When a campaign needs copy that converts, draft a 7-section landing page grounded in customer language and proof. — Claude Skill
Write landing pages built around one conversion goal.
- Hero block built around outcome plus audience plus mechanism, with 5 to 10 headline variants ready to test
- Social proof slotted within the first scroll: logos, trust statistic, one strong attributed testimonial
- Objection handling section that names price, time, trust, risk, and comparison worries head-on
- CTA copy patterns (action plus outcome, first-person, low-friction) instead of Submit or Learn more
- Markdown export structured by section, ready to paste into the CMS or hand to design
Voor wie
Content marketers ship a single-goal landing page in one working session instead of three review cycles; copy is grounded in real customer language, not invented benefits.
Skills voor deze rol bekijkenGrowth marketers get 5 to 10 headline variants and 2 CTA patterns per page, ready for A/B testing without going back to copywriting.
Skills voor deze rol bekijkenWat het doet
Growth marketer drafts a single-goal page with hero, 3 features, 2 testimonials, FAQ, and final CTA in one afternoon; design picks it up next morning.
Marketing lead rewrites hero plus first-scroll social proof; ships 5 headline variants for an A/B test the same week.
Pricing page gets price-objection handling and risk-reversal section; demo-request CTA pattern shifts from Contact us to Book a 15-minute demo.
Single-offer page with one form and one CTA; copy mined from 12 sales-call transcripts to mirror prospect language.
Hoe het werkt
Confirm the single offer, the conversion goal, and the one specific objection the visitor brings
Mine real customer language from testimonials, support tickets, and sales-call transcripts to seed every section
Draft the hero block (headline, subheadline, CTA) and produce 5 to 10 variants for testing
Build out the 7-section structure: hero, early social proof, problem, solution, deeper proof, objections, final CTA
Edit for friction: drop every word that does not earn its place, read the page aloud, confirm the next action is obvious
Voorbeeld
Offer: 14-day free trial of Rampstack, async-first project tool for engineering teams. Audience: engineering managers at 50 to 500-person companies. Objection: 'we already have Jira, do we really need another tool?' Goal: free-trial signups. Inputs: 12 customer quotes, 6 sales-call transcripts.
Headline: Ship features 3x faster, for engineering teams who hate meetings. Subheadline: Async-first project tool that replaces 4 standups a week with one shared thread. CTA: Start your free trial.
Logo bar: 8 engineering teams who switched from Jira. Trust statistic: 12,400 standups skipped last quarter.
Three paragraphs mirroring quotes from sales calls: meetings eat 11 hours a week, status updates lag a day, context lives in 4 different tools.
Side-by-side comparison block plus risk-reversal: keep Jira for tickets, run Rampstack for async standups; 14-day trial with no credit card and no team migration.
Headline: Get your team running async in 5 minutes. Button: Start your free trial. Supporting cue: No credit card required.
Verbeterde metrieken
Werkt met
Watch session recordings and heatmaps to see where visitors drop off the copy flow.
Pull existing testimonials, support tickets, and sales-call notes that seed the customer-language step.
Paste the section-by-section markdown into design files for layout and visual treatment.
Measure conversion lift on the published page versus the prior version.
Draft, version, and review landing page copy with stakeholders before handoff.
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Landing Page Copy
Write copy for pages with a single conversion goal: signup, purchase, demo request, download, lead capture. Stack-agnostic.
This skill is narrower than content-and-copy. Landing pages exist to drive a specific action, not to inform broadly.
When to use
- Writing a hero section for a homepage or product page
- Writing a sales page or long-form sales letter
- Drafting opt-in or lead-capture page copy
- Campaign-specific landing pages
- Pricing page copy
- Demo or signup CTAs
When NOT to use
- Long-form blog content (use
content-and-copy) - Email sequences (use
email-sequences) - Brand voice definition (use
brand-voice) - Page design and layout decisions (use
design-standards)
Required inputs
- The product, service, or offer
- The target audience and the specific objection they bring
- The conversion goal (one specific action)
- Brand voice
- Existing customer language (testimonials, support tickets, sales calls)
- Any constraints (length, format, regulatory)
If audience is unclear or objections are unknown, run brand-discovery or pull from sales call recordings before writing.
The framework: 7 sections
A landing page does seven things in sequence. The structure can flex (combine, reorder, expand), but the elements stay constant.
1. Hero
The first 3 to 5 seconds. Decides whether the visitor stays.
Three components:
- Headline. The promise. Specific, outcome-focused, free of cliche.
- Subheadline. The mechanism. How you deliver the promise.
- Primary CTA. The action. One button, descriptive label.
Strong hero patterns:
- Outcome + audience + mechanism. "Ship features 3x faster, for engineering teams who hate meetings, with our async-first project tool."
- Pain reversal. "Stop losing customers to slow page loads."
- Surprising claim. "The note-taking app that gets used. We have data."
- Direct address. "You have 47 unread Slack messages. Here's what to do about it."
Weak hero patterns:
- Generic adjective stacking ("Powerful, intuitive, scalable")
- "Welcome to our platform"
- Brand-name-only headlines ("Acme: The Future of X")
- Vague benefits ("Streamline your workflow")
2. Social proof (early)
Within the first scroll, prove someone else trusts you.
Forms:
- Customer logos (recognizable beats unknown)
- Quantitative trust signal ("Over 10,000 teams")
- One strong testimonial with name and role
- Press mentions (logos of where you've been featured)
Placement: Right below the hero, before the visitor invests in reading more.
3. Problem / promise
Establish that you understand the visitor's situation.
Pattern:
- 1 to 3 paragraphs naming the specific problem
- Use the visitor's language (mined from research, not your marketing language)
- Stop before you sell. Resonate first.
Test: Read the problem section aloud. Does the target audience nod? If they don't, you don't understand them yet.
4. Solution / mechanism
How you solve the problem. The "what we actually do" section.
Effective structure:
- One headline summarizing the solution
- 3 to 5 specific features or capabilities, each with a 1-2 sentence explanation
- Each feature framed as the benefit it produces, not the technical detail
- Visual support (screenshots, illustrations, video clips)
Failure mode: Listing features without translating to outcomes. "Real-time collaboration" is a feature. "Edit together without copying-pasting from email" is the outcome.
5. Proof and detail
The expanded social proof and case studies section.
Components:
- 1 to 3 detailed case studies (specific customer, specific outcome, specific numbers)
- Multiple testimonials with attribution
- Specific data points (usage stats, success metrics, growth)
- Awards, certifications, or third-party validation
The deeper proof section is where committed visitors convert. Skim-readers won't make it here, but the ones who do are ready to buy.
6. Objection handling
Anticipate the reasons people say no. Address them directly.
Common objection types:
- Price. "Is this worth it?"
- Time. "Will this take forever to set up?"
- Trust. "Will this actually work for my situation?"
- Risk. "What if I commit and it's wrong?"
- Comparison. "How is this different from [competitor]?"
- Implementation. "Can my team handle the change?"
Handling formats:
- FAQ section. Structured, scannable.
- Comparison table. Vs. competitors or vs. alternatives.
- Risk reversal. Money-back guarantee, free trial, no-contract terms.
- Proof of effort needed. "Setup takes 5 minutes, not 5 weeks."
7. Final CTA
The closer. Re-state the offer. Re-state the action.
Strong final CTAs:
- Repeat the primary CTA from the hero (consistency)
- Frame in terms of the visitor's situation ("Get your team set up in 5 minutes")
- Remove friction ("No credit card required")
- One action only (avoid offering 5 alternatives that paralyze decision)
Avoid:
- Multiple CTAs competing for attention at the bottom
- New offers introduced only at the bottom (visitor is now confused)
- Long forms that ask for more information than needed for the action
The CTA itself
Buttons matter. Treat the button copy as a whole-page-worth of attention.
Strong CTA patterns:
- Action + outcome. "Start your free trial," "Get my pricing," "Send me the guide"
- First-person. "Show me how" outperforms "Show you how"
- Specific. "Book a 15-minute demo" beats "Contact us"
- Low-friction. "Free trial, no credit card" reduces commitment cost
Weak CTAs:
- "Submit" (functional but lifeless)
- "Click here" (no value statement)
- "Learn more" (vague; about what?)
- "Get started" (started doing what?)
Workflow
- Confirm the offer. What exactly is being offered? At what price (if any)? What does the visitor get?
- Confirm the audience and objection. Specific segment. The specific worry they bring.
- Mine the language. Customer testimonials, support tickets, sales calls. Use real customer phrases.
- Draft the hero. Headline, subheadline, CTA. Test 5 to 10 variations.
- Build the structure. All 7 sections in order. Sections can combine for shorter pages.
- Draft sections. Section by section. Don't polish until the structure is sound.
- Edit for friction. Remove every word that doesn't earn its place. Landing pages do not have words to spare.
- Test the CTA. Read the page aloud. By the end, is the visitor's next action obvious?
- Pre-publish: check links, spell-check, mobile preview, SEO basics if SEO is a goal.
Failure patterns
- Hero that explains instead of sells. "We're an X for Y" is description. "Get X without Y" is sell.
- Feature lists with no outcomes. Features without benefits read as a spec sheet.
- Generic testimonials. "Great product!" is worth less than nothing. "We cut onboarding time from 2 weeks to 4 days" is gold.
- Multiple competing CTAs. Pick one primary action. Everything else is noise.
- Walls of text. Visitors scan. Use short paragraphs, bullet lists, and visual breakpoints.
- No social proof. Trust is the first hurdle. Without proof, the rest of the page does not earn the chance to be read.
- Mismatched headline and CTA. Hero promises X, CTA asks for Y. Visitor confused.
- Writing for everyone. "Our solution works for any business" appeals to no one. Specificity converts.
- Ignoring mobile. Most visitors are on mobile. Test the page at 375px first.
Output format
Default output is a structured markdown document for the page, with each section labeled. The markdown is ready to import into the CMS or hand to design.
Structure:
# [Page Title]
## SECTION: Hero
- Headline: [text]
- Subheadline: [text]
- Primary CTA: [button text]
- Supporting cue: [optional, e.g., "No credit card required"]
- Hero visual notes: [if any]
## SECTION: Social proof (early)
- Logo bar: [list customer/press logos]
- Trust statistic: [if any]
## SECTION: Problem / promise
[2 to 3 paragraphs]
## SECTION: Solution
- Headline: [text]
- Feature 1: [headline + description]
- Feature 2: [headline + description]
- Feature 3: [headline + description]
## SECTION: Proof
- Case study 1: [customer, outcome, numbers]
- Testimonials: [list]
- Data points: [list]
## SECTION: Objection handling
- FAQ: [questions and answers]
- OR Comparison table: [vs alternatives]
- OR Risk reversal: [guarantee, terms]
## SECTION: Final CTA
- Headline: [text]
- Final CTA button: [text]
- Supporting cue: [optional]
## Variants for testing
- [Alternate headlines]
- [Alternate CTAs]
- [Alternate proof framings]
Reference files
references/hero-formulas.md- Patterns and formulas for hero headlines.references/objection-library.md- Common objections by category, with handling strategies.