Copywriting Pro

v1.0.0

Write persuasive, high-converting copy for any format — ads, landing pages, emails, sales pages, headlines, product descriptions, CTAs, and social posts. App...

0· 3.8k·22 current·24 all-time

Install

OpenClaw Prompt Flow

Install with OpenClaw

Best for remote or guided setup. Copy the exact prompt, then paste it into OpenClaw for maverick-software/copywriting-pro.

Previewing Install & Setup.
Prompt PreviewInstall & Setup
Install the skill "Copywriting Pro" (maverick-software/copywriting-pro) from ClawHub.
Skill page: https://clawhub.ai/maverick-software/copywriting-pro
Keep the work scoped to this skill only.
After install, inspect the skill metadata and help me finish setup.
Use only the metadata you can verify from ClawHub; do not invent missing requirements.
Ask before making any broader environment changes.

Command Line

CLI Commands

Use the direct CLI path if you want to install manually and keep every step visible.

OpenClaw CLI

Bare skill slug

openclaw skills install copywriting-pro

ClawHub CLI

Package manager switcher

npx clawhub@latest install copywriting-pro
Security Scan
VirusTotalVirusTotal
Benign
View report →
OpenClawOpenClaw
Benign
high confidence
Purpose & Capability
Name and description (high-converting copy for multiple formats) match the SKILL.md and the three reference documents. No binaries, env vars, or config paths are required — nothing requested is out of scope for a copywriting skill.
Instruction Scope
Instructions are focused on research, frameworks, readability rules, and a preflight checklist. One notable point: the workflow encourages mining Voice-of-Customer (VoC) sources (reviews, testimonials, support tickets, sales-call transcripts) if available. That is appropriate for copywriting, but it does mean the agent may ask for or consume user-provided customer data — review any such data for PII before sharing.
Install Mechanism
No install spec and no code files — instruction-only. This minimizes disk writes and external code execution risk.
Credentials
The skill requests no environment variables, credentials, or config paths. All data access implied by the instructions is expected to be user-supplied contextual material (VoC, briefs, assets) rather than hidden system credentials.
Persistence & Privilege
always is false and disable-model-invocation is false (normal). The skill does not request permanent presence or system-level changes.
Assessment
This skill is internally coherent and low-risk as packaged, but it explicitly asks you to provide Voice-of-Customer material (reviews, support tickets, call transcripts) when available — do not upload customer PII or sensitive data unless you have permission and have redacted personal identifiers. Treat any factual claims the generated copy makes (numbers, testimonials, guarantees) as drafts that you must verify before publishing to avoid legal or reputational issues. Because it's instruction-only, risks come from what you feed it: verify sources, redact sensitive info, and review outputs for accuracy, privacy, and compliance before use.

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

latestvk9723hqnmzk8r0c3483cmfq129827xx7
3.8kdownloads
0stars
1versions
Updated 1mo ago
v1.0.0
MIT-0

Copywriting Skill

Produces high-converting copy using proven professional SOPs. Follow this skill in order — research before writing, framework before words, checklist before publishing.

Core Principle

Great copy is never written. It's discovered. Your job is to find the words your buyer already uses — then play them back.

Workflow

Step 1 — Research & Avatar (before writing anything)

Ask or determine:

  • Who is the ONE specific person this is written for? (Not a demographic range — one person with a name)
  • What is their awareness stage? (See references/awareness-and-frameworks.md)
  • What exact words do they use to describe their problem?

If VoC data is available (reviews, testimonials, interviews, support tickets): mine it for exact phrases. Use their words, not yours.

Avatar must-knows:

  • What keeps them up at 3am?
  • What have they already tried that failed?
  • What's their dream outcome?
  • What objection will they raise before buying?

Step 2 — Pick the Right Framework

Writing...Use
Cold ad / social postPAS or Awareness Stage 1–2 hook
Landing page / sales pageAIDA (full)
Email subject lineCuriosity gap or number headline formula
Product bulletsFAB (Features → Advantages → Benefits)
Testimonial / case studyBAB (Before → After → Bridge)
Offer descriptionTIMER lever mapping
Any copy quality review4 C's checklist

Full framework details + examples: references/awareness-and-frameworks.md

Step 3 — Write the Headline First

Spend 50% of your effort here. 80% of readers read only the headline.

Every strong headline has ≥2 of the 4 U's: Useful, Urgent, Unique, Ultra-specific.

Top formulas:

  • How to [Outcome] Without [Fear/Objection]
  • [Number] [Things] [ICP] Should Know About [Topic]
  • [Common Belief] — But Here's What They Don't Tell You
  • [Outcome] in [Timeframe] — Or [Guarantee]
  • If You [Problem], Then [Solution]
  • Are You [Experiencing Painful Problem]?

Step 4 — Write the Body

Apply framework structure. Layer in psychological triggers throughout:

TriggerHow
Social proofExact numbers: "487 five-star reviews"
ScarcityReal limits: "3 spots left in April"
UrgencyReal deadline: "Offer ends Friday"
Loss aversionFrame as loss avoided: "Stop losing $X/month"
Risk reversalGuarantee: removes fear of being wrong
ReciprocityGive value first — people feel compelled to return it
AuthorityCredentials, awards, years, certifications
SpecificityExact numbers = credibility; round numbers = skepticism

Step 5 — Language Rules (Non-Negotiable)

  • Grade 6 reading level — Flesch-Kincaid 5–7. Use Hemingway Editor.
  • ≤14 words per sentence — comprehension drops sharply above this
  • Small words win — "use" not "utilize," "show" not "demonstrate," "buy" not "purchase"
  • Specificity wins — "cut your bill by $80/month" not "save money"
  • Empathy first — enter their world before talking about you
  • Their language — use the exact phrases from VoC research, not industry jargon
  • Read it out loud — if it sounds like a brochure, rewrite it

Full language rules + small-word swap table: references/language-and-readability.md

Step 6 — Write the CTA

One ask. Always one.

Formula: [Action Verb] + [Specific Outcome] + [Time/Ease Qualifier]

Examples:

  • "Book Your Free Lawn Audit — Takes 2 Minutes"
  • "Get My Custom Plan Today — No Obligation"
  • "Claim Your Spot Before Friday"

Step 7 — Run the Pre-Flight Checklist

Before any copy goes live, verify:

Strategy: One avatar? Awareness stage matched? Enters their conversation? Structure: Framework applied? Offer maps to TIMER? Headline has 2+ U's? Language: Grade 6? Short sentences? Small words? Sounds human? Uses their language? Persuasion: Specifics? Social proof? Risk reversal? Real urgency? CTA: One ask? Verb-led? Names the outcome?

Full checklist with all items: references/preflight-checklist.md

Comments

Loading comments...