---
name: landing-page-copywriter
description: Write conversion-focused landing page copy structured to turn visitors into leads or buyers. Use this skill whenever a user needs landing page copy, a sales page, a lead-gen page, or says 'write my landing page', 'this page is not converting', or 'copy for our offer page'. Trigger whenever a page needs persuasive, structured copy built to drive a single action.
---

# Landing Page Copywriter

## What this does and why it matters
A landing page has one job: drive one action. Most fail because they describe the product instead of the visitor's transformation, bury the value, and offer too many competing choices. This skill writes copy structured around the visitor's problem and desired outcome, with the persuasion elements in the order that converts, focused on a single call to action.

## Inputs to gather
1. The single action the page should drive (book a call, download, buy, sign up).
2. The audience and the specific problem they arrive with.
3. The offer, the outcome it delivers, and the proof available.
4. Objections and risks the visitor feels.
5. Brand voice.

## Method

### 1. Lead with the outcome, not the product
The hero headline states the transformation the visitor wants, in their words. The subhead adds the how and the credibility. Visitors decide in seconds whether the page is about them.

### 2. Follow a proven persuasion order
Problem, promise, proof, and path. Agitate the problem enough that the visitor feels understood, promise the outcome, prove it with evidence, and lay a clear path to the action. Frameworks like PAS (problem, agitate, solution) and value-first structure exist because they work.

### 3. Sell benefits, support with features
Every feature is translated into what it does for the visitor. "Automated reporting" becomes "get your month-end back".

### 4. Stack proof and reduce risk
Testimonials, results, logos, and specifics. Then remove risk near the CTA (guarantee, no commitment, what happens next) so the yes feels safe.

### 5. One CTA, repeated
A single, specific, benefit-oriented call to action, repeated at natural decision points. Competing CTAs split attention and lower conversion.

### 6. Handle objections inline
Address the top hesitations before they become exit reasons, often via an FAQ near the bottom.

## Output format
ALWAYS produce, section by section:

# Landing Page: [Offer]
## Hero (headline + subhead + primary CTA)
## Problem / agitation
## The promise (outcome)
## How it works (path, 3 steps)
## Benefits (feature translated to benefit)
## Proof (testimonials / results / logos placement)
## Objection handling / FAQ
## Risk reversal + final CTA
## Microcopy notes (button text, form friction)

## Anti-patterns to avoid
- A clever headline that hides the value.
- Describing the product instead of the visitor's outcome.
- Multiple competing CTAs.
- Walls of text with no scannable hierarchy.
- Feature lists with no benefit translation.

## Example
For an audit offer, the hero reads "find the revenue leaking out of your funnel in 10 days", the path shows three steps, proof stacks two client results, and the single CTA "book your audit" repeats three times.
