end. We see go okay, let me actually do the reverse
or you can do the reverse. Go from the bottom
all the way to the top command C. To copy, we had over two chat as we see here from the
top we need to use the web pilot feature because we want to give Chachi
access to the Internet. To get us the best output, we go to chat down
here in plug ins. Click the drop down. Scroll down until you see the web pilot. Click on that. And if you
don't see that web pilot or another plug in that searches the web, it
doesn't have to be web. Anything that searches
the web is perfect. Click on the plug in store
and then you can find any kind scraper
tool or web pilot. So we already have
that selected. We're good to go here
and send a message. I'm going to command V to paste. Just paste it, everything there. And I'm hitting enter. Let's see what Catch PD comes up with. I'll write in literally
less than 1 minute, we have an entire sales page written for us as
you can see here at the top we have our headline, Subheading shocking statistic. Agitate the pain, introduction
to a product or service, main benefit by taking or consuming the
product or service. Other features or benefits. Establishing credibility,
customer testimonials, additional bonus if you have it. Risk free, guarantee scarcity
and call to action, right? So overall, really, really good. You can pause to kind of read
this fully in its entirety, but whenever I've noticed
longer kind of blocks of text that BT creates, there's a little bit more
work that needs to be done. So this is good, but not great. And I'll actually critique
this to kind of give some additional insights to
where you might look at this. Be like, this is amazing,
this is good to go, as is. It's great. But I always like things to be as
good as possible. So a few things I
notice obviously. Number one, with emojis, just keep in mind who's
your audience and you know, what platform are you
kind of using this for. Because maybe in
certain cases emojis, you shouldn't be used or should be used lighter
in different ways. Just kind of keep that in mind. There's automatic
bolding and italics, that tragedy kind of identified. But of course, you can kind
of change that on your own. One thing I want to
mention is like, did you know 68% of Americans will struggle financially
in retirement? Make sure that this is accurate. So I asked trait in
the prompt, Hey, make sure you cite your source, which for whatever reason, sometimes they do,
sometimes they don't. Doesn't really
matter because you want to make sure you verify
that that is correct. And I can just ask like, hey, where did you get
this statistic from? But regardless of
that, this is okay. Like did you know 68% of Americans struggle
financially for retirement? It's like, yeah, maybe it would be
better is like, you know, 80% of Americans are going
to work until they die. You know, it's like whoa,
like something more, again, kind of hitting that, you know, one of
those life force eight that we covered earlier.
Really touching on that. So really fine, you
know, what percent of, and you can maybe do
some math, you know, like how much do most, what's the average
kind of, you know, annual expenses for the average household
income in the United States? You kind of classify that out. Okay, so someone who retires,
needs like this much. You know, if they retire
at 60 and they live to be, let's say on average
80 years old, 20 years of expenses,
here's how much they need, but here's how much the
average American has. So then you can
just do deduction and be like, okay, you know, 80% 81% of Americans will have to work until they die and
leave debt to their kids. It's like whoa. So when you're coming up with
a shocking statistic, just really dig into the pain,
don't be afraid to do so. That's something I see
a lot of copywriters sort of being afraid with. But it's better. And it's also
better to make a mistake, which you likely won't do. But if you make a mistake
of being a little bit too intense or aggressive, again, it does depend
on your audience. But in general, I
find copywriters being much less aggressive and intense than they should be. You need to really
dig into their fears, their desires and pains. Never say anything that's false. Everything should be correct, but it should be powerful
and heart wrenching. Everyone else sounds
corporate technical. Everyone else is afraid, and you're the only one that's
actually speaking to them. It's going to get
incredible results. So just kind of one point
about the statistic. Make sure you know
where it's coming from, do your own research
with this because for whatever reason
sometimes, you know, it's a little bit off. But yeah, that's kind of there, you could kind of
read through and see if anything
would be changed. I might include some kind
of emojis down here, but overall, really good. It took our exact testimonials
and copied pace as is. Instead of creating
new ones, which is great but really
well done overall. So at the very least,
this is going to do the vast majority
of work for you. Best case scenario, it's going
to do everything for you. Everything's going
to be perfect and generated though, like I said, have the mindset that it'll
do most of the work for you, not all the work for you.
Although that'll change. And keep in mind with any
of these prompts, you know, Chat PT and Claude
and Google Bard and all these different AI tools are going to continue to
improve as time goes on. So you may see like, let's say a month from now,
year from now, whatever. You are taking this prompt
and pasting into chat PT. And by the way,
I'll be continually updating the prompts
every once in a while in case I see advantages to
improve kind of the output. But aside from just improving the prompts, we use
the same prompt. But the different tools improve with time,
which they will, especially as there's
more users giving input and feedback and the teams
actually changing the code, you'll see the output
actually improved. So hopefully by the
time you see this, even a few days from now, that your output will be
even better than this. But just kind of a few things
to kind of keep in mind. I'll continue playing with
all of the prompts as well to continually improve for
you as time goes on, which is one of the benefits
you get in this course. So yeah, really powerful
hope you all the power of this prompt as
well as all the others. Be sure to get that in
the resources section of this video and if
you have any questions, let me know Of that being said, let's get to the next video.
28. Generate Viral YouTube Video Titles with AI : If you're a Youtuber like I am, you're going to love this video. In this video, I'm going to show you how to use chat PT to create viral Youtube video
titles in literally seconds. And it'll be very similar to the other prompts
that we have. So you can access this
prompt along with everything else in the
resources section. Once you get here, you'll see
an option to click on File. Click on File in the
top left corner, and then click on
Make a Copy to make your own copy of this prompt as well as all of the others. Once you do so, you'll
be able to copy and paste and edit first. Before we get to it,
what we want to do is obviously enter in our own
video details right here. What is the video about overall? Are there one or
two keywords you want to make sure that
you're optimizing for? And if you are creating
content for Youtube, there's a good chance
that you want to include one or two keywords
in order for, when someone searches
for those keywords on Youtube that you appear. What kind of tone or emotion
do you want to go for? In general, this
would be excitement, curiosity, intrigue. It can be others depending
on your audience. One to two sentences about your target audience
and additional info. Again, the more
detail that you give, the better your output
is going to be. But it's up to you how much effort you
want to put into this. This is good enough to go as is. As you can see, we are creating a video about the dangers, common mistakes, and the proper
way to invest in crypto. We have our other info here. What I've done is actually
hand picked some of the most viral Youtube videos
in recent years that are best for Chachi BT to understand where you
may find actually the most viral Youtube
videos tend to be music videos which don't
really follow our format. They're viral for a
very different reason. So I went ahead
and found some of the most viral
Youtube videos that can apply to numerous niches. But you can add
more, change it out. Anything here in this section. Also, again, we have the
best practices here, what to do as well
as what not to do. Again, editing this
to your liking. We'll change the output, but once we'll see here
in just a second, everything is good to go
command C to copy everything. You can go command A and then command C to copy from the
bottom all the way to the top. Head back over to our
handy dandy chat GBT. I prefer four. Someone
select four here and send a message
command V to paste all of that data and hit Enter. What we'll see is, as before, within just seconds chat BT is going to generate some
viral tube video title. Let's see the quality. All right. The ultimate
crypto chal***ge. How newbies get
rich in 24 hours? Why 90% failed cryptocurrency
mistakes you must avoid. Maybe for this I would
actually add seven mistakes. You must avoid five mistakes. You must avoid how
to turn $1,000 into $1 million with
crypto beginner's guide. Blindfolded crypto picks, shocking results
for new investors. Interesting. I lived on
cryptocurrency for a month. Here's what happened. These are some really solid video titles. As a Youtuber, I make a full
time income on Youtube. These are great titles that would have taken
me a long time. Keep in mind with copywriting, just because text or
copy is short does not mean it took
a short amount of time to come up with. Right. All for example, Nike's
slogan, right, just do it. That took a lot of time and effort and thought to actually just create those few words and that has helped the
company tremendously. Just those few words
as you likely know. So sending here
with video titles, one of the most important
aspects aside from your thumbnail of your
Youtube video as a whole. So super important
to get it right. And literally Chachi B is going to help you,
at the very least, come up with better ideas and at most it's going to do
all the work for you. So hopefully you see
this is as powerful as I've seen it and it'll change your business as
much as it has for us. If you have questions of course, let me know the Q and A
section and be sure to access this as well as all the other prompts in
the resources section. That being said, let's go ahead and get to the next video.
29. HYPNOTIC AI Bullet Point Formula: Do you or any of your
clients sell anything online If you're in luck because this prompt
is made for you. So this is the AI product
bullet point generator to where this is going
to generate top quality, highly compelling
product bullet points. And you can also generate bullet points for services as well. I've already covered
in detail how to use prompts for tools
like Chachi BT. If you haven't seen
those videos, make sure you watch those so I
won't be covering. That is not to repeat
myself over and over again, but basically you can
access this prompt in the resources section
in the top left corner. Click on file and then make a
copy to make your own copy. And the only
information needed to edit are the salmon
colored text here. You can delete that
and enter in your own here from kind of the product section down
to the keyword section. If anything here is not
really relevant to you, you don't really need keywords
or whatever it might be, You can leave them
blank or delete them, but I've included
as many sections as you could possibly
need for this. And if you're selling services like you can change
any information. So you can say services
right here instead, which I'm going to leave as
is. We'll get right to it. So, all right, enter
in your product, which in this case is
going to be palpable. Ice cube tray, Our target
audience, our material. Any special packaging. Let's say in this case we
do have special packaging, our dimensions, our features benefits, unique
selling proposition. Do we offer 30 day money
back promise? Yes, we do. If we have other
important information, our product title, if we have it, and
important keywords and fill out as is
important to you. If it's not important,
leave it blank, right? Or just leave that section. So you may be wondering
too, like, okay, hold on, the dimensions,
how relevant is that? For example, maybe
it's not going to be included in the bullet points.
But why you have that? Because what's very
interesting about artificial intelligence is it's going to pick up different things that
you don't even see. You're helping as much as you can to describe your
product or service. The more detail that you give chat BT even seemingly
irrelevant information, it's going to register with AI. They're going to see those kind of correlations
and similarities. And it's actually going to
help provide the total output. And trust me, I've run through a lot of
different examples, like hundreds at this point. Constant, actually thousands. Now, testing all
different types of prompts and copying all of that with chat BT and
this is the best. And I will be continuing to update and experiment
as time goes on. So if you notice that any of these prompts are
a bit different, they're just simply
been improved. So anyway, what
we're going to do, we filled out all
of our information. As you can see, it's all
right here we're going to go. Everything else stays the same. All of this down here,
this is all the same. Appear starting at Hello, command C to copy. We head over to our good
friend chat BT again, you can use either 3.5 or 44 is going to give
you better results. But 3.5 is free. All right, and still
gets good results. But chat four is a bit better. Under send a message command V to paste, and hit Enter to go. Automatically,
we're going to have chat generate seven
product bullet points. And we can choose
either all seven or five based on
our information. Here we go. No more
ice cube chaos with whatever brand name, silicone ice cube tray. Say goodbye to those wild ice
cubes shooting everywhere. Our design ensures easy
popping, making your ice cube, making a breeze perfect for
those who love cold drinks at home created from
BPA free plastic. Our ice cube trays
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ice cube connoisseur. These are not bad at all. Unleashed the fund
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Built to last. We're here for you, add to cart. Now these are some pretty
solid bullet points, if you've ever read product
bullet points on line. These are top notch quality. Like I said, I've done a lot of research with this
because bullet points are so important to a lot of the different platforms
I operate on. These are really,
really powerful. And what's really cool about
this and any of the other prompts is I just gave
the information here. If you already have, like
we showed you before, how to use Chachi BT
to analyze reviews. So if you already
have a chat, right, where chat BT has
analyzed your reviews, then you can go back
to that chat and I'll show you to
blur some of this. But you can go to any
one of those chats. Over here on the left hand side, let's say it was ice cube
tray customer analysis, so we click on that. And then from there we are
able to go to that chat. Chat has already analyzed
and they know our audience, so we can use that
and take this prompt, copy and paste into that
chat, if that makes sense. So what I showed you
here is creating a brand new chat which
still works really well. But if you want to
kind of super charge your results like a
secret hack is to go to an existing chat that has your audience research and
then copy and paste in there. Because at BT is going to take
its previous research and your prompt and kind of
combine it together and it's going to be even more
targeted and honed in. And like I said, as you can see here, these are already amazing. But if you wanted
to really drill in even more, like I said, you can copy and paste this into an existing chat where Chachi BT did audience
research already. Or you can add more information. Like I said, the more
information you add, the better your results
are going to be with any AI tool including chat
BT So I just did some basic, but if you want to
provide more information about your target audience, you know why it's
important to them. Like you know important
features here. You can say here's the five most important
features in order. Here's the five most important
benefits in order, right? So you can do that on your own, just kind of some little hacks. But yeah, I don't know. You can screenshot
this if you like, but this is extremely powerful. So yeah, I hope you
find this valuable. If you have questions, let
me know and like I said, access your free insanely
profitable resource in the description
section and there's more. So let's get to the next video.
30. Clone ANY Website Into Wordpress with AI: If you write web page copy, you need to know about
this awesome tool. So this tool is called
Ten Web and it's an AI tool that actually clones
websites into Wordpress. And going to show you how it
works. So it's very simple. You can sign up
for a free trial, which I will be linking
in the resources section. And yeah, let's go
ahead and get to it. So once you sign up, you're going to get to a
page that looks like this, where you can create
a new website with AI that kind of helps you just create something
from scratch. You can actually
clone a website, which I think is really cool. So find a high performing
website, clone it, and then improve upon it, write your own copy and
change and manipulate it. You can migrate
Wordpress websites to ten web and optimize
a Wordpress website. But these are the tool that
I like and use the most. Yeah, let's go ahead and
clone a website here. You just enter any URL. In this case I'm
going to use Boom. By Cindy Joseph as an example. So I'm going to go to the
URL and command C to copy. Just for reference
the reason I'm choosing this website,
which can be any, but this is actually
one of the top e commerce websites in the world. I'm actually know the founder
and as your Firestone. And they do some insane revenue through this shop website. Really incredible brand and they do a lot of great
things overall. So instead of
reinventing the wheel, you know I'm going to
clone this website. And then I can kind
of use that as a base to create my own website, maybe in a different category. So of course you
need to be careful. Don't just copy
someone straight off. But one of the keys to
success is emulation. So just like with
all the principles we've covered so far
with copyrighting, which we'll talk
about in a second. Let's just go ahead and
command V to paste, because this will take
a little bit of time. So once we get the green check, we're going to go
click on Proceed. And it'll just take
a little bit of time for us to recreate, but really not that long at all. And like I said,
you don't want to completely copy anything but find copy and websites and all of that already exist
that are performing well. Analyze them, create your
own version and improve upon them with your own spin versus going creating something
completely from scratch. Yeah, we're just going to
give this second to load and then we're going
to check back in and see how long it takes. All right, and just took a few minutes and now we can preview and edit our website. And as we can see,
the entire home page of the website has been
cloned right here, which we can then edit
using elementors. Click on Edit, and here in order to start
editing, as you can see here, you can drag and drop, add different text and copy
and videos and all of that. You'll need to sign
up for seven days for free and then ongoing
for the basic plan, it's $20 per month with the monthly plan,
just so you know. But then you can kind
of do so here and kind of play around
with it using the tool, which is pretty straightforward, but I just wanted to make
you aware of this tool. It's game changing,
really, really powerful. Especially for those of you who create websites
and website copy. So I hope you found
this valuable. Again, I'll be linking
Ten Web in the resources section
of that being said, let's go ahead and get
to the next video.
31. Search Engine Optimization (SEO) Explained: Now we can't talk about copyrighting without
also talking about SEO, which stands for Search
Engine Optimization. Seo is the practice of ranking content on
different search engines. Search engines are
what you see here. They are platforms where people like us are
searching for content, for products, for videos,
and different things. The most notable and
famous is Google. This is the largest search
engine in the world. The second largest search engine in the world is
actually Youtube. Which Google and
Youtube are both owned by the same
company called Alphabet. There's also other
search engines that aren't as
obvious, like Amazon, Etsy, and Walmart, where
you search for products. Tiktok, where you search
for vertical video content. Quora where you
search for answers. Domine Skillshare, where
you search for courses. And there's many
other search engines anywhere where
there's a search bar. Okay, This includes
social media platforms and you can search
for information, content products, whatever it
might be in the search bar, that is a search engine. Okay, so it kind of makes you think a little
bit differently about search engines and maybe social media
and other platforms. Because as copywriters,
we tend to get caught up in one side of the equation and
there's actually two. Okay? We need to not just
focus on conversions. Conversions refer to not converting necessarily
a religion, although it could
be, but converting visitors or readers into
people that take action. So like what
percentage of people who read our blog article
turn into subscribers? What percentage of
people that read our product description turn into buyers you know, and so on. Right, So the percentage of people that visit our website or our copy and read it and then take action, that's
our conversion rate. The more people
that take action, the higher the conversion rate, the less people
that take action, the lower the conversion rate. Higher is obviously better. We want more people
to take action, and ideally, we want 100%
of people taking action. Though that's almost
never the case in volume, but we want to get that
number as high as possible. So up to this
point, we've really honed in and covered
how to really write amazing copy that converts well that grabs
readers attention, gets them to read our
content, resonates with them, convinces them that they should take action, and
gets them to do so. But another really important
point that we need to make are keywords, okay? So conversions help us get
sales right, ultimately. So let's say, you know, it helps us get copywriting conversions, they help us get viewers
into subscribers. They help subscribers turn into buyers and then
repeat buyers, right? But ultimately our
goal with copywriting our sales keywords
help us with views. And I'll show you kind
of the formula here that open up your
mind a little bit. It's very important we need
to have keywords in our copy. Because in general keywords, and for some platforms
like Instagram, Tiktok, and others, hashtags also play the role
of keywords, right? Where you have a hash tag, it helps you get ranked, right? But if you don't create
social media content, this is not a social
media course, right? But if you are to create content on social media platforms, especially Instagram and Tiktok, did you know the
power of hashtags? But let's just kind of put hash tags into that
category of keywords. You include certain keywords when users are on
that search engine. Like for example, you
have the keyword of like, you know how to lose
weight with Keto. When someone goes on Google and searches for how to
lose weight with Keto, your blog article shows up. If you have you know how
to change your own oil or tie your own tie
on Youtube, right? And you have that in
your Youtube title. Those keywords when
someone types in how to tie your own tie or how to change your own oil on Youtube. Your video shows up
the last example. If you're selling, let's
say succu***t holders on Amazon and you have succu***t
holders in your copy, then when someone types in
succu***t holders in Amazon, it helps your product show up. Okay, so really straightforward. We need keywords in our copy that's going
to help us get seen. When someone types a keyword
into the search engine, we're kind of
matching that there. So it's important to
include keywords. So when we have
keywords, we get seen. When we get seen, what does
that mean? We get views. So we increase our
views with keywords, we increase our sales
with conversions. Are you with me here?
Okay. I know this can be a little bit complicated
if it's your first time learning this. But hopefully this
will illuminate focusing just on views.
This is with keywords. Let's say that we
optimize with SEO, we optimize for search engines. We include keywords and
that helps us get our content 1,000
views, 1,000 views. And let's say we have
a 1% conversion rate. 1% of people who read
our copy take an action, they subscribe,
they buy something, whatever the desired action is. 1% conversion rate, 1,000 views
times 1% conversion rate. That's ten sales, let's say right or ten actions, but
we'll just say sales. Same idea here, so
we have high views and let's say a low
conversion rate, ten sales. In another example, let's say
our copy is amazing, right? We do a very, very good job of converting our
audience into buyers, but we only get 100 views, right, because we kind
of neglected keywords. So in option number
one, we have, let's say, really good SEO, really good keyword
optimization, but our copy isn't very good. It's not very
convincing. We didn't do very good audience research. We don't understand them super well and we're not
resonating with them. So low conversion rate, high views, this is
purely an example. 1% can be a high
conversion rate, in some regards, it
can be very low. In other regards, it's
just for example purposes. So let's just say high
views, low conversion rate. In this example, we
have really good copy. We have the same example, we have a really good copy,
so at 10% conversion rate, but we didn't really optimize
well for the search engine, so we get low views
in both cases. Those who try to really focus on keywords and those who
really try to focus on conversions ultimately get the same result
because they're only focusing on one side of the
literal equation, right? This is all math. Now that's
why you have this course. The copywriters who emphasize both search engine
optimization keywords with conversions in what
we mean here is right. Phenomenal copy do great
audience research. We resonate, we use all
the formulas and tactics. We get a lot of people who read our content to take
action, to subscribe, to buy to whatever that
might be to follow us. That's amazing, right? And then we also
do a great job of including keywords
in our copy to where we rank and we
get maximum views. So you see the power here of compounding by only focusing
on one side of the equation. We get ten sales, let's
say as an example, ten sales in the other,
we can get 100 sales. So we don't double sales. We ten X our sales by really focusing on
both the conversions and the keyword side, right? Kind of looking to get
views and optimizing for that and optimizing to
get people to convert. And it's kind of a pull
and tug because you can't really emphasize one
more than the other, right? You're just going to have a list of keywords because someone's going to get to your
page and it's just like the same keyword
over and over again. It's like, what is this?
You got a bunch of views but no one
knows what to do. It's weird, they leave,
so you get zero sales. On the other end, you have
the best piece of copy, but nobody reads it
because it doesn't rank. So you'll get zero
sales as well. But when you combine
both together and play with it, that's where
we're going to cover. So like I said, each search engine is
different, it's unique. And this is not an SEO course. This is just to give you a good overview and help
you as copywriters, because this is a very
important element if you're writing copy
for search engines, which most of us are now, Google is the biggest, so
we're going to focus on that. But keep in mind there's
rules for each platform. So it's good to take a course, read some articles and
Youtube videos about that specific platform to
get some good guidelines. By the way, you
can also ask chat GPT and other AI tools, hey, what are the key
search engine criteria for this platform? And chat PT is going to
answer that question for you. Again, Google is the biggest, so we're going to focus
really on Google. All of this that
you see here are the main components of SEO. So I'm going to break
down each element, tell you a good overview
of how to handle it, to make sure you have each of these elements in your SEO and then to make sure you're maximizing each in terms of
conversions and keywords. All right, so first metadiscriptionsseI
have screenshots here of what exactly they look like. It's a brief summary
of your content, it appears in search. It's under the title, you have that little snippet. Now you want to make this short, compelling but very important. You want to make sure
you have keywords in the section you're writing. Blog content, okay,
or web page content. What is your primary keyword
that you want to rank for? Make sure that's in your meta description because guess what? If you're working for a client and they
don't really have, well keyword optimized
their web content, their articles, this is amazing. This is really easy to
kind of go in there and follow these steps to ultimately improve
your performance. Including keywords in your meta description
that's going to help. It's something that a
guy named Neil Patel, who's huge in the
SEO space told me, and this is always stuck
with me is it's like the game of ones when it comes to digital marketing
and copywriting. It's small incremental additions that add up to the big change. So it's not like
you make one change and it's the world
of difference. It's making small improvements. And those small
improvements multiplied together result in
a massive change. So this is one of the
small improvements. Make sure it's short. Compelling describes the
overall web page content. You have some examples
here and as keywords, because when someone searches for those keywords on Google, those keywords get
bolded in your meta description and Google views
that as more relevant. Okay, and that's
just one element, so make sure there's keywords
in your meta description, that's basically the takeaway. Number two, also, make sure you have important
keywords in your URL's. Yes, you can customize
your URLs, you should. A URL, is that link, you know, Htp dot slash summer,
Hobart.com slash whatever. So you have your domain
after your domain. For example, www.domain.com
forward slash. We have make money online. When you're including
keywords in your URL, make sure that they're separated by a dash and not a space, and they're not
altogether this way. Google and other search engines can actually read the text. If it was all make money online, Google would read
that as one word. Where when you have
a dash in between, make money on line, Those are three separate words. And basically you
want to, again, take that same main keyword they have in your
meta description, Make sure it's in your URL, because Google is
going to read that. And that's another
small increment, right where it's adding
and building blocks in SEO and that's going to help
us get more visibility. Number three are title tags. Okay, so these are the
titles of our web pages. They do appear in search. Actually, they appear
the largest in search. And the most important, you
want to make sure you include your primary keyword
here and keep it under 60 characters,
so keep it short. What's your unique
selling proposition? If you can kind of squeeze a
little bit of that in there. For example, like
cheap holidays, price is as low as
eight pounds, okay? The key here is Cheap Holidays, That was the kind of main keyword and they've
included that. And then they've had
their unique selling proposition which is cheap. Someone else, if you
see this here in the Cheap Holidays on
the middle option, their unique selling proposition is all inclusive holiday. Right? The other one, I don't really know what
it is, it's package deals. So not really unique
selling proposition. So take your main benefit, include it there with keywords, keep it under 60 characters. And again, having
the keyword there in all these places is
going to show Google. You know, Google's
going to understand, Google's going to help rank
it for those keywords. Next, we have heter tags. We already covered
our first heter tag. This is our H one tag. We also have our h
two and h three. Our H one tags have
our primary keyword, and this is the title of our web page like we just covered. But there's also
H2h 34 and so on, which you can see here. It's important to
include secondary keywords in the section. You can repeat your primary
keyword in certain cases, but also include secondary
keywords or related keywords. Okay, in these
sections, for example, a related keyword could be
like keto diet for moms, it could be ketogenic diet
for mothers, for example. Or ketogenic diets
related keywords there that all kind of help rank for your
primary keyword, primary keyword, as well as secondary keywords
in 23 and so on. And these basically
break up your content in your web pages,
in your articles. Next we have all text
extremely under utilized. Everyone should be doing this, whether you're on Google
or anywhere else. I do this with almost
all content on Linked, in on Google, and even with
Amazon and other platforms. So basically with your images, you have the ability to include
keywords on the back end. Okay. So you can do
this on Mac or PC. Basically, open up
the image information and in the information
you can give it a file name, right? So you can name the file of it, and on the back end
include keywords, which is called the alt text. Okay, so file name
and the alt text. This is your keywords
for the image. This helps Google understand
what the image is. And guess what, that's more
keywords in your web page. That's again, going to help rank your web page as a whole
so it's each element. Again, the focus here is keywords because
we've already covered the conversion side of the important elements
of copyrighting. So that's why we're really
honing in on keywords here. Yeah, so you take
your primary keyword and make that the file name. So that's like, you know,
again make money on line, that's the name of the
file that you then upload. And then also with the
all text section that you see here have make space, money space online for the all text dashes
for the file name. This is the best
way for Google and other search engines to
read and understand. But then for your all
text, you can just separate by ****** that
you see right here, embroidered Baltimore
Clipper, tall ship with red, yellow and gray sails. That's a very long
kind of keyword, including their
primary and secondary. I like to mix it all together, but to keep it simple, just take your primary keyword, make it the file name,
add it as the all text. Also with links. The
same thing with links, you can have keywords in here, but really it's important
to have two types of links. We have internal links
and external links. So internal links
are links or links that direct to other content
on your own website. External links are links that drive outside of the website. And it's very important
for Google to kind of crawl and to
understand your content. To have both internal
and external links. If you ever reference
in like an article or on your web page some
other content, right? Maybe it's your other
content on Youtube, but it's external because
it's outside of your website. Then you want to make
sure that you have a link to that instead of just
saying it with words. What you'll do is create anchor text and have a link to that. And then also if you have
other content like, hey, if you love this article, you'll love this
article about XY and Z. That's super key. So that's
your call to action. Like if you enjoy this
article, read this article. That's your call to action,
is to read another article, link to that article
on your website. Or if you have an
e commerce website and you have a blog and you're like talking about
one of your top sellers, have a link to your
top selling product there in your article. That makes sense. So
you're anytime you reference something
internally or externally, make sure that you're
linking that and that's going to help
with overall SEO. And then that brings
us here how do we know Link is we're going to have
what's called anchor text, which is pretty straightforward. You've seen it in
a lot of places. For example, right down here, we have click here to find the best pizza places in Brook Lynn that may be
linking to an article. So someone clicks on the text that takes them to
the destination. The text is the anchor text. It's the anchor of the
link and then the link is like the bridge that takes
them to the other content. Our anchor text is going to
have a link to external or a link to something internal
with the anchor text. If you can, again,
use common sense, like can you include
a primary or secondary keyword with
your anchor text? If so, do so because that helps with your overall ranking. But sometimes, like for
example, click here. If our main keyword is
Best Pizza in New York, like we can't really
include that keyword in the anchor text because
we have the anchor text. Click here to find the
best pizza in Brooklyn. What you could do is actually extend the anchor text out a bit more to where it contains the entire kind of phrase there. But to keep it simple, you know, if you can like for example, Chicago dentist, maybe
that's our main keyword, like you really need to
check out this website. It's owned by the
Chicago dentist who clean my teeth,
blah, blah, blah. So Chicago dentist, let's say that's a keyword, so it's great. Our anchor text is also one of our main keywords.
So there we go. So anyway, the whole idea
here is we're taking, again, if we go back
to our original slide, all of those elements of SEO, and we're making sure that
we're strategically including keywords and also where it makes sense our unique
selling proposition or, you know, a benefit of
some kind in them as well. But really holding in on
those keywords because it's going to take our existing
content and propel it, that means more people
are going to see it. More views equal what
more ultimately sales. So that's kind of the
point of all of these. Just to kind of give you
a general framework. Again, this is not
an SEO course. I don't consider
myself an SEO expert, although I've written
numerous blog articles, I've helped other
write blog articles, but specifically do so using AI. I just want to kind of
help you to give you a clear picture of
SEO, how it works. And yeah, I know this was a lot. So of course, if
you have questions about this or anything else, please let me know in the
Q and A section of that. Being said, let's get
to the next video.
32. Let AI Write Blogs Better Than You Can: This may be the
most powerful chat GPT prompt that I've
created to date. With this prompt, you're
going to be able to generate entire keyword and SEO optimized blog
articles using chat, BT and Super Powerful. And here's how it
works. Again, you can access this as well as
all of the other prompts. In the resources
section of this video, it's divided into two parts, part one, All you need
to do is scroll down and include the links to the top three articles
for your main keywords. So go to Google, type
in your main keyword, and then look at the top three
articles for that keyword. Copy and paste
them in here, just their URL like you see here. In this case, we're going to use Paleo diets as an example. With that chat is going to analyze and look at
the type of wording, the tone that's being used, the ***gth of the article, and other factors and elements that may not
be obvious to us. And it's going to analyze
why they're performing. Well. Then take our
own personal topic, target audience, pain points, target keyword tonality,
call to action, and any other links that
we want to include. It merges that
data together with our specific preferences
and it creates a master blog article
that will out rank your competitors and be better optimized and better
written than theirs. So this is super powerful. Let's go ahead and
get to it, part one. Oh, and by the way, like
you see here on the screen. In order to use this you need chat four which is available
with the pro version. And specifically you need
to use the scraper tool. Go ahead. We've included our three URL's head
over to chat BT. Make sure you have four
selected for plug ins. We want to select Scraper, which is already here by
default. So there we go. And then just simply
command via to paste Head Enter and let
chat t do the magic. Now it'll take a little bit for Chachi BT's scraper
tool to actually go ahead and analyze
these three articles. So we'll give it a second
and then check back in. After a few minutes, we see that Chachi BT has analyzed
our blog articles, each on an individual level. And then also gives us
recommendations for our blog post, which you can read
through if you like. But automatically it's
built in the prompt to where this recommendations will be built in to our own article. So that being said, we already have
part one complete. Now we head over
here to part two. So just below part two, we want to make sure, first of all, that we have
our information. So our topics are
going to be seven, worst foods for
moms on Paleo diet. It's young mothers
on a Paleo diet who want to lose weight
and feel more energy. We have their pain points,
the target keyword of Paleo diet for moms,
et cetera, right? And the more detail you give, the better. So I
really recommend it. This is just purely
for an example, with this very limited detail. Putting almost no
effort into this blog. Let's see what chatted
comes up with for part two. Going to copy the entire part because our
information is added. So command C to copy, you start a new message in the same chat
command V to paste. Hit Enter, scroll down. As we can see immediately chat is creating an
entire blog article. Again, we'll just give this
a little bit of time to run. We can see how quickly
this is being run. Also, if we go back
to the prompt, one of the requests is that chat needs to bold the
keywords that they use. So I can see where they're
being used, right? That's why you see certain
things bold that might seem random. But there we go. So we have the H one
tag or our title, it specifies H two
and H three tags for us, which is
really powerful. Best case scenario, this varies, again depending on how
much information you have, depending on the quality of the existing blog
articles, all of that. But at best case scenario, this is going to do
all of the work for you that you can
just copy and paste. However, what I recommend doing, and this is really to
get the best result. This is an amazing, amazing base for you or for your team to use for
writing blog articles. If there's any
section that needs to be expanded a
little bit more, maybe the tone needs to
be changed a little bit. Maybe it's missing some
keyword opportunities where BT didn't ad a keyword. So I really recommend you don't just blindly
copy and paste. Manually, go over, look for some tweaks or
ways to improve. But the key here again, Chachi, BT and A I isn't going to do everything for you, at
least not right now. But it's a helper.
It's going to do most of the work for
you. So think about it. Instead of having to
write a first draft and then edit that first
draft multiple times, all you have to do is just edit a draft that
you already have. Okay, so anyway, scrolling down, let's see if they're done. Awesome. So that's
everything right here, all the way down to note. So this look at that,
how amazing is that? And I'm just going to ask, how many words long is
this article you wrote? Because I ask. That
needs to be at least 1,000 words long. So let's see, because
it's a general 705 fell short of the 1,000 word ***gth
for whatever reason. When it comes to counting, it's the single
thing I've seen with chat is counting
characters or words. For some reason it really Mrs. this and I've not
been able to find a fix for it other than making
sure that we ask again. That's where manual
review comes into play. This is a great base. What you can do is just add and expand on existing sections. And naturally it's
going to get to that 1,502,000 word mark, which is great for a
lot of blog articles. Yeah, I'm just going to ask. Yes, please. Please rewrite this article. It is at least 1,000 words
long by adding detail, detail, insights,
and sections that will better optimize and deliver more search engines and deliver
more value to the reader. So just give me a real world,
Please rewrite the article. It's at least 1,000 words long. You know include adding details, insights, and sections that will better optimize and so on. Boom, and after giving it
just a couple more minutes, we now have our new article
that's over 1,000 words long. And you can read through
and see this for yourself and the best way is
just to test it on your own. But it's also cool that
I want to point out is Tragic will give you visuals. So it'll give you examples of where to put visuals and
what they should be of. Again, these are just
recommendations. You can do whatever you want. I think that's
really, really cool. And like I said, at best this is going to do all
of the work for you. At worst, this is going to
do most of the work for you. That's just what I
want to stress here, even if it doesn't solve
all your problems, it's going to other agencies
are taking this on and doing this and those who are
not are getting left behind. Also keep in mind if you're reading through and
they're like, man, I don't really like the
way that this is worded or structured or we use
a different strategy. You can go here and chat and just ask and you will receive whatever you
want to change about it. Chat BT will change. Or what's even better is because this is
no longer prompt. Go through here into the
what you must do sections, Don't commit any of these sins. Sections article titles,
bad article titles, phenomenal article subheadings,
bad article subheadings, et cetera, and add information. Change information whatever
you want because changing the master prompt
is going to change the output and that's going
to have the best result. So if you keep seeing kind of the same errors or issues
happening over and over that are not up
to your preferences by editing this document, that is ultimately going to save you so much time in the future. But like I said, it yeah, this is literally life changing. It's amazing. So
yeah, I hope you see the value in this and Yeah. Start using it. I'd love to
know your thoughts on it. And as always, you know, if you have questions, let me know in the
Q and A section. Let's go ahead and get
to the next video.
33. 10X Your Content Writing with Custom GPTs: In this video, I'm
going to show you the most powerful
update that chat PT has just announced,
especially for copywriting. And this is now 90%
of how I use chat BT. As we know, AI tools like chat BT are constantly evolving. So you'll constantly see like update videos like this as
soon as they become available. So just kind of
keep that in mind. But basically everything you've learned at this
point will remain pretty much exactly the
same with this small tweak. And what we're going
to be focusing on is this top left section here which are called
custom GPT's with chat PT. When you're using it it's great because it accesses literally the largest database
of human knowledge, any other AI language model. It's really, really powerful, however, because it's so broad, it'll pull from random
different things and sometimes the
outputs can vary. Or maybe you're going through
and you're like, okay, so the outputs are good overall, but sometimes they're good,
sometimes they're bad. And basically with custom GBT's, we're going to hone in
chat GBTs knowledge specifically into copywriting to really further
improve the results. And this is game changing. I use this to write all of my e mails, sales copy, you know, course outlines and
Youtube video scripts, thumbnail ideas so
much it's crazy. And it's very, very
simple to set up. And I have some free resources that I'm going to share
with you and show you how to kind of plug
these into chat BT. So first of all right, now to use custom GPT's, you need to have a chat
PT 4.0 account, okay? So a paid account. So keep that in
mind. We can kind of see if this is
worth it for me, this is beyond worth it. How this works is in
this section here, you won't really see
anything, but you'll see Explored GPT's. Click on Explored GPTs. What's cool is you
can actually see existing GPTs that have
already been created. And I would actually recommend
going through this Canva. You can actually
connect chat BT with Canva an image generator. Now this is created by chat B. These are from others in
the chat PT community. People like me and people like others who have
created their own. It's an open source platform
specifically with Dolly, so this is more specifically for images writing and so on. So that's cool. You can
check these out and use a GBT someone
else has created. Which is nice because you
don't have to do any work. However, in general,
who's going to care more about your business and your quality of work?
It's going to be you. So I prefer to create my own for my own extremely
specific purposes versus using someone else's even if they claim
to be the best. I never believe it.
Either way this works. So you can use other GPT's
which are really simple, but I'll actually show
you how to create your own which is the most powerful. You have an example
of these other GPTs, basically chat GBT trained on specific functions
to create your own. Once you click on Explore GPTs, click on Create in
the top right corner. Then from here it might look
a little bit overwhelming. It's actually super,
super simple and easy. First you're going
to name your GBT. What is the purpose you're
trying to accomplish? All right, let's say sales
script writer or it could be. Yeah, like sales script
writer description. What does your B
do? It's like this. Gbt, top performing
sales pages and writes the highest converting sales scripts on the planet. Right. You can go into
more detail or less. I'll show you some other
prewritten examples, instructions. What does this GPT do and what
should it not do or avoid? For example, it's like this GPT. All of the data in the
knowledge base before responding this
GPT, does X, Y, Z? Sounds like a human being and not bland corporate copy this GPT, so XYZ. Anyway, I'll show you
some other examples. But what does it do?
What does it not? Do you want to include
that in the instructions here? Conversation starters. Honestly, you can
skip over this. I don't find this
valuable whatsoever. It's just you can just create
predetermined prompts. So you can just click
on a button and it'll automatically like reply. But usually every time
you use Catch PT, it's going to be for
a specific purpose. So like I need a
custom question, conversations are just like preset buttons that
you can create. Like you generate 1010
Youtube content ideas for me that I can use
for my channel that revolve around Amazon,
FBA, whatever. But usually it changes slightly, so that's why I
don't use it here. You want to make
sure you click on Code Interpreter just to
have everything baked in. Code Interpreter again,
basically allows you to analyze CSV files. So like numeric data, you know if you
download and Excel or Google sheets
and you have data stored there and this could be copy that's
just stored there, this could be numbers we
can download and upload. However, right now I've noticed, and this will definitely
change in the near future that chat BT has a difficult
time interpreting data, so I'm going to get to
this, so bear with me. If you have copy, it's better to download in a PDF format is the
best format I've found so far versus a
text file or CSV file. Why? Because it
seems that chatBT best understands and interprets via PDF for whatever reason. Okay, what am I
talking about here? All right, now this is
really where the meta is. All right, so these
are the capabilities. We can browse the web, great. Because sometimes
we'll want to combine knowledge that we have here
in the GBT with web browsing. Image creation might
as well. Why not? Depending on your
purposes and code interpreter leave them all. It just makes it as
multifaceted as possible. Now comes to the powerful stuff. So here in this is called
the knowledge base. Okay, This is the key here. You want to upload up to 20
files that relate to this. So for example, what
do we want here? So we want someone that
writes sales scripts, or let's say sales web pages,
whatever that might be. So we want to find the top performing sales
scripts in the world. Maybe we've saved some,
you know, in the past. You can do some research
now go on Google. Just type in what are some
of the top, you know, if you find any books
about sales scripts, about selling things like that. So like books, blog
articles, you know, if you have examples
that you've saved in the past and you
can upload PNG's, J pegs or basically like images, PDF files, text files,
CSV files, right? A huge array of all different kinds of
files you can upload. Like I said, recommended
in general is PDF. If you want to basically analyze images and then
create images, you know, via dolly, which is the kind of chachiBT image generation tool. Then that's exactly
what you want to do is upload up to 20
kind of images there. And I'll show you to better
understand a real example. So if you're, you've uploaded
some files and everything, you can go ahead and click Save, make it only visible to
you. So this is private. That would be the best kind of default anyone with the link, this is what I'm going
to provide to you. You can actually get access
to some of my own here, which will be linking in
the resources section, so you can access it there or to everyone in the internet. So it's up to you kind
of what you want to do if you have
private information. Like sometimes I
analyze my own life, like journaling my
thoughts, you know, our goals, challenges
that we have, et cetera, then I only want to see that I don't want to share that with
the world, right? So if it's private
or somewhat private, then you want to make
sure you do that, then confirm and it's
saved. So it's great. We're just going to exit out of this and I'm going to show you right here e mail writer. So I'm going to click
on e mail writer. So basically when I
want to write e mails, I've already created this
custom GBT to do that, it's trained on the best e
mail subject lines, bodies, best marketing and
copywriting books in the world are all
there inside this GPT. So instead of, for example, clicking on chat EBT, you can see that this
is just general chat BT And my results still, with the prompts that you use
are going to be very good, but they're going to be even
better when I'm using this. And I can tell you
the results are much, much better, really
great quality. And they write things I
would never think to write. It's actually incredible
like it will do, it can do a better
job than you can. That's what's so
crazy about this. So instead I click on the
custom GBT that I created, which I'll share with you
in the resources section. And then here, use the same prompts and use it
just like you would chat. Ebt. It's just going
to be more honed in on a specific thing,
if that makes sense. So really simple,
It's just a set up that's a little
bit time consuming, but it's actually super easy. And I'll make it
even easier for you because I'm going to give
you some free resources. So to show you this is kind of how you would use it, right? Just like chat PT, open it. We just like you would hey, you know, insert the
prompt you write. Here's what I'm
trying to accomplish. Like I'm writing to re, engage old subscribers in
my e mail list and I want to let them know about a
new free offer, blah, blah. Write me five viral
subject lines, two viral bodies and blah, blah. And then we'll do it to
show you behind the scenes, just click on your custom
GPT that you've created. Click on Edit GPT. All right, and
then from here I'm going to show you
behind the scenes. So I've named it e mail writer, and I always love to use emojis because it really
helps me with clarity, keeping things
organized, but you don't have to. Here's
the description. So this GPT analyzes the top, the top open rate CTR, e mail body and subject lines, as well as the best
proven practices for the most effective e
mail market campaigns. Order to write, write e mail better than any other
human being on the planet. Okay, instructions.
Here's what to do. Analyze and memorize all files and documents uploaded
in the knowledge base. Know exactly what makes the
highest open rate and CTR, e mail, subject lines
and bodies in the world. Using the knowledge base paired with information
to the prompt, avoid writing generic
corporate blind and boring e mail copy
and subject lines. Okay, so nothing too
extraordinary here. And As you are getting results. If there's something
that you really hate that your GBT is doing, take that like, you
know, articulate it. Hey, these are constantly, let's say they're,
they're way too. Let's take personal
like they're like even grammatical errors
which it shouldn't do. But let's just say that typos say there should be no typos. Grammatical errors should not be sounding like, you know, XYZ. So you can kind of refine
this as time goes on, but this has worked really well. What really is the key is this right here,
the knowledge base. Okay, so you've seen that I've uploaded over a dozen
files here and these are literally some of the
top copywriting books and marketing books
on the planet. And I'm going to constantly
kind of be updating this with more as they
kind of become available. And what's great is as a
student in this course, only you're getting
complete access to all. So all of the knowledge here and I actually use
this in other things. I use this for e mail marketing, I use this for sales scripts, for creating online courses, Youtube inspiration, all
these different things. I re use some of the same pieces of knowledge in multiple GPT's. Right. I still make them slightly different
but there's a lot of kind of shared files because a lot of this marketing
knowledge and, you know, human
psychology is going to be the base for all
this copywriting. So anyway, you can access all these files in the
resources section. Just simply go to each
right click on download, or you can actually click
and select everything here. And then just click on, we should see download
here. Download. You can download them all and just kind of show you again. You have to Google like, hey,
what is this book about? Because I'm going to go
through every single one. For example, we
have profit first. This is about
business efficiency. We have, let's see what else, Tools of the Titans, that's more for
personal development. It varies a bit from copyrighting,
but this right here, one of the top
copywriting books, Period Copyrighting
Secrets by Jim Edwards. Cash Advertising, another
phenomenal copyrighting book, $100,000,000 offers
more for marketing, but with some really great
copywriting secrets there. Magnetic marketing
contagious, right? So just a great mix and a lot of them will kind of touch on some similar principles. But regardless, you can
download everything, just Google, hey, what
is this book about? To see if it makes
sense for you, we can literally
download these PDFs, upload them into your own GPT, and I'm also going to give
you a link to this GPT and my other copyrighting GPTs
that you can start using. Because like I said,
I do my best to make it a top the line, best in the world possible. So you're going to get
access to all of this. Yeah. If you want to
test it before you save, you can just go in
here and play around, send messages and prompts. But yeah, so that's kind
of the key here, right? It's all about this, it's all
about the knowledge base. So I'm going to go
back here. Right. And that's pretty
much it. So, yeah, I'm going to give
you my own GPT's. You can go ahead and
create your own, which I would highly recommend
for your specific things. And remember, you can go online and just
type in, you know, if there's certain books or certain principles or
you know, examples. You just go on Google, say, hey, is this available for
free PDF download? Or you can just kind of find a blog post potentially
download that in PDF format, or just kind of copy and
paste in the Google Docs. Download as a PDF
from there and so on. But it's really simple
to do really fast and it'll level up your
copywriting like crazy. And like I said, it
literally writes better. I pride myself on
being, you know, I would consider myself
a top 1% copywriter, although that's obviously
up for debate and chat. Gbt many, many times writes much better copy
than I ever could. It's crazy, especially with some e mails that I wrote recently. I would have never thought
about both the strategy, the marketing kind of strategy behind the e mail sequence, then the actual
quality themselves, and it's kind of both of those. So anyway, you see how
excited I am about this, but the only way to know is
to test it for yourself. So I hope you find this
immensely valuable. If you have questions, please let me know in the
Q and A section. That being said, let's
get to the next video.
34. Create a Professional Copywriting Portfolio from Scratch in MINUTES: I hope you're excited
because in this video, I'm going to show
you how to write an entire professional
copywriting portfolio in minutes, even if you've never
written anything before in your life or if you are an
experienced copywriter. So this is really amazing. Of course, first, we have
our portfolio writer prompt. So I want to make
sure you access that in the student
resources section. This is new and just been added. And from here, you can go ahead and read
through this yourself. You can edit this if you like,
but this is ready to go. The only thing you
need to do as usual, is fill out the
required information that's highlighted here
in the salmon color. Excuse me. So you
can either do this after you paste in a
Chachi PT or beforehand. I'll let you do so beforehand. So in this separate Google Doc, it can be in notes or anywhere. I just copied and pasted
the questions which are, again, just in this
orange section here, and then answer them, which you can see here in black, which I'll quickly cover so you kind of know what to prepare for before Chachi P writes your entire
professional portfolio. And actually, before
I get to that, for those of you who aren't familiar already with what a portfolio is, like,
what am I talking about? Of course, this is a
very important part if you are a freelance copywriter,
which many of you are. And it's essentially
a compilation of information about yourself, your past results, testimonials, samples of your work,
contact information, but basically this
condensed, beautiful, clean, clear and professional place
that you're going to hand off either in the form of
Google Docs or Notion page, which I'll talk
about in a second. Or it can be in
another form as well, and give to prospective
clients, right? So when you're a client, you
have a project, let's say, I want to hire a sales
page writer for this, promotion that we're having
with our ecommerceite, or whatever it might be with
a course that's coming, and you're competing with
all these other freelancers. And your portfolio wants to show them that you are
the best candidate. You're going to
help them make the most money and be
most successful, the best person to work with all of that with this portfolio. So that's the
purpose. And again, it's going to come
in the form of either what I've seen and what I prefer as a
Google Doc or notion, actually, I prefer, which
I'll talk about in a second. So anyway, getting back
to it with the questions, what's your full name, right? What's your niche or
speciality as a copywriter? If you consider yourself more of a general copywriter,
which, of course, with these principles and
formulas and foundations, you can write anything
and be good at it. I write a lot of different
copy for businesses and hires or copywriters
and designers here or there for
when I need help, but I do everything else myself. What I'd recommend doing
with your portfolio is have multiple portfolios. This is a huge hack that so few freelancers do,
but it's so important. So if you are more of
a general freelancer, what I'd recommend
doing is kind of think about some of those core skills, like maybe certain type of
copy that you really enjoy, maybe you're really
good at, maybe you have good results from the past
that you can utilize. So maybe it's like two or
three different things and then have two or three
different portfolios. So let's say you have an
email copywriting portfolio. Let's say you have a
blog writing portfolio, and then you have a third
kind of general portfolio. And then depending on the
client and the project, you give the portfolio. Again, all these should
be 100% accurate. And, you know, honest
and up to date, it's no, you know,
scammy type thing. You want to show you're not just a general copyright
that just kind of good at stuff unless it calls for that,
unless someone's like, Hey, we're looking to hire
someone like full time or for the next year for the next six months,
just revamp everything. We want them to do social media. We want them to do our website, we want them to do all
these different things. Then you want to have and showcase that in your portfolio. And what's amazing with
this is you can immediately update your portfolio at any given time in
literally seconds, where it would take
hours and hours before, it's literally minutes now,
which I'm about to show you. So yeah, have a few
different ones. Like I said, if you you know, kind of specialize in one,
you can just have that. But if you are more of
a general copywriter, which many of us are, have
an email copywriting one. Have a blog writing,
social media caption, a Facebook ads copy,
whatever it is, broken out and have
those separately because that's ultimately going to be the most
beneficial for you, and it's going to
make the client feel confident because remember, perception over reality, if someone feels like you're
going to do a better job, you know, than freelancer B, they're going to
hire you because you made them feel better
and more confident, not that you're actually better or not, but you are
better, of course. So Email copywriter, that's the portfolio we're
going to focus on now. Do you want a general
or niche specific? Again, in this case, niche. Short description
of your background, skills, pastorals,
relevant experience. So how many years have
you been working? What kind of tools
have you used? Do you have any, certifications? What kind of clients have
you worked with in the past? You know, what kind of things
specially have you done? Like, let's say
you specialize in taggings and automation
with email marketing, you specialize in ecommerce. Right, it's up to you. Whatever
it is, just write it out. If you're not sure,
AskGBT and say, Hey, I've done this, what
would be relevant here? But it's pretty
straightforward. Do you have any real client
work examples? I want to say no, because I
want to see what it puts out. If you already have
it, you can literally upload as a text file. So you can go to Google Docs, go to File, download.
As textFile. That's what I'd
recommend doing. So just copy and paste in Google Docs, all of your work if
it's already there. You can also download
as a PDF, right? So that you can take that
PDF or that textFile of your work and upload
it with this prompt. So, for example,
I could say, Yes, attached in PDF, right? Or whatever. That's an easy way, so you don't have to go
and, like, copy and paste. You can take your
existing portfolio, one that you're already working
on that you want to kind of polish up and
put that in here. If you have an ideal client,
write that in here, right? Totally depends on you. Who have you enjoyed
working with? Who do you want to go after
that you're like, Hey, I know this is
somewhat easy work that's paid really well. Like setting up, I
don't know, like email automation
campaigns for re engaging past customers and abandoned carts for mid size, you
know, ecommerce brands. It could be huge. It only
takes you, like, a few hours, and you can make, you know, thousands
of dollars from that. Which, by the way, it is
true. That's a little hack. What kind of tone do you
want? So it's up to you. Here's what I perse
recommend in general. So, of course, if
there's a certain tone that resonates with
your target audience, of course, use that what I want is
professionality, right? Like, when I like I said, I do most copywriting myself, but there are times
where my skills might be a little bit lacking or I'm just really
busy with projects, and I've brought in other
copywriters to do work for me, also possibly learn from them. What are they doing? How
do they see things a bit differently and get some
fresh perspective in? And I've spent tens of
thousands of dollars on this, as well as generating
millions of dollars myself for my own copywriting. And the big thing
that stands out to me and many others
is professionality. I want to feel like
this individual, like you are going
to get me results. So that's the feeling
I want to come. Not a way, like, I'm quirky, I'm fun, you know, I'm responsive. That's all good. But
it's all about results. So that's really the focus. But again, it depends
on you, right. Do what's best for you. So what I wrote is, you
know, professional, when someone reads this, I don't want them to think
about my personality. I want them to think
this guy's gonna make us a boatload of money. So professional,
confident, you know, also that, you know, I'm
responsive, I'm clear, not scattered, not
general or generic, unique, professional, clear,
results driven, that's key. And that's really kind of across all freelancers, really,
not just copywriting. What specific services do I have or I'm want to
highlight? Just write them in. Do you have any
client testimonials? If you have them, include
them here, that's great. But I'm just going
to write No. And how should clients get in
touch with you, right? So I have my email and my Cally, could be linked in, whatever
that is, keep it simple. I'd really drive kind of
one call to action there, and then you're good. So take a few minutes,
fill out the questions. Once it's done, we
are ready to go. So we're going to go up to the very top here
just like before. We're going to scroll down
to the very bottom, right? And it is a pretty
massive prompt. Command, see the copy. Good to Chata BT. Now you could use. And actually, I'm just
going to go ahead and we'll go ahead and
use the generic one here. And you neede ask me questions, and I'll show you
why I'm doing this. Then we so it's asking me. Sorry, Comence, I'm
getting ahead of myself. So I included the
prompt here. Now, I need to ask you the required
questions one at a time. So here's the question, right? And it's one at a time, I'm just going to
do all at once. Hit Enter. So I just copy and paste
the questions in there. Now it's ready to go.
Okay? So that's running. Like I said before,
what I like to do is have two different chats. So I have this here and it's asking me one
kind of follow up question. Do you want head
or standard Black? Standard. I'll say whatever is more professional. Do that. Alright, anyway, so there's
a follow up question there. Even when using the same
prompt in the same system, because Chachi Pee
is updating and all of that, it can be
slightly different. So that's actually the
first time I've seen that, but that's why I do live
tutorials. So that's great. So that's running. You're
already see an example there, but I'm going to use another custom GBT to see
the difference. So we're going to go to Explore. I'm going to type
in copywriting. Okay. And I want to see
some of these results here that show up
because it is dynamic. They will change with
time. I don't know. There we go. So we have copyrighting expert, I'm
going to click to see. And I like to see 4.4 or higher. I've just found 4.3 and
below that especially like 3.9 is just that's what people rate when
they use this tool, and it just means
it's not as good. So not bad. You can always worth testing
if you have the time, but I like to go until I find a good amount,
thousands of conversations. So 50,000 times this has been used, actually
more than that. And 4.5 pretty great. W 1,000 people have rated
it. So this is great. So we're just going
to go and click on Starthat and again, we're
going to do this with her. So you don't have to do this of having the
two different chats. I recommend it. Actually, I would have three, especially
with your portfolio. It's thing you create
one time, whichever one has the best results,
use that, right? It's like, literally seconds. It's a minute of extra effort. So command Vita pace.
We're going to hit Enter. We know what's going
to happen next. It's going to be
questions, okay? So I go to my questions here. Command C. Make sure that's copied here to just
copy my questions. I'm just going to
give it all to them. Hit Enter, and we
should be good to go. We'll see if they have
any follow up questions. And then once that's done, we'll compare the results. So here we go. It's
already recording it. Now, something cool
that I want to show you is the format that
hachBT is using here versus if we go to
our other chats and hopefully I don't exit
out of this. There we go. So what you're looking at here, this is our original
prompt, okay? So what I can do
here is I can take all this and then copy and paste into
Google Docs or Notion, which I'll show you in a
second, which is fine. But if we go to our
other da da da here, so we just click on copy here instead of having
to copy everything. Go to Google Docs and a
fresh Command V to paste. And then check out fully
written professional portfolio. Well, almost fully
written because we have one section here
that is missing. But first we have kind
of this intro section. So there will be certain texts and you will need to
kind of tweak this, and you should absolutely review this to make sure
everything's accurate. If anything's off from
your toner style, you want to make
sure you edit this. But the bulk majority
of the work is done, especially the organization,
the orientation, a lot of the writing,
really, really solid. So like, for example,
here, you know, you don't want to leave
that insert profile image. You want to go ahead
and upload that here. And by the way, like I said, I've spent tens of
thousands of dollars on freelance copywriters who use Google Docs in an exact
sort of format like this. So this seems a
little bit basic. I might change the font
around from Arial. I might play actually
one that I really like. You can steal. This is Montserrat. Really like this font,
very professional. So you want to make sure
it's readable, clean, professional, kind of modern. So I really like
that. So then you add some images or screenshots here and there to kind of
liven it up a bit, especially as you get examples. Now, as you can see, if
we scroll down past, we have the kind of intro, the About me, services that
we kind of specialize in. And again, I was just very just putting in random information. I spit out something
pretty amazing. Then we have portfolio samples. So, you know, sample number one, sample number two, client
goal, deliverables approach. And I would actually ask ha HBT. You can do this
yourself manually. Just to kind of make
this pop a bit more, I would maybe bold and
ask hachBT kind of format that a bit better because
there is more information. Like, the output is
larger than others. Like, if I said, Hey, just
write this one email, boom, I said, write this entire
portfolio, it is quite a lot. So certain aspects I found might be a little
bit off here or there. So you have to back with ChaiPT and just kind
of tweak it a bit. But as HIP improves. Hopefully, that goes
away, and it's perfect. But it's like 80% there. And then, again, ten more samples following
the exact format. So you want to go
back and say, Hey, this is great if these samples
look good to you. Okay? So here's Win Back
email sequence. Here's an abandoned cart
email sequence example. Again, these are samples of
what you can do for them. And of course, you want to
make sure that the writing is correct because you don't
want to mislead and say, Hey, this is a client
that I did before, right? These are just work samples. So you want to be very clear about that and I
want to make sure you're ethical
when using ChaiBT. When you have no clients,
just use samples. Once you start getting
testimonials and reviews, I would ask all of your clients. For testimonials and reviews,
you'll add them here. If you scroll down to
this section here, right? So it's already filled in.
You can delete that for now, and then you know exactly
where to add that in later. So ask all for testimonials. Make sure for samples, include those as you go through and
you're just copywriting. You can do so for fun if
you already have some and include them
here. Use Chachi PT. Boom, we've gone
through the course. You've already created some
samples, put them in here. And also number three,
which we have here, just automatically, we have
before and after examples. So we have kind of
general samples of, like, here was the objective,
here's the client, here is the approach, and
here is the result, right? But then we have
before and after. So what's really good, too is with all of your clients,
this is really important. It goes beyond just
like the portfolio. It's just kind of
marketing yourself is number one what I
would say is this, in terms of getting
clients, if you find it difficult
or kind of slow, do a little bit
of free work with entrepreneurial
friends that you have. If they have, I have a
friend who has a wedding, you know, videography website. I'm going to be helping him out in return for testimonial. You know, it doesn't
need to be this massive, you know, hours
and hours of work, but some simple
things that you can do that can help lift, you
know, conversion rates, click through rates you know, subscribers, different metrics
of all different kinds. I'm kind of in the email
marketing mindset right now, but different metrics
for your specific kind of niche, and record that. So asking for testimonials. You know, now have testimonials, you have samples, and you have potentially results, right? And once you do this
like five to ten times, you can do it, you know,
five to ten free clients, or you can also, you know, start mixing in some paid
clients there as well, and it'll kind of update
these sections with that. So you start off Chachi V is going to
write everything for you. Here's kind of the whole shell. But then you can kind
of combine prompts. So we have our portfolio. Go to our other prompts where like the email
marketing one, the social media captions
one, the Facebook adds one. You can use those
prompts, create amazing samples and examples, and just boom, copy and paste them right in
here, if that makes sense. So you have kind
of our Google Doc, from before, we take those
samples, add them in here. Of course, right now, we're
brand new, we have no result, so we want to be ethical and not lie and make
something up, of course, which I prompted this
correctly because ChachP has the tendency to do that. So I want
to make sure not. There is this client
testimonial section just so you have it and kind
of know what it looks like, yeah, just kind of keep
that in mind as well. But that's just a little huge
hack is so many freelancers are against doing free work but the reality is you're
not doing it for free, because you're not
getting paid money, but you're getting paid
future money because you're getting
testimonials results, you know, even some basic, like, communication and back and
forth and things like that. It's really great experience
if you're brand new. But of course, you've already
have some experience, then you know exactly what to do and kind of how
to put that in here. But this is organized
in the best kind of readability and
conversion way possible. This is professional.
This is clean. Of course, feel free to edit
in any way that you like. The only thing I would
say here is maybe add some images, maybe some logos. You have a certification,
have the image of that certification profile image of you if you have, you know, your own brand, you've
created your own agency, have that there, you
know, at the bottom, all of that just to
add a little bit more. You could also change
the color here, right? So for each of these headers, right, I'm just using purple, probably not the
most professional. Depends on your branding
and all of that. That can kind of help make it
pop, help with readability, as well, just to give you some very practical tips of
additional things you can do. And Google Docs is great. It's free. It's used
pretty universal to share, click here on Share. Oh, yeah, I need to name
it. So it'd be like Sumner. Oh Sumner, Hobarts. You're writing portfolio, save. Okay. So you want to go
to anyone with the link, and then you want
view, copy link, and then you can share it
that way to be very tactical. But also, what I recommend
doing is checking out notion. So here's an example
of a notion page. It's similar to Google Docs, but it's more dynamic,
more customizable. Like you see here, we can actually toggle
this information. So it makes it easier to
scroll through the boom. Okay, we can go here.
And Notion is free. There's a free and paid version, right, where Google Doc
is only free currently. Hopefully it stays that way. I'll just show you
some more examples. This is all the
different types of stylization you
can use with Noon. It's, like I said, Google Docs, but a bit more dynamic, a bit more clean, professional. And again, you can Google Docs, go up to here to share, right? And then you can just copy the
link here. You'll publish. Copy and share it with anyone. And anyone, even if they don't have a notion
account can view it, okay, you know, kind of
like with Google Docs. And yeah, lastly, just another example. This is
probably not the best. But just give you a feel for it. So I definitely
check out Notion. Either one works. It
really doesn't matter. Especially with copywriting,
at the end of the day, it's really about your
work and your results. So samples showing, you know, you can talk all day long, but showing, you know, number two is case studies, and number three
is testimonials, especially those three things, along with everything
else is important. You contact information is but those three things are critical. That's what you know,
I'm going to scroll past the about me
section and all of that. You could even
kind of get rid of it. It's kind of good to have. It is expected. But what most of your clients are going
to do is scroll right to the samples, the
results, and all of that. And when they see that
you're including that, it's going to set you
apart from all these other copywriters and
absolutely crush it. So yeah, there's your
entire portfolio done in, how many minutes? And I hope you found
this immensely valuable. If you have any
questions at all, just let me know in the Q&A
section of that being said, let's get to the next video.
35. Don't Get Sued! (Watch This): When using any AI tool, make sure that you're
checking for plagiarism. A concern that
I've heard, though I haven't personally
experienced, is because that AI tools are built on this abundance
of information. That when you ask,
create a Youtube title, create a social media
caption, a blog article, some will say that AI
is just going to take existing text and basically plagiarize it and kind of
just tweak it a little bit. So like I said, this has not been my personal
experience at all. It could also be with
the way that I use the tool and all the
methods and strategies. However, it's very, very important to make
sure that you're not plagiarizing or stealing
anyone's information or, you know, their handiwork, whether knowingly
or unknowingly. So what you can do
is go to Chat PT, take whatever copy
that you have, like this blog article, go to Google and type in
plagiarism checker. It really doesn't matter
exactly what it is, but there's one
from grammarly here at duple check,
plagiarism checker, free. There's a lot of free
tools and ways to do this. You just need to
choose one, right? So we're going to hit it out of this I've already uploaded. So basically what I did,
I'll show you here, is I went to this one right
here, open a new tab, I simply copy and paste
the content here, Click on Not a Robot, and then I check for plagiarism. And this basically
scans the internet, checks to see if there's
anything somewhat similar to the copy that's here to make sure there's
no plagiarism. We're at 70% Again, just like with
other online tools, Let's give it just a couple more minutes and we'll
get back to it. The results are in, and
we can see that there is 96% uniqueness and 4%
potential plagiarism detected. Now, keep in mind you
might be in shock like, oh my goodness, 4% plagiarized. It's copying other
people's content naturally when all different
types of people are all talking about
the same subject, there's going to be overlap in words and phrases,
and that's okay. The key here is that
not the majority of it is plagiarized. We saw a large red section
here, like really large, taking up a big chunk of that pie, that
would be alarming. But regardless, if you get any
detective plagiarism here, what's really great about these tools is they
will show you, and you can actually
go to the links of where the plagiarism
is detected. And you can see for yourself, okay, you know, is this
actually plagiarized or not? I can go ahead and dive
a little bit deeper, but in this case, this
is not worry me at all. Let's assume that I
go here and you know, nothing here is plagiarized. It's just that
we're talking about similar subjects to where there's that little
bit of plagiarism, where we're all kind of copying the same words or phrases. Then you can, of course,
you know, identify, right, that 3% similarity here
with this article, 2% similarity here
with this article. And then kind of tweak a bit
to make sure that it's not plagiarized that you're using
your own unique language. But just an important kind of aspect to use when
using any AI tool, especially if you're
not using chat PT. But like I said, I
found, you know, very, very low technical plagiarism to 0% when using these methods, but just kind of an
added level of safety. So hope you find this
valuable. You have questions. Let me know in the
Q and A section, and let's go ahead and
get to the next video.
36. Even More Sales - Top 6 Copywriting Books: For those asking about my top recommended copyrighting books for continued
copyrighting education. Here they are, right
here, all in the screen. So I'll run through
them. Number one is Cash Advertising by Drew Eric Whitman,
which I've referenced. He's the author of Life Force
eight here in the book, as well as some other
really great examples. This is an amazing,
amazing copyrighting book, writing to sell
highly recommend. Number two is Copyrighting
Secrets by Jim Edwards. In my opinion, this is the best copyrighting book
that I've ever read. You'll see some of
the principles that are sort of touched on
or covered in the book. Some of them which are
here in the course, as well as others that
are not in the book. Also covered here in the course. But a really great book. Very inexpensive as well. Yeah, you can just listen to it. He does a great job
with the way he structures everything.
Very formulaic. It'd be my number
one recommendation. Number three, we have.com
secrets going a little way from just copyrighting and focusing on digital
marketing as a whole. But you'll see how important copywriting is and
how critical it is. Talks about audience research
like we have and other kind of digital marketing with copyrighting sort of techniques. Number four, we
have Breakthrough advertising by Eugene Schwartz. Another incredible book,
highly highly recommend. This is sort of like the
OG book of copywriting. And it is a bit more
expensive for you to find it, but it is well worth it.
Really powerful book. And one of the key concepts
in this book is like we talked about that
you're not going to create desire in somebody. You're copyrighting
the bridge, right? Like we talked about, you're
not creating anything. You're bridging the
target audience between their individual
personal pains, fears, and desires and your product or service
that solves them. So amazing book, Building a Story Brand by Donald Miller is
another great book. Again, this is really
highlighting where you are the guide and your
target audience is the hero, not the
other way around. It talks about even simple kind of website design and really, really interesting
great book as well. And lastly, I'm kind
of covering it a bit, but start with why. The only negative I'll say about this book is the
number of times that the author mentions Apple
as an example of marketing. But all of your writing
and all of what you do being based in
why and not what. Again, all of which here
we've kind of touched on. But of course, it's
always good to seek out other knowledge
and information. Believe it or not, I'm not the wisest and most experienced
person on the planet. That's why it's always great
to have mentors both in person and via books and
other learning like this. Yeah, for those of you asking, these are my top
recommendations. I'll be linking these in the resources section just
to make sure you can find the right books because I know sometimes
it's difficult. Yeah, if you have questions
about this, let me know. But hope you in
finding the content, of course, up to this point, extremely helpful
to you and super excited to get to the next
video. So let's get to it.
37. Last Step!: Did you know that only 10% of students make it through
the entire program? Yeah, it's been a long journey. I know there's been a
lot of tools, templates, formulas, things to remember, and information to take on. But I hope you've seen the life changing power of
this program and hats off to you for being literally the top percentage of students that make it
all the way through. Because if you're
watching this video, you've made it to the end. So congratulations, so excited for you along
this journey ahead. And there are only two
last easy steps to take. Number one, the most
important is to take action. You have every single
tool, formula of resource, and strategy that you
need to dramatically increase your income and reduce your hours
through copywriting. Even if it's a small step, take that small step
today and it will be like a snowball turning into an avalanche, running
down a mountain. Small steps, you know, the journey of 1,000 miles
begins with a single step. It sounds cliche, but
it's totally true. So take that action today. Number two is now that you've made it to
the end of the course, if you haven't already,
would really appreciate your honest feedback and
review about this program. It would be helpful both to
myself as well as hundreds of other prospective
students who are looking for the
right program for them. So if you found this valuable, we'd really appreciate you
kind of sharing your thoughts. But regardless,
I'm here for you. We will be updating the
course as well in the future. Because obviously as
AI evolves, new tools, new strategies, anything
becomes outdated, we will be updating at that
time here in the program. So this is a living
breathing course, so you can check back in. At any point, I'll
be sending out any announcement messages when
that content gets updated. So you know, I'll
also be sending out messages in the underground
AI, Facebook group. Also another place
where you can ask me any question whether
now or in the future. Because like I said,
I'm literally here for you to make you as
successful as possible, reduce your stress,
reduce your hours. That's like my mission
here on this Earth. So thank you again
for choosing me as your instructor and I'm so excited for your
journey ahead.