Copywriting / VSL Copy

Use narrative storytelling, customer journeys, founder experiences, or dramatic turning points to naturally transition into the sales pitch.
Difficulty: Advanced
Model: GPT-4 / Claude / Gemini
Use Case: VSLs, Narrative-Driven Sales, Emotional Connection Videos
Updated: May 2026
Why This Prompt Exists
Most VSLs are feature-driven. The best VSLs are story-driven.

You get:

  • feature lists that don’t engage
  • no emotional arc (boring)
  • no protagonist (viewer can’t see themselves)
  • no turning point (no drama)
  • scripts that inform but don’t inspire

But stories are how humans process meaning.

A story is worth a hundred features.

  • The protagonist: someone the viewer relates to
  • The struggle: the problem they face
  • The turning point: the moment of change
  • The transformation: the outcome they want

Without story, your VSL is forgettable.

This framework forces AI to tell stories that sell.

The Prompt
Assume the role of a narrative VSL writer who sells through story.

Your task is to write a story-driven VSL script.

STRUCTURE:

1. THE PROTAGONIST (30-60 seconds)
   - Introduce someone the viewer relates to

2. THE STRUGGLE (60-90 seconds)
   - The problem, pain, and frustration

3. THE TURNING POINT (30-60 seconds)
   - The moment everything changed

4. THE TRANSFORMATION (30-60 seconds)
   - What life looks like after

5. THE BRIDGE TO OFFER (30 seconds)
   - How your product/service enables the transformation

Generate:

1. FULL STORY SCRIPT (timing notes)

2. VISUAL DIRECTION (what to show during each story beat)

3. EMOTIONAL ARC CHART
   - How the viewer should feel at each stage

INPUTS:

Product or Service:
[DESCRIBE]

Story Type:
[FOUNDER STORY / CUSTOMER STORY / PARABLE / ANALOGY]

Protagonist Description:
[WHO IS THE MAIN CHARACTER?]

The Problem They Faced:
[WHAT WAS THE STRUGGLE?]

The Turning Point:
[WHAT CHANGED?]

The Transformation:
[HOW DID LIFE IMPROVE?]

How Your Product Enables This:
[WHAT ROLE DOES IT PLAY?]

Target Audience:
[WHO IS WATCHING?]

RULES:
- The protagonist must be relatable to the viewer
- The struggle must be specific and emotional
- The turning point must be a moment (not a process)
- The transformation must be vivid (show, don't tell)
- The bridge to offer must be natural (not forced)
- The product should be the enabler, not the hero
How To Use It
  • The best VSL stories are true (founder or customer).
  • The protagonist should mirror the viewer’s situation.
  • The turning point is the most important moment — make it dramatic.
  • The bridge to offer should be subtle (the product is the tool, not the hero).
  • Test the story on someone who doesn’t know your product — do they care?
Example Input

Product or Service: Productivity app for freelancers ($15/month)

Story Type: Customer story

Protagonist Description: Freelance designer, overwhelmed with client communication, missing deadlines

The Problem They Faced: 47 unread client emails, 3 missed deadlines, working weekends to catch up

The Turning Point: A client fired them because of communication delays

The Transformation: Centralized client communication, never missed another deadline, weekends free

How Your Product Enables This: The app centralizes all client messages in one dashboard with deadline tracking

Target Audience: Freelancers struggling with client management

Why It Works
Most VSLs are feature-driven and forgettable.

This framework improves outcomes by forcing:

  • relatable protagonist (viewer sees themselves)
  • specific struggle (emotional connection)
  • dramatic turning point (tension)
  • vivid transformation (desire)
  • subtle bridge (product as enabler)

Great story VSLs don’t sell products — they sell the transformation the viewer wants for themselves.

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