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Adding the word 'without' to headlines and offers removes perceived obstacles and fears for the customer. This simple change can significantly boost open rates (19%), social engagement (31%), and conversions (22%) by framing the benefit in terms of what the user avoids, thus lowering their cognitive load.
Headlines like 'Down 17%... until we fixed this' tap into our aversion to loss and curiosity about mistakes. This 'rubbernecking' effect creates a pause and grabs attention more effectively than purely positive framing, leading to a significant lift in engagement.
Marketers often overlook the simplest element: the name of the offer, sale, or content piece. A/B testing the title is easier than changing creative or landing pages and can have the biggest impact on actual conversions, not just clicks or opens.
The human brain is wired to pay more attention to potential threats or mistakes. Leveraging this, hooks framed with negative words like "don't," "stop," or "avoid" are more likely to stop a scroll and maintain viewer curiosity than hooks with positive framing like "do this" or "try this."
When testing copy like titles or subject lines, change only a single modifier word (e.g., add "Quick Fix" to "HR Guide"). This isolates the variable, providing clear learnings about what resonates with your audience, unlike testing two completely different sentences where the "why" is unclear.
The email preheader is crucial for engagement. Beginning this preview text with a 'continuation word' like 'and,' 'but,' or 'plus' creates a cognitive link to the subject line. This simple linguistic trick encourages the reader's eye to keep moving and significantly lifts open rates.
Explicitly telling users what action to take in marketing copy taps into their subconscious willingness to follow instructions. Simple commands like 'open this,' 'save this post,' or 'screenshot this' prompt users to act, leading to measurable lifts in metrics like email opens and post saves on platforms like LinkedIn.
Rephrase call-to-action buttons from a brand command (e.g., "Donate Now") to a user's first-person statement (e.g., "Yes, I want to help"). This simple change in perspective makes the user an active participant, significantly increasing engagement and click-through rates on emails, landing pages, and social media posts.
A counterintuitive tactic suggests beginning email subject lines with conjunctions like 'and,' 'but,' or 'plus'. This grammatically incorrect but novel approach disrupts reader expectations, sparking curiosity and leading to a claimed 15% lift in open rates, especially when the starting word is capitalized.
Marketers often focus on optimizing creative, landing pages, or automation. However, simply A/B testing the name or title of a content piece, sale, or offer can have the most significant impact on conversions with the least effort.
During periods when audiences feel time-pressed, like late January, using 'TLDR' (Too Long; Didn't Read) at the start of subject lines, landing page headlines, or social posts is highly effective. It acknowledges the reader's time scarcity and promises a quick summary, which can significantly increase engagement and conversions.