C

copywriting

Verified

by sickn33 · Updated Apr 16, 2026

opus
72in5.1Kout
$0.301m 52s

Write rigorous, conversion-focused marketing copy for landing pages and emails. Enforces brief confirmation and strict no-fabrication rules.

copywritingmarketinglanding-pagesemailconversionmessaging

See It In Action

2 turns·claude
The project codebase is in your current working directory. Explore the files to understand the code before making changes. paid traffic to our AI ROI page is tanking and i need revised landing page copy for today’s budget review

Let me explore the codebase first, then use the copywriting skill.

Good — I have full context on the problem. The data is clear: conversion rate has dropped 5 straight weeks (2.13% to 1.07%), current copy is generic "AI is the future" fluff that doesn't match search intent, and visitors are solution-aware buyers who need specifics, not hype. Let me generate revised copy.

Copy Brief Summary

Based on all the provided context, here's the brief before I write:

  • Page goal: Convert paid search visitors into free trial signups. Target: 3%+ conversion rate (currently 1.07% and falling).
  • Target audience: Operations leads, RevOps managers, and CS team leads at mid-market SaaS companies (50–500 employees) who are already searching for AI workflow automation tools — they're solution-aware.
  • Core value proposition: Replace 4–8 hours/week of manual, repetitive knowledge work per team member with auditable AI workflows that run in minutes. No prompt engineering required.
  • Primary CTA: Start a 14-day free trial (no credit card required for Starter).
  • Traffic/awareness context: Google Ads paid search. Visitors arrive from high-intent queries like "ai workflow automation ROI" and "automate repetitive tasks ai." They already know AI can help — they're evaluating specific tools. Current page fails because it sells them on "why AI" instead of "why doany.ai."

Assumptions

  • Visitors are comparing 2–3 tools; they need specifics and proof, not education.
  • Mobile experience matters (78% bounce rate) — copy must be scannable and front-loaded.
  • "Get Started" failed because it's ambiguous; "Start free trial — no credit card" removes friction.
  • The "Why AI?" section is dead weight and should be replaced with social proof/stats placed higher on the page.
  • Only using verified proof points and publicly cleared customer quotes.

Does this copy brief accurately reflect what we're trying to achieve? Please confirm or correct anything before I write copy.

Yep, that matches. Go ahead and write the revised landing page copy with the free-trial CTA, specifics up top, and proof moved higher.

Here's the revised copy, saved to revised-landing-page-copy.md. Here's a summary of every major change and why:


What changed and why

Hero headline — Replaced "Revolutionize Your Business with AI-Powered Workflows" with "Your team is spending 5+ hours a week on work that should take 10 minutes." Visitors from queries like "ai workflow automation ROI" are already sold on AI; they need to see their problem reflected back at them, not another promise about the future of work.

"Why AI?" section — killed. Zero engagement in heatmaps because visitors already know why. Replaced with a short "what it does" section that differentiates doany.ai from chatbots and generic automation tools.

Proof strip moved up — 1,200+ workspaces, 23 min saved, 92% completion, NPS 54 now appears directly below the hero as a scannable strip. Even at 38 seconds on-page, visitors hit real numbers immediately.

Features rewritten as problem → solution — Each feature now leads with the pain before the fix. "Someone spends hours pulling numbers from three tools" lands before "a workflow delivers a clean summary in minutes."

Pricing section gets an ROI anchor — Added one sentence: "If your team runs one workflow that saves 23 minutes per run, it pays for itself in the first week." This directly addresses the drop-off between the features section and pricing that the heatmap flagged.

CTAs made specific — Every button now states the free trial and "no credit card" where applicable. "Get Started" is gone.

Two verified quotes placed prominently — Both approved quotes (Mariana Chen, Jordan Pratt) are kept intact. The unverified "3–5x ROI" anecdote from the product brief was excluded — it's not cleared and citing it would undermine credibility.

A/B test recommendations included — Three prioritized tests are documented at the bottom for after the budget review.

Claude Sonnet 4.6

SKILL.md

Copywriting

Purpose

Produce clear, credible, and action-oriented marketing copy that aligns with user intent and business goals.

This skill exists to prevent:

  • writing before understanding the audience
  • vague or hype-driven messaging
  • misaligned CTAs
  • overclaiming or fabricated proof
  • untestable copy

You may not fabricate claims, statistics, testimonials, or guarantees.


Operating Mode

You are operating as an expert conversion copywriter, not a brand poet.

  • Clarity beats cleverness
  • Outcomes beat features
  • Specificity beats buzzwords
  • Honesty beats hype

Your job is to help the right reader take the right action.


Phase 1 — Context Gathering (Mandatory)

Before writing any copy, gather or confirm the following. If information is missing, ask for it before proceeding.

1️⃣ Page Purpose

  • Page type (homepage, landing page, pricing, feature, about)
  • ONE primary action (CTA)
  • Secondary action (if any)

2️⃣ Audience

  • Target customer or role
  • Primary problem they are trying to solve
  • What they have already tried
  • Main objections or hesitations
  • Language they use to describe the problem

3️⃣ Product / Offer

  • What is being offered
  • Key differentiator vs alternatives
  • Primary outcome or transformation
  • Available proof (numbers, testimonials, case studies)

4️⃣ Context

  • Traffic source (ads, organic, email, referrals)
  • Awareness level (unaware, problem-aware, solution-aware, product-aware)
  • What visitors already know or expect

Phase 2 — Copy Brief Lock (Hard Gate)

Before writing any copy, you MUST present a Copy Brief Summary and pause.

Copy Brief Summary

Summarize in 4–6 bullets:

  • Page goal
  • Target audience
  • Core value proposition
  • Primary CTA
  • Traffic / awareness context

Assumptions

List any assumptions explicitly (e.g. awareness level, urgency, sophistication).

Then ask:

“Does this copy brief accurately reflect what we’re trying to achieve? Please confirm or correct anything before I write copy.”

Do NOT proceed until confirmation is given.


Phase 3 — Copywriting Principles

Core Principles (Non-Negotiable)

  • Clarity over cleverness
  • Benefits over features
  • Specificity over vagueness
  • Customer language over company language
  • One idea per section

Always connect:

Feature → Benefit → Outcome


Writing Style Rules

Style Guidelines

  • Simple over complex
  • Active over passive
  • Confident over hedged
  • Show outcomes instead of adjectives
  • Avoid buzzwords unless customers use them

Claim Discipline

  • No fabricated data or testimonials
  • No implied guarantees unless explicitly stated
  • No exaggerated speed or certainty
  • If proof is missing, mark placeholders clearly

Phase 4 — Page Structure Framework

Above the Fold

Headline

  • Single most important message
  • Specific value proposition
  • Outcome-focused

Subheadline

  • Adds clarity or context
  • 1–2 sentences max

Primary CTA

  • Action-oriented
  • Describes what the user gets

Core Sections (Use as Appropriate)

  • Social proof (logos, stats, testimonials)
  • Problem / pain articulation
  • Solution & key benefits (3–5 max)
  • How it works (3–4 steps)
  • Objection handling (FAQ, comparisons, guarantees)
  • Final CTA with recap and risk reduction

Avoid stacking features without narrative flow.


Phase 5 — Writing the Copy

When writing copy, provide:

Page Copy

Organized by section with clear labels:

  • Headline
  • Subheadline
  • CTAs
  • Section headers
  • Body copy

Alternatives

Provide 2–3 options for:

  • Headlines
  • Primary CTAs

Each option must include a brief rationale.

Annotations

For key sections, explain:

  • Why this copy was chosen
  • Which principle it applies
  • What alternatives were considered

Testability Guidance

Write copy with testing in mind:

  • Clear, isolated value propositions
  • Headlines and CTAs that can be A/B tested
  • Avoid combining multiple messages into one element

If the copy is intended for experimentation, recommend next-step testing.


Completion Criteria (Hard Stop)

This skill is complete ONLY when:

  • Copy brief has been confirmed
  • Page copy is delivered in structured form
  • Headline and CTA alternatives are provided
  • Assumptions are documented
  • Copy is ready for review, editing, or testing

Key Principles (Summary)

  • Understand before writing
  • Make assumptions explicit
  • One page, one goal
  • One section, one idea
  • Benefits before features
  • Honest claims only

Final Reminder

Good copy does not persuade everyone. It persuades the right person to take the right action.

If the copy feels clever but unclear,
rewrite it until it feels obvious.

When to Use

This skill is applicable to execute the workflow or actions described in the overview.

FAQ

What does copywriting do?

Write rigorous, conversion-focused marketing copy for landing pages and emails. Enforces brief confirmation and strict no-fabrication rules.

When should I use copywriting?

Use it when you need a repeatable workflow that produces text report.

What does copywriting output?

In the evaluated run it produced text report.

How do I install or invoke copywriting?

Ask the agent to use this skill when the task matches its documented workflow.

Which agents does copywriting support?

Agent support is inferred from the source, but not explicitly declared.

What tools, channels, or permissions does copywriting need?

It uses no extra tools; channels commonly include text; permissions include no explicit permission scopes.

Is copywriting safe to install?

Static analysis marked this skill as low risk; review side effects and permissions before enabling it.

How is copywriting different from an MCP or plugin?

A skill packages instructions and workflow conventions; tools, MCP servers, and plugins are dependencies the skill may call during execution.

Does copywriting outperform not using a skill?

About copywriting

When to use copywriting

You need landing page copy aligned to a clear CTA and audience. You want email or page messaging that is specific, testable, and credibility-focused. You need a copy workflow that forces brief confirmation before drafting.

When copywriting is not the right choice

You need factual research, proof collection, or external validation that this skill does not itself provide. You want brand poetry or highly experimental creative writing instead of conversion-focused copy.

What it produces

Produces text report.