Post Text: Decent Post Text. Opens with how its design is award winning. Then “impactful difference”, which is positioning, but it’s weak because it’s
Post Text: Solid Post Text. Introduces the product + what it’s for, then tells you the feature before translating it seamlessly into the main
Post Text: Not one, but two CTA’s! The first one is direct, the second more abstract, trying to hit an emotional angle. Unfortunately, neither
Post Text: This is one of my favorite ads of all time. One Championship has been killing it. The Post Text here is good
Post Text: Decent Post Text. I love the climate messaging. Then it introduces a list. The tree one is pretty impressive, although I don’t know
Post Text: A great example to follow; a major brand does it like this, and so can you. It doesn’t take much but a
Post Text: The Post Text kicks off with, “STOP” and a hand emoji. I don’t know how attention grabbing this is, but I would
Post Text: Finally! An ad worth swiping. I love this ad. Look at that Post Text. It kicks off with a $75 discount for a
Post Text: I wanted to do a positive ad today, but I couldn’t help myself after seeing this. The Post Text doesn’t do anything
Post Text: I dislike the first line. It’s cringeworthy. It’s also extremely disingenuous. What does this guy think, that people go into the dropshipping business
Post Text: The Post Text kicks off with a CTA (call-to-action), telling the target to give the ultimate gift. But instead of saying “gift”,
Post Text: The Post Text kicks off with a thumbs-up emoji, which isn’t as good as other “Thank you” emojis. It does thank you
Post Text: This ad is a good example of how to waste ad spend. The Post Text kicks off with a variation of, “Did
Post Text: The Post Text kicks off with a controversial + novel statement. It’s very straightforward and direct, with no fluffing about. I like
Post Text: I have a confession to make. I clicked through and gave Wilco my email because I was curious. So in a way,
Post Text: The Post Text opens with a question. It’s vague. Then he breaks it down into a list. Still vague. “Most people assume