Tactic 2 - Presuppositions
What if you could skip over everything, and start from an angle where you know your customer is going to buy your product. "What will you do with the extra $5,000 you make next month?" Is an example of a presupposition - I'm assuming the visitor is going to buy my product. The question here assumes that the visitor will make an extra $5,000 next month by asking what they'll do with it.
By phrasing my copy this way, the brain sees a question "What will you do..."? and is compelled to answer it. By 'answering it', I don't mean clicking and converting, I mean answering in their own mind 'what they would do'. As soon as they read that sentence, they picture what they would do with an extra $5k next month. When your brain sees a question, it's compelled to answer it. That's just the way the brain works, and I'm going to get into that more in another tactic.
Presuppositions can be used in many ways:
What will your friends say when your skin looks 10 years younger?
Imagine waking up refreshed and full of energy after sleeping on this awesome mattress.
Think how awesome you will be when you stay a member of Aff Playbook forever.
There are examples of this used all over the advertising world. One of the best known is the line from this Dial commercial: