| name | copywriting-frameworks |
| description | Master copywriting frameworks (AIDA, PAS, BAB, 4Ps, StoryBrand) for persuasive marketing copy. Use when structuring any marketing text. |
| origin | ECM |
Copywriting Frameworks
When to Activate
Use this skill whenever you need to structure persuasive marketing copy: emails, landing pages, ads, social posts, video scripts, sales pages, or any content that must move the reader toward an action. If the user asks you to "write copy," "create a marketing message," or "make this more persuasive," start here.
First Questions
Before selecting a framework, clarify:
- What is the goal? (awareness, lead capture, sale, upsell, re-engagement)
- Who is the audience? (cold, warm, hot — awareness level matters)
- What is the medium? (email, ad, landing page, social post, video script)
- What is the offer? (free resource, trial, purchase, consultation)
- How aware is the reader? (unaware, problem-aware, solution-aware, product-aware, most-aware)
Framework Selection Guide
| Framework | Best For | Audience Awareness | Typical Length |
|---|
| AIDA | Landing pages, emails, ads | Problem-aware to solution-aware | Medium |
| PAS | Short-form ads, emails, social | Problem-aware | Short to medium |
| BAB | Case studies, testimonials, transformation stories | Problem-aware to solution-aware | Medium |
| 4Ps | Direct response, sales pages | Solution-aware to product-aware | Medium to long |
| StoryBrand SB7 | Brand messaging, websites, long-form | Any | Long |
| PASTOR | Sales pages, webinar pitches, email sequences | Problem-aware to solution-aware | Long |
Framework 1: AIDA (Attention, Interest, Desire, Action)
The classic direct-response framework. Works nearly everywhere.
Structure
- Attention: Stop the scroll. Use a bold claim, surprising stat, or provocative question.
- Interest: Build curiosity. Share relevant information that connects to the reader's world.
- Desire: Make them want it. Paint the outcome, show proof, trigger emotion.
- Action: Tell them exactly what to do next. Clear, specific, urgent.
Full Example (SaaS Email)
Subject: Your team is wasting 11 hours a week on status updates
[ATTENTION] The average product team spends 11.2 hours per week in status meetings that could be replaced by a 30-second async update.
[INTEREST] We studied 340 product teams and found that the highest-performing ones share one trait: they replaced daily standups with async check-ins. Team velocity increased 23% on average.
[DESIRE] Imagine reclaiming those 11 hours every week. Your engineers ship faster. Your PMs spend time on strategy instead of scheduling. And everyone gets back their deep-focus mornings. Teams using StatusFlow report shipping 2x more features in the first quarter.
[ACTION] Start your free 14-day trial today — no credit card required. Set up your first async standup in under 3 minutes.
[Button: Start Free Trial]
Common Mistakes
- Weak attention: Starting with "We're excited to announce..." (nobody cares about your excitement)
- Skipping interest: Jumping straight from a hook to a sales pitch
- Desire without proof: Making claims without evidence or specificity
- Vague action: "Learn more" instead of a specific next step
Framework 2: PAS (Problem, Agitate, Solve)
The most powerful short-form persuasion framework. Works by intensifying pain before offering relief.
Structure
- Problem: Name the specific problem the reader faces. Be precise, not generic.
- Agitate: Twist the knife. Show consequences, future pain, hidden costs. Make the problem feel urgent.
- Solve: Present your solution as the clear path out of the pain.
Full Example (Facebook Ad)
[PROBLEM] Spending hours creating social media content that gets zero engagement?
[AGITATE] Every post you publish to crickets is a missed opportunity. Your competitors are building audiences while yours stagnates. And the algorithm punishes low-engagement accounts, making it harder every month. You're stuck in a downward spiral — posting more, getting less.
[SOLVE] ContentEngine generates a month of scroll-stopping posts in 10 minutes, trained on what actually performs in your industry. Join 4,200+ marketers who stopped guessing and started growing.
[CTA: Get Your Free Content Calendar]
Common Mistakes
- Agitate too hard: Crossing from empathy into fear-mongering damages trust
- Problem too broad: "Marketing is hard" vs. "Your email open rates dropped 15% this quarter"
- Solving too fast: The agitate section needs space to breathe — at least 2-3 sentences
- Forgetting the emotional layer: Agitate should touch on feelings (frustration, anxiety, embarrassment), not just logistics
Framework 3: BAB (Before, After, Bridge)
A transformation-focused framework. Ideal for showing change and possibility.
Structure
- Before: Describe the reader's current painful reality in vivid detail.
- After: Paint the transformed state — what life looks like when the problem is solved.
- Bridge: Reveal how to get from Before to After (your product/service).
Full Example (Course Sales Email)
[BEFORE] Right now, you're staring at a blank Google Doc every Monday morning, trying to figure out what to write about. You know content marketing works — you've seen competitors build massive audiences — but you can't seem to find your voice. Every post feels forced. You publish inconsistently. Growth is flat.
[AFTER] Six months from now, you have a content system. You sit down Monday morning, open your editorial calendar, and the topic is already chosen. You write with a clear voice your audience recognizes. You publish every week without fail. Your newsletter has tripled in size. Inbound leads come in while you sleep.
[BRIDGE] The Content Accelerator is a 6-week program that installs a complete content operating system into your business. You'll leave with your voice defined, 90 days of content planned, and a repeatable process that takes 4 hours a week. 1,200+ creators have been through the program. Average list growth: 187% in 6 months.
Common Mistakes
- Before is too vague: Must feel like you're reading the audience's diary
- After is unrealistic: Overpromising destroys credibility
- Bridge is too long: The bridge should be concise — the After state did the heavy lifting
Framework 4: 4Ps (Promise, Picture, Proof, Push)
A direct-response framework that layers visual imagination with evidence.
Structure
- Promise: Lead with the big, specific promise (what will the reader get?).
- Picture: Help the reader visualize having the result. Use sensory language.
- Proof: Back the promise with evidence — testimonials, data, case studies, credentials.
- Push: Create urgency and deliver the CTA.
Full Example (Webinar Registration Page)
[PROMISE] Learn the exact 3-step LinkedIn system that generated $2.1M in pipeline for B2B founders in 2025 — in just 60 minutes.
[PICTURE] Imagine opening LinkedIn on a Tuesday morning and seeing 4 connection requests from ideal-fit prospects, 2 DMs asking about your services, and a comment thread where your ICP is debating your latest insight. No cold outreach. No ads. Just authority-driven inbound.
[PROOF] This system was developed by Sarah Chen, who grew from 2K to 85K followers in 14 months while building a $4M consulting practice. 340 founders have implemented the system with an average 6x increase in inbound leads within 90 days. Featured in Forbes, Entrepreneur, and Harvard Business Review.
[PUSH] The live workshop is Thursday, March 19 at 12pm ET. Only 200 spots available — we keep it small for live Q&A. Reserve your seat now.
Framework 5: StoryBrand SB7
Donald Miller's 7-part narrative framework. Best for brand messaging and website copy where you need a cohesive story.
The 7 Elements
- A Character — The customer is the hero, not your brand.
- Has a Problem — External (surface), internal (emotional), philosophical (why it matters to the world).
- And Meets a Guide — Your brand, positioned as the mentor with empathy and authority.
- Who Gives Them a Plan — A simple 3-step plan that removes confusion.
- And Calls Them to Action — Direct CTA (buy now) and transitional CTA (download guide).
- That Helps Them Avoid Failure — What's at stake if they don't act.
- And Ends in Success — The transformation they experience.
Application Template (Homepage)
- Header: [Character's desire] + [without the pain] — e.g., "Grow your revenue without burning out your sales team"
- Stakes Section: Show the cost of inaction (failure)
- Guide Section: Empathy statement + authority markers (logos, stats)
- Plan Section: 3 simple steps (numbered, clear)
- CTA: Direct ("Start free trial") + Transitional ("Download the playbook")
- Success Section: Testimonials and outcome descriptions
Common Mistakes
- Making your brand the hero instead of the guide
- Skipping the internal problem (the emotional layer is where connection happens)
- Plan has too many steps (3 is ideal, 4 is max)
- No failure stakes — if nothing bad happens from inaction, there's no urgency
Framework 6: PASTOR (Problem, Amplify, Story, Transformation, Offer, Response)
Ray Edwards' framework for longer-form sales copy. Excellent for sales pages and email sequences.
Structure
- Problem: Identify the specific pain point in the reader's own language.
- Amplify: Magnify the consequences of not solving the problem. Use stats, future projections, emotional cost.
- Story/Solution: Tell a relevant story (yours, a customer's, a metaphor) that leads to the solution.
- Transformation: Contrast the before/after. Focus on identity change, not just circumstantial change.
- Offer: Present exactly what they get. Be specific — modules, features, bonuses, deliverables.
- Response: Ask for the sale. Remove risk (guarantee). Create urgency. Make the CTA unmistakable.
When to Use
- Sales pages for courses, programs, or high-ticket services
- Webinar pitch sequences
- Launch email series (spread across 4-6 emails)
- Video sales letters (VSL scripts)
Quality Gate
Before delivering copy built on any framework, verify: