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Role 3: The Copywriter Task: Craft compelling messaging that converts. I use these prompts in sequence: 1. “Write a single powerful hook sentence for this lead magnet.” 2. “Create 3 strong benefit bullets that make the offer irresistible.” 3. “Write complete one-page website copy using the hook, bullets, and a clear call-to-action.”
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Build complete, conversion-focused website copy by chaining three targeted prompts in sequence.
Prompt
1. "Write a single powerful hook sentence for this lead magnet."
2. "Create 3 strong benefit bullets that make the offer irresistible."
3. "Write complete one-page website copy using the hook, bullets, and a clear call-to-action."Why it works
Breaking copywriting into isolated components forces the model to concentrate its output on one element at a time — a hook, bullets, then full page copy — rather than producing a generic, unfocused draft in one shot. Each step produces a polished building block the next prompt can reference explicitly.
Using the outputs of earlier prompts as named inputs in the final prompt ('using the hook, bullets, and a clear call-to-action') gives the model a concrete structure to fill, reducing hallucinated or off-brief content. The model is essentially assembling copy from pre-approved pieces rather than inventing everything from scratch.
This sequential approach also makes revision easier: if the hook is weak, you only re-run step one. You don't need to regenerate the entire page, preserving the parts that already work.
When to use
- •Creating a landing page for a lead magnet, course, or digital product
- •When you want control over each individual copy element before assembling the full page
- •Iterating quickly on marketing copy without rewriting everything from scratch each time
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