How to Use AI for Copywriting: 15 Prompts That Actually Convert (2026)

📝 February 12, 2026 · 18 min read

Let's be honest: most AI-written copy is garbage. It reads like a college textbook had a baby with a corporate press release. "Leverage synergies to unlock unprecedented growth" — who talks like that?

But here's the thing. The AI isn't the problem. Your prompts are.

When you feed ChatGPT a lazy prompt like "write me a sales page," you get lazy output. When you feed it the right context — your audience's pain points, your unique angle, a specific copywriting framework — the output goes from cringe to convincing.

I've spent months testing AI copywriting prompts across headlines, sales pages, Facebook ads, Google ads, email sequences, and product descriptions. Most didn't work. Fifteen of them did — consistently. Those are the ones in this guide.

Whether you're a freelancer writing for clients, a solopreneur selling your own products, or a marketer trying to crank out variations faster, these prompts will save you hours and make you more money.

📋 What's Inside

Why Most AI Copy Fails (And How to Fix It)

Before we get to the prompts, you need to understand why most people's AI copy sounds like it was written by a robot having an existential crisis.

Problem #1: No audience context. You tell ChatGPT to "write a headline for my product" without explaining who's buying it, what problem it solves, or what keeps your customer up at 2 AM. The AI doesn't know your customer. You have to teach it.

Problem #2: No copywriting framework. Great copy follows proven formulas — PAS (Problem-Agitate-Solve), AIDA (Attention-Interest-Desire-Action), Before-After-Bridge. When you don't specify a framework, the AI defaults to "corporate brochure mode," which is the writing equivalent of elevator music.

Problem #3: No voice direction. Every brand sounds different. Dollar Shave Club doesn't sound like McKinsey. If you don't tell the AI your brand's voice, it picks the most generic one possible.

💡 The Fix: Every good copywriting prompt includes three things: (1) who you're writing for, (2) what framework to use, and (3) what voice/tone to write in. Include all three, and your AI copy jumps from D-minus to B-plus overnight.

Every prompt below follows this principle. They're not magic — they're just properly structured instructions.

Part 1: Headlines That Stop the Scroll

Your headline does 80% of the work. If nobody reads past it, nothing else matters — not your brilliant sales page, not your irresistible offer, not your gorgeous design. David Ogilvy said it in 1963 and it's still true in 2026.

These three prompts generate headlines that make people stop scrolling and actually read.

Prompt #1: The Pain-Point Headline Generator

Headlines

🎯 Pain-Point Headlines (10 Variations)

I'm selling [PRODUCT/SERVICE] to [TARGET AUDIENCE]. Their #1 frustration is: [MAIN PAIN POINT] They've tried: [WHAT THEY'VE ALREADY TRIED] They want: [DESIRED OUTCOME] Write 10 headlines using these proven formulas: - 3 using "How to [desired outcome] without [pain point]" - 3 using numbers ("7 ways...", "The 3-step...") - 2 using curiosity gaps ("The [adjective] reason why...") - 2 using social proof framing ("Why [X] people switched to...") Rules: - Keep each headline under 12 words - Use specific numbers over vague claims - No corporate buzzwords (leverage, synergy, unlock) - Write at a 6th grade reading level - Make me feel something — urgency, curiosity, or relief

Pro tip: Run this 3 times and you'll have 30 headline options. Pick your top 5 and A/B test them.

Prompt #2: The "Scroll-Stopper" Hook Generator

Headlines

🛑 Scroll-Stopping Hooks for Ads & Social

I need opening hooks for [Facebook ads / Instagram posts / landing page] promoting [PRODUCT]. Target audience: [WHO THEY ARE] Their biggest objection: [WHY THEY HAVEN'T BOUGHT YET] Write 8 opening hooks (first 1-2 sentences only) using these angles: 1. Contrarian: Challenge a common belief in the industry 2. Story: Start with a mini-narrative ("Last Tuesday, I...") 3. Statistic: Lead with a surprising number 4. Question: Ask something they can't ignore 5. Confession: Admit something vulnerable 6. Warning: "Stop doing X before Y happens" 7. Result: Lead with the end result 8. Comparison: "X is like Y for Z" Keep each hook under 25 words. Conversational tone — like texting a smart friend.

Why it works: Each angle triggers a different psychological response. Test all 8 to find which resonates with your audience.

Prompt #3: The Subject Line Swipe File Builder

Headlines

📧 Email Subject Lines That Get 40%+ Open Rates

I'm sending an email about [TOPIC/OFFER] to my list of [AUDIENCE DESCRIPTION]. The email's goal is to get them to [DESIRED ACTION]. Generate 15 subject lines in these styles: - 3 curiosity-driven (make them NEED to open it) - 3 benefit-driven (promise a clear outcome) - 3 urgency-driven (time-sensitive, scarcity) - 3 personal/casual (sounds like it's from a friend) - 3 contrarian (challenge what they believe) Rules: - Under 50 characters each (mobile-friendly) - No ALL CAPS or excessive punctuation!!! - No spam trigger words (free, guaranteed, act now) - Include 2-3 with emoji and 2-3 without - Preview text suggestion for top 5

Numbers game: Send the top 3 to different segments and let data pick the winner.

Part 2: Sales Pages That Convert

A sales page isn't a product description — it's a conversation. You're walking someone from "I have a problem" to "take my money." The structure matters more than the individual sentences.

These prompts build each section of a sales page that follows proven direct-response copywriting principles.

Prompt #4: The PAS Sales Page Framework

Sales Pages

🔥 Full PAS Sales Page (Problem-Agitate-Solve)

Write a sales page for [PRODUCT NAME] — [ONE-LINE DESCRIPTION]. Price: [PRICE] Target buyer: [WHO THEY ARE + THEIR SITUATION] Use the PAS (Problem-Agitate-Solve) framework: **PROBLEM section (3-4 paragraphs):** - Open with the specific frustration they feel RIGHT NOW - Use their exact words (the way they'd describe it to a friend over coffee) - Paint the scene: what does a bad day look like because of this problem? **AGITATE section (2-3 paragraphs):** - What happens if they do NOTHING? - How much is this problem costing them in time/money/stress? - What are they missing out on while struggling with this? **SOLVE section (4-5 paragraphs):** - Introduce the product as the bridge from pain → desired outcome - List 5-7 specific benefits (not features — benefits) - Include 3 bullet points starting with "Imagine..." (future-pacing) - Social proof placeholder: [INSERT TESTIMONIAL HERE] - Clear CTA with urgency Voice: Conversational, empathetic but confident. Like a mentor who's been there, not a used car salesman. No hype words. No "revolutionary" or "game-changing."

Important: Replace placeholder testimonials with real ones. AI testimonials are fake and your audience can smell them.

Prompt #5: The Bullet Point Benefit Converter

Sales Pages

✨ Turn Features Into Benefits That Sell

Here are the features of my product [PRODUCT NAME]: [LIST YOUR FEATURES — paste your full feature list here] For each feature, write: 1. The benefit (what does this DO for the customer?) 2. A "fascination bullet" (1 line that creates curiosity) 3. The "so what?" test (why should they care?) Format each as: ✅ [Fascination bullet] — [Benefit explanation in 1 sentence] Rules: - Start each bullet with a verb or outcome, not the feature name - Be specific: "Save 3 hours per week" beats "Save time" - Use odd numbers and specific details over round numbers - No feature-dumping — if you can't explain why they'd care, cut it - Target audience: [WHO IS BUYING THIS]

Feature vs. benefit: "500-page ebook" is a feature. "Never stare at a blank screen again — 500 pages of copy-paste prompts for every situation" is a benefit.

Prompt #6: The Objection Crusher

Sales Pages

🛡️ Handle Every Objection Before They Think It

I'm selling [PRODUCT] at [PRICE] to [TARGET AUDIENCE]. The top objections I hear (or expect) are: 1. [OBJECTION 1 — e.g., "It's too expensive"] 2. [OBJECTION 2 — e.g., "I don't have time"] 3. [OBJECTION 3 — e.g., "Will this work for my industry?"] 4. [OBJECTION 4 — e.g., "I've tried similar things before"] 5. [OBJECTION 5 — e.g., "I can find this for free"] For each objection, write: - A conversational 2-3 sentence response that acknowledges the concern without being defensive - A reframe that turns the objection into a reason TO buy - Format as an FAQ question and answer Tone: Honest, direct, no BS. If the objection is valid, say so — then explain why the value still outweighs the concern. Don't be slimy.

Where to use these: FAQ section, sales page, checkout page, follow-up emails. The same objections appear everywhere — answer them everywhere.

Prompt #7: The Urgency & CTA Writer

Sales Pages

⏰ CTAs That Create Real Urgency

I need call-to-action copy for [PRODUCT/OFFER]. Context: - Product: [WHAT IT IS] - Price: [PRICE] - Offer type: [One-time purchase / subscription / limited-time discount] - Real scarcity factor: [If any — e.g., limited spots, price going up, bonus expiring] Write: 1. 5 CTA button text options (3-6 words each, action-oriented) 2. 3 "above the button" urgency lines (1 sentence each) 3. 2 "below the button" reassurance lines (reduce anxiety) 4. 1 closing paragraph (3-4 sentences) that motivates action without being pushy Rules: - Only use urgency that's REAL. Fake scarcity kills trust. - CTA buttons should start with action verbs (Get, Start, Grab, Join) - Include risk-reversal (guarantee, free trial, easy cancel) - No exclamation point abuse

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Part 3: Ad Copy That Gets Clicks

Ad copy is a completely different animal. You have 3 seconds to hook someone who's actively trying to ignore you. Every word has to earn its place.

These prompts are built for Facebook, Instagram, Google Ads, and LinkedIn — the platforms where most small businesses advertise.

Prompt #8: The Facebook/Instagram Ad Copy Generator

Ad Copy

📱 Facebook & Instagram Ad Variations

Write 3 Facebook/Instagram ad variations for [PRODUCT/SERVICE]. Target audience: [DEMOGRAPHICS + PSYCHOGRAPHICS] Goal: [Traffic to landing page / Direct purchase / Lead magnet signup] Budget context: [Small business / testing phase — keep it scrappy] For each variation, write: - Hook (first line — must stop the scroll in under 8 words) - Body (3-5 lines — problem → solution → benefit) - CTA line (clear next step) Variation 1: Story-based (start with a relatable scenario) Variation 2: Direct benefit (lead with the #1 outcome) Variation 3: Social proof angle (even if hypothetical — "Join 500+ people who...") Character limits: - Primary text: Under 125 characters visible (before "See more") - Total: Under 300 characters per ad - Use line breaks for readability - Emoji sparingly (1-2 per ad, not a wall of them) What NOT to do: No "Are you tired of...?" openers. No "Introducing..." No "We're excited to announce..."

Testing tip: Run all 3 variations with $5/day each for 3 days. Kill the worst performer, double down on the winner.

Prompt #9: The Google Ads Copy Generator

Ad Copy

🔍 Google Search Ad Copy (RSA Format)

Write Google Responsive Search Ad copy for the keyword "[TARGET KEYWORD]". Business: [WHAT YOU SELL] Landing page: [URL] Unique selling point: [WHAT MAKES YOU DIFFERENT] Target searcher intent: [What are they looking for when they type this keyword?] Generate: - 10 headlines (max 30 characters each) — mix of: - Keyword-focused (include the search term) - Benefit-focused (what they get) - Trust-focused (reviews, years in business, guarantees) - Action-focused (Get, Try, Start, Download) - 4 descriptions (max 90 characters each) — each should: - Include a clear benefit - Have a call-to-action - Mention price/offer if applicable Rules: - Front-load keywords in headlines - No exclamation marks (Google may disapprove) - Include at least one headline with a number - Don't repeat the same message in different words

Prompt #10: The Retargeting Ad Sequence

Ad Copy

🔄 Retargeting Ad Sequence (Day 1, 3, 7)

Write a 3-ad retargeting sequence for people who visited my [LANDING PAGE / PRODUCT PAGE] but didn't buy. Product: [PRODUCT NAME + BRIEF DESCRIPTION] Price: [PRICE] What they saw on the page: [KEY SELLING POINTS THEY ALREADY KNOW] Day 1 ad (gentle reminder): - Acknowledge they were checking it out - Remind them of the #1 benefit - No pressure, just value Day 3 ad (social proof): - Lead with a testimonial or result - Address the most common objection - Soft CTA Day 7 ad (urgency/final push): - Create legitimate urgency (bonus expiring, price change, limited availability) - Stack the value (everything they get) - Strong CTA with risk reversal (guarantee) Each ad: Hook + 3-5 lines + CTA. Under 200 words per ad. Conversational tone.

Part 4: Email Copy That Gets Opened

Email is still the highest-ROI marketing channel — $36 returned for every $1 spent according to Litmus. But only if people actually open your emails and click your links.

These prompts handle the two hardest parts: getting the open and getting the click.

Prompt #11: The Welcome Email Sequence

Email Copy

👋 Welcome Email Sequence (3 Emails)

Write a 3-email welcome sequence for new subscribers to [YOUR EMAIL LIST / LEAD MAGNET]. What they signed up for: [LEAD MAGNET / FREEBIE DESCRIPTION] What you ultimately sell: [YOUR PAID PRODUCT/SERVICE] Brand voice: [e.g., friendly expert, witty and casual, warm and encouraging] Email 1 (Deliver + Connect) — Send immediately: - Deliver the lead magnet (link placeholder) - Introduce yourself in 2-3 sentences (not your life story) - Set expectations: what emails they'll get, how often - One personal detail that makes you human - P.S. line with a question to encourage replies Email 2 (Value + Story) — Send day 2: - Share a quick story related to your expertise - Teach one useful thing they can implement TODAY - Soft mention of your paid product (not a hard sell) - End with a question or conversation starter Email 3 (Offer + Social proof) — Send day 4: - Transition from free to paid naturally - Present your product as the next logical step - Include a testimonial or result - Clear CTA with link - Risk reversal (guarantee, free trial, etc.) Each email: 200-350 words. Short paragraphs (1-3 sentences). Conversational — like writing to one person, not a list.

Prompt #12: The Promotional Email (Single Product)

Email Copy

💰 Product Launch / Promotional Email

Write a promotional email for [PRODUCT NAME] — [ONE-LINE DESCRIPTION]. Price: [PRICE] Target audience: [WHO'S ON THIS LIST] Offer: [DISCOUNT / BONUS / LIMITED TIME — if any] Structure: 1. Subject line (3 options: curiosity, benefit, urgency) 2. Preview text (40 characters, complements subject line) 3. Opening hook (personal story or surprising stat — 2 sentences) 4. Problem bridge (what they're struggling with — 2-3 sentences) 5. Product intro (what it is + who it's for — 2 sentences) 6. Benefit bullets (5 specific outcomes, not features) 7. Social proof (testimonial placeholder or "Here's what [name] said:") 8. CTA (clear, single action) 9. P.S. line (urgency or bonus reminder) Total length: 250-400 words Voice: [SPECIFY — e.g., "Direct and energetic, like a helpful friend who just found something amazing"] Format: Short paragraphs, strategic bold, bullet points for scanning

Prompt #13: The Cart Abandonment Email

Email Copy

🛒 Cart/Checkout Abandonment Recovery

Write a cart abandonment email for someone who started to buy [PRODUCT] at [PRICE] but didn't complete checkout. Email structure: 1. Subject line (5 options — helpful, not guilt-trippy) 2. Opening: Acknowledge what happened without being creepy ("You left something behind" — not "We noticed you were on our site at 2:47 PM") 3. Remind them what they're getting (2-3 top benefits) 4. Handle the likely objection (usually price or timing) 5. CTA back to checkout 6. P.S. with time-limited incentive if applicable Tone: Helpful, not desperate. Like a friend saying "hey, just wanted to make sure you saw this" — NOT "PLEASE COME BACK WE MISS YOU." Length: Under 200 words. They already know the product — don't re-sell it, just remove friction.
🛠️ Want to turn these prompts into a full freelance business? The Freelancer's AI Toolkit ($24) includes copywriting prompts plus client management templates, proposal scripts, and pricing frameworks. Everything you need to sell AI-powered copywriting as a service.

Part 5: Product Descriptions That Sell

Product descriptions are the unsung heroes of e-commerce. Most people write them as an afterthought — "Blue widget. Made of plastic. 4 inches tall." Then they wonder why nobody buys.

A good product description does three things: it paints a picture of life with the product, it handles the "is this for me?" question, and it makes the next step obvious.

Prompt #14: The E-Commerce Product Description

Product Descriptions

🛍️ Product Description That Converts

Write a product description for [PRODUCT NAME]. Product details: - Category: [e.g., digital product, physical product, SaaS, course] - Price: [PRICE] - Key features: [LIST 5-8 FEATURES] - Target buyer: [WHO + THEIR SITUATION] - Primary use case: [WHEN/WHY they'd use it] - Competitors: [WHAT ELSE THEY MIGHT BUY INSTEAD] Write: 1. Headline (benefit-driven, under 10 words) 2. Subheadline (address the #1 objection in 1 sentence) 3. Opening paragraph (2-3 sentences painting the "after" — their life with this product) 4. Feature-benefit bullets (6 bullets: feature → benefit format) 5. "Who this is for" section (3 bullet points) 6. "Who this is NOT for" section (2 bullet points — builds trust) 7. Closing CTA (1-2 sentences + button text suggestion) Voice: Warm, confident, specific. Not hypey. Every claim should be verifiable. Length: 250-400 words total.

Prompt #15: The Comparison-Based Description

Product Descriptions

⚖️ "Why Us vs. Them" Product Positioning

Write a product description for [PRODUCT] that positions it against the alternatives. My product: [NAME, PRICE, KEY DIFFERENTIATOR] Alternative 1: [COMPETITOR OR DIY OPTION] Alternative 2: [ANOTHER OPTION — e.g., hiring someone, using a free tool] Structure: 1. Open with the problem all three solutions address 2. Briefly acknowledge the alternatives (don't trash them — respect the reader's intelligence) 3. Explain what makes your approach different (not better — different) 4. 3 specific scenarios where YOUR product is the right choice 5. 1 honest scenario where a competitor might be better (builds massive trust) 6. CTA Tone: Confident but fair. A buyer who feels respected is 10x more likely to buy than one who feels manipulated. Show you understand the landscape. Length: 300-500 words.

Trust hack: Telling people when NOT to buy from you is one of the most powerful conversion tactics. It proves you're not just trying to sell everyone.

Before & After: Real AI Copy Transformations

Let's see what happens when you use these prompts vs. a basic "write me copy" request.

Example 1: Product Description

❌ Bad prompt: "Write a product description for an AI prompt pack."

Bad output: "Introducing our comprehensive AI prompt pack! This revolutionary collection features 100 carefully curated prompts designed to unlock the full potential of ChatGPT. Whether you're a content creator, marketer, or entrepreneur, this versatile toolkit will help you leverage AI technology to boost your productivity and achieve unprecedented results."

🤮 "Revolutionary." "Unlock the full potential." "Unprecedented results." This could be selling literally anything. It says nothing specific and sounds like every other product description on the internet.

✅ Good prompt: Used Prompt #14 with specific audience details, features, and competitive context.

Good output: "Stop staring at ChatGPT's blinking cursor wondering what to type. This pack includes 100 tested prompts for content creators who need to write blog posts, social captions, email sequences, and video scripts — without spending 45 minutes 'engineering' each prompt from scratch. Copy, paste, fill in 2-3 blanks about your brand, and get output you can actually use."

See the difference? Specific audience (content creators), specific problem (staring at the cursor), specific use cases (blog posts, captions, emails, scripts), specific benefit (skip 45 minutes of prompt engineering).

Example 2: Headline

❌ Generic: "The Ultimate AI Toolkit for Entrepreneurs"

✅ With Prompt #1: "Write Client Proposals in 10 Minutes (Not 3 Hours)"

The second headline speaks to a specific pain (proposals taking forever), promises a specific outcome (10 minutes), and creates contrast (vs. 3 hours). It makes someone think, "Wait, how?"

Example 3: Email Subject Line

❌ Generic: "Check Out Our New Product!"

✅ With Prompt #3: "I stopped writing my own copy (here's why)"

Curiosity gap + personal angle + lowercase casual tone = open rates that actually move the needle.

5 Mistakes That Make AI Copy Sound Robotic

Even with perfect prompts, these five mistakes will kill your copy:

1. Not Editing the Output

AI gives you a B-plus first draft. Your job is to make it an A. Read every sentence and ask: "Would I actually say this?" If not, rewrite it. The best AI copy is 70% AI, 30% you.

2. Using AI Cliché Words

Search your copy for these and kill them: elevate, unlock, leverage, streamline, empower, cutting-edge, game-changing, revolutionary, seamless, robust, delve. These words are the AI equivalent of clip art. Replace them with specific, concrete language.

3. Skipping the Voice Direction

If you don't tell ChatGPT how to sound, it defaults to "LinkedIn post by a middle manager." Always include voice direction: "Write like a slightly sarcastic friend who happens to be an expert" or "Direct, no-fluff, like a text message from a mentor."

4. Writing for Everyone

Copy that speaks to everyone speaks to no one. "Perfect for entrepreneurs, marketers, students, freelancers, and anyone who uses AI!" — that's a sign you haven't picked an audience. The more specific your target, the harder your copy hits.

5. Forgetting Social Proof

AI can write persuasive arguments all day. What it can't do is provide real testimonials, real case studies, or real numbers. Those are your job. A single genuine customer quote beats three paragraphs of AI-generated persuasion.

💡 The Bottom Line: AI is a copywriting accelerator, not a copywriting replacement. It gets you 80% of the way there in 10% of the time. The last 20% — your voice, your customer knowledge, your real-world proof — is what separates copy that converts from copy that gets scrolled past.

How to Build a Complete Copywriting System with AI

Now that you have the prompts, here's how to turn them into a repeatable system:

  1. Create a "brand voice" document. Write 3-5 sentences describing your brand's voice. Paste it at the top of every copywriting prompt. This alone eliminates 50% of robotic-sounding output.
  2. Build a customer language bank. Collect phrases your customers actually use — from reviews, support tickets, social comments, and sales calls. Paste these into your prompts under "use this language." AI mirrors what you feed it.
  3. Create prompt templates. Save your best-performing prompts (with your specific details filled in) as templates. Don't start from scratch every time. A Google Doc or Notion database works perfectly for this.
  4. Test and iterate. Great copy isn't written — it's tested. Use the AI to generate 3-5 variations, run them against each other, and let data tell you what works. One week of testing teaches you more than six months of guessing.
  5. Build a swipe file. Every time AI generates something great, save it. Over time, you'll build a library of proven angles, hooks, and frameworks specific to your audience.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can AI write good sales copy?

AI writes solid first drafts that are often better than what non-copywriters produce. But it won't match a seasoned human copywriter because it doesn't truly understand your customer's pain from experience. Use AI to generate multiple angles quickly, then edit with your own customer knowledge. Think brainstorming partner at 10x speed — not a replacement for understanding your audience.

What's the best AI tool for copywriting?

ChatGPT (GPT-4) is the best all-purpose choice — it handles everything from headlines to long-form sales pages. Claude excels at longer copy and consistent brand voice. Jasper and Copy.ai have purpose-built templates, but ChatGPT with the right prompts matches them. For most people, ChatGPT Plus ($20/month) gives you 90% of what tools charging $49-99/month offer.

Will Google penalize AI-written copy?

No. Google doesn't penalize content for being AI-generated — it penalizes low-quality, unhelpful content regardless of who wrote it. Most sales copy (product pages, landing pages, ads) isn't even indexed by Google. For blog content, Google rewards helpful content, not the method of creation. Edit your AI copy to add unique insights and you're fine.

How do I make AI copy sound less robotic?

Three things: (1) Give it a specific voice to mimic, (2) Feed it real customer language from reviews and support tickets, (3) Edit the output — replace generic phrases with specific details, add personal anecdotes, and cut any sentence that could appear on a competitor's site. The prompt matters more than the tool.

How much does AI copywriting cost compared to hiring a copywriter?

A professional copywriter charges $500-$5,000+ for a sales page and $100-$500 per email. ChatGPT Plus costs $20/month for unlimited generation. AI is 10-50x cheaper but requires you to edit, test, and iterate. For small businesses, AI is a no-brainer for first drafts. For high-stakes launches, use AI for drafts and hire a human to polish.

Wrapping Up

You now have 15 prompts that cover every type of copy you'll need: headlines, sales pages, ad copy, emails, and product descriptions. That's not theory — that's a complete copywriting toolkit.

But here's what separates people who read about AI copywriting from people who profit from it: action. Pick one prompt. Use it today. On your actual product, your actual landing page, your actual email list.

You'll spend 15 minutes on what used to take 3 hours. And after a few rounds of testing, you'll wonder why you ever wrote copy from scratch.

The blank page is dead. Start writing. 🚀

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