Training Resources

Click HERE For: 16 Word Sales Letter in 1 Prompt

The business name is [your offer/biz name].

We provide a [service/product] that achieves the main outcome of [main outcome] by using the unique [framework/system/mechanism] of [describe the uniqueness]

Write a sales letter for a product that follows a structured approach to persuade the audience.

The sales letter should include:

1 - One Belief Statement that emphasizes the unique opportunity the service or product provides for achieving the main outcome and using that to achieve the audiences’ key desires through the unique mechanism or framework.

2 - Explanation of how this product/service is different from other similar competitors.

3 - Description of the main outcome and benefits the audience can expect from the service/product.

4 - ABT (And, But, Therefore) story structure that showcases the effectiveness of the service/ product.

5 - Address common roadblocks the audience might face, showing empathy and understanding.

6 - Identification of a common enemy that has prevented the audience from achieving the main outcome or other relevant outcomes.

7 - Reasons for the audience to take action now, addressing their resistance to trust, concerns about losing freedom, and inclination to do nothing.

8 - A relatable story of how the founder overcame similar challenges and found success through this new approach.

9 - High-level overview of the service content and steps or principles, using the ABT Story Structure.

10 - Explanation of the service/product's value proposition, a relevant and high-value bonus, and steps to get started with the offer.

11 - Reminder of the potential losses if the audience does not take action, reinforcing the unique opportunity the service provides.

 

Click HERE For: Stephen King's Writing Trick

The legendary horror, Stephen King author once said, "I believe the road to hell is paved with adverbs, and I will shout it from the rooftops."


Relying too much on adverbs is a sign of sloppy, messy writing. Great writing often uses powerful verbs instead of those '-ly' adverbs. Many times, the adverb just repeats what the verb already says, cluttering the writing.

Behold! The "Adverb Hunter" prompt that pinpoints weak adverbs in your copy and replaces them with more powerful verbs:

Prompt 1

Please meticulously check my text for adverbs ending in 'ly' and list them along with the verb they are modifying. Accuracy is crucial, so take your time to ensure each word is correctly identified is an adverb that ends in 'ly'. Double check your work.

Here is the text: <insert your text>

Prompt 2

Please change each adverb ending in '-ly' to a stronger verb. For example: 'walked slowly' would become 'strolled', 'talked loudly' would become 'shouted', and laughed quietly would become 'chuckled'.

Prompt 3

Please rewrite the sales copy making these changes.

Click HERE To: Read, Memorize and Implement A Book A Day

Prompt #1: Please summarize [BOOK] by [AUTHOR]

Prompt 2: What are all of the chapters in the book?

(From here, I'd pick out chapters that provided the best teachings based on what I want to learn}

Prompt 3: In [BEST CHAPTER], what are the most important 20% of learnings about [INSERT LEARNING OBJECTIVE] that will help me understand 80% of it."

(At this point, we've got the most important points from the chapter, based on what you want to get out of it. No fluff. Now we're going to use a scientifically proven way to remember it all.)

Prompt 4: Convert those key lessons from the chapter into engaging stories and metaphors to aid my memorization.

ChatGPT will split out easy-to-understand stories that make it super simple to remember what you've just read.

Optional Prompt 5: Write me an action list of how I can apply [KEY LESSON] into [PLACE YOU WANT TO APPLY IT]

(On this prompt, provide any valuable background knowledge on the current situation or struggles that you're hoping to improve on in your application area.)