Copywriting / Headlines

Transform features into headlines that stack benefits — Feature → Benefit → Deeper Benefit → Identity Shift — with a reusable stacking blueprint.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Model: GPT-4 / Claude / Gemini
Use Case: Benefit-Driven Copy, Feature Translation, Value Messaging
Updated: May 2026
Why This Prompt Exists
Most headlines fail because they describe features instead of benefits.

You get:

  • “10GB of storage” (feature — so what?)
  • “Fast processor” (feature — what does that do for me?)
  • benefits that stop at the first level (“save time” — so what?)
  • no identity shift (the deepest benefit level)
  • headlines that inform but don’t persuade

But benefits are not a single level.

They stack until they reach identity.

  • Level 1: Feature (what it is)
  • Level 2: Benefit (what it does)
  • Level 3: Deeper Benefit (why that matters)
  • Level 4: Identity Shift (who you become)

Without stacking, you stop before the sale.

This framework forces AI to stack benefits until they sell.

The Prompt
Assume the role of a benefit-driven copywriter who knows that features don't sell.

Your task is to generate headlines that stack benefits from feature to identity.

Generate 15 headlines that stack benefits using this progression:
Feature → Benefit → Deeper Benefit → Identity Shift

For EACH headline:
- Show the stacking (e.g., "10-minute workout [feature] → get fit fast [benefit] → skip the gym [deeper] → become a morning person [identity]")

PLUS:
- A stacking blueprint (template for future use)

INPUTS:

Product or Service Feature:
[E.G., "24/7 customer support" / "One-click checkout"]

Target Audience's Pain Point:
[WHAT PROBLEM ARE THEY TRYING TO SOLVE?]

Desired Transformation:
[WHO DO THEY WANT TO BECOME?]

Competitors' Headlines (optional):
[WHAT ARE THEY SAYING?]

RULES:
- Each headline must reach at least the deeper benefit level (Level 3)
- Stacking must be shown explicitly for each headline
- The identity shift must be specific, not "become successful"
- The stacking blueprint must be reusable (fill-in-the-blank format)
- No feature-only headlines (must include at least one benefit)
How To Use It
  • Start with a feature, then ask “so what?” until you reach identity.
  • The deepest benefit (identity shift) is the most persuasive — lead with it.
  • Save the stacking blueprint; use it for every product feature.
  • Test feature vs. stacked-benefit headlines — stacked wins 9/10 times.
  • If you can’t reach an identity shift, the feature may not be valuable enough.
Example Input

Product or Service Feature: “Automatic expense categorization for freelancers”

Target Audience’s Pain Point: Freelancers who hate tracking receipts and miss deductions at tax time

Desired Transformation: From “stressed about taxes” to “confident, organized business owner”

Competitors’ Headlines: “Track your expenses,” “Expense tracking made easy”

Why It Works
Most benefit headlines stop too soon.

This framework improves outcomes by forcing:

  • feature → benefit → deeper benefit → identity shift stacking
  • explicit stacking display (learn the process)
  • identity-level benefits (deepest motivation)
  • reusable blueprint (future templates)
  • competitor differentiation (stack deeper than they do)

Great benefit headlines don’t describe what the product does — they describe who the customer becomes.

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