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scriptwriting-methodology

@mike-coulbourn/claude-vibes
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Direct response copywriting frameworks for video scripts. Includes DR formula, PAS, AIDA, hook formulas, CTA best practices, and conversion optimization. Auto-activates when writing scripts, sponsored content, affiliate content, hooks, CTAs, or copywriting for video. Use when discussing scriptwriting, DR formula, PAS framework, hooks, calls to action, or conversion copy.

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SKILL.md

name scriptwriting-methodology
description Direct response copywriting frameworks for video scripts. Includes DR formula, PAS, AIDA, hook formulas, CTA best practices, and conversion optimization. Auto-activates when writing scripts, sponsored content, affiliate content, hooks, CTAs, or copywriting for video. Use when discussing scriptwriting, DR formula, PAS framework, hooks, calls to action, or conversion copy.

Scriptwriting Methodology for Sponsored Content

Core Framework: The DR Formula

The Direct Response (DR) Formula is the industry standard for sponsored and affiliate video scripts:

Structure

  1. HOOK (0-3 seconds): Stop the scroll
  2. PROBLEM (3-7 seconds): Make them feel understood
  3. SOLUTION (7-12 seconds): Introduce the product
  4. VALUE PROP (12-15 seconds): Why this product is different
  5. SOCIAL PROOF (15-18 seconds): Results and credibility
  6. CTA (18-20 seconds): Clear call to action

Key Principle

Scripts should be 60 words or less for a 20-second video. The structure should feel like storytelling, not advertising.


Alternative Frameworks

PAS (Problem-Agitate-Solution)

Simpler structure for short-form content:

  1. Problem (15%): Identify the specific problem
  2. Agitate (25%): Intensify the pain — make them FEEL it
  3. Solution (60%): Present the product as the answer

Key insight: Agitation is the most overlooked step. "Hammering the problem home gets under the reader's skin."

AIDA (Attention-Interest-Desire-Action)

Classic framework from 1898, still effective:

  1. Attention: Punchy hook (first 1-3 seconds)
  2. Interest: Why should they care? What's in it for them?
  3. Desire: Convert interest into want through emotion, social proof
  4. Action: Clear call-to-action

PAIPS (Problem-Agitate-Intrigue-Positive Future-Solution)

Justin Welsh's evolution of PAS:

  1. Problem: Identify the problem
  2. Agitate: Intensify emotional response
  3. Intrigue: Create curiosity about the solution
  4. Positive Future: Paint a picture of life after the problem is solved
  5. Solution: Present your offering

Hook Formulas

The hook is 71% of the battle. Viewers decide to stay or scroll in 1-3 seconds.

Proven Hook Types

Type Template Example
Correction "Stop doing [X]. Do this instead." "Stop applying sunscreen like this..."
Insider Secret "No one talks about this in [industry]..." "No one talks about this in skincare..."
Quick Fix "Here's how to fix [problem] in 60 seconds" "Here's how to fix oily skin in 60 seconds"
Curiosity Loop "Watch what happens when I..." "Watch what happens when I add this to my routine"
Transformation "I can't believe this [product] actually..." "I can't believe this serum actually..."
Call-Out "If you're a [person], this is for you" "If you're over 30 with dry skin, this is for you"
Personal Mistake "This mistake cost me [result]" "This mistake cost me 6 months of breakouts"

Hook Stacking

Combine multiple hook types for maximum impact:

  • Visual hook: Motion, expressions, text overlay
  • Auditory hook: Trending audio, snappy voiceover
  • Content hook: Bold statement, question, opinion
  • Emotional hook: Taps into stress, joy, frustration

CTA Best Practices

The Data

  • Affiliates who test CTAs see 49% improvement in conversion
  • CTA placement matters: End of video is standard, but mid-video CTAs can work

CTA Templates

Soft CTAs (for cold audiences):

  • "Link in bio if you want to check it out"
  • "I'll drop the link if you're curious"

Medium CTAs:

  • "Use my code [X] for [discount]"
  • "Link in description to grab yours"

Strong CTAs (for warm audiences):

  • "Tap the link now — this deal ends [date]"
  • "Click the product tag to see the price"

Writing Effective CTAs

  1. Keep it short: 1-2 sentences
  2. Be specific: Tell them exactly what to do
  3. Match urgency to context: Don't fake scarcity
  4. Use action words: grab, snag, check out, try

Soft Sell vs Hard Sell

Research Findings

  • Soft sell emails get 31% positive response vs hard sell
  • Hard sell has 25% unsubscribe rate vs 10% for soft sell
  • Drip campaigns (soft sell) linked to 50% higher conversion

When to Use Each

Soft Sell (most creator content):

  • Best for cold audiences
  • Builds trust before asking
  • Creates positive brand association

Hard Sell:

  • Only for audiences already familiar with you
  • Limited-time offers to engaged followers
  • When you have one shot at closing

The Rule

"The hardness of your sell should increase proportionally to the viewer's progression through the sales funnel."


Hormozi's Value Equation

Use this when describing product value:

Value = (Dream Outcome × Perceived Likelihood) / (Time Delay × Effort Required)

To maximize value in your script:

  • Emphasize the dream outcome
  • Build confidence it will work (social proof)
  • Minimize perceived time to results
  • Minimize perceived effort required

Script Quality Checklist

Before finalizing any script:

  • Hook lands in first 3 seconds
  • Problem section creates emotional connection
  • Solution feels natural, not salesy
  • Value prop differentiates from alternatives
  • Social proof is specific and credible
  • CTA is clear and actionable
  • Sounds like the creator would actually say it
  • Can be read aloud naturally
  • Fits the target length
  • No corporate marketing language