Demand Curve - The Growth Newsletter #066
![]() The Growth Newsletter #066
This week we're covering copywriting, SEO list posts, and personalization.
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1. Use conditional claims to build more trust Insight from VeryGoodCopy.
Can you guess which of these two headlines did better than the other?
You might expect the first to perform better because it’s bolder. It makes a definitive claim: the price of silver will rise.
But according to copywriter Gary Bencivenga, the headline that used “may” outperformed its counterpart by 200%.
Why?
The one-word difference qualifies the rest of the statement—it’s a condition telling readers that the claim being made isn’t 100% certain. So it feels more realistic. Even credible.
Here are some examples of how companies use conditional claims to build more trust:
Note the italicized phrases that create a condition—they ground the claims and make them feel more believable—they’re not absolute statements.
To build more trust with readers, try using* conditional claims in your own copywriting.
One easy way to do it: use an “if... then” statement. Define a clear requirement (if), and then write your promise (then).
*See what we did there? In most of our tactics and recommendations, we use conditional language—we can’t say with 100% certainty that growth will follow.
2. How to write list posts that generate revenue Insight from Search Engine Land.
Most list posts (listicles) are utilitarian, boring, and easily copied by rivals.
They have titles like:
These types of posts may generate a ton of pageviews—but they rarely generate revenue (a common goal of listicles).
You can transform your listicles from generic, copycat content into unique, defensible, revenue-generating assets in five steps. Here's how.
1. Choose novel selection criteria. Most listicles are “Google research papers.” The writer searches a target keyword, skims the search engine results page (SERP), and grabs an assortment of popular things to include in their article. This isn’t effective since you’re recycling the same information as everyone else.
To differentiate your listicle and pique the reader's interest, you need a strong hook.
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2. Surface your thought process. Even though you’re curating objective information, your writing still needs to persuade. You are the expert and your job is to persuade the reader that your list is worth trusting. To do that, share your thought process and selection criteria (why you chose what you chose).
3. Share personal experience to demonstrate credibility. Readers can tell when a writer doesn’t have firsthand experience. So even if your articles rank for their target keywords, readers won't trust your advice. If you want your listicles to convert readers, you need to prove to them that you have firsthand experience with the things you're writing about. Here are a few ways to do that.
4. Lean on the experiences of others. If you can't experience the product or service firsthand, base your listicle on the experience of people who have. That means surveying and quoting audiences and synthesizing firsthand experiences from users.
5. Make a single, opinionated recommendation. Listicles are meant to help readers make a decision. Most listicles are good at collecting things but usually go overboard with too many choices. This only makes it harder for the reader. Great listicles go out on a limb and make a strong recommendation. And readers trust it because it was written based on firsthand experience and clear selection criteria.
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3. Personalize content for struggling users Insight from mParticle and Demand Curve.
When users start struggling with a service or an app, they often get discouraged and stop using it entirely.
People don’t tend to continue using things they feel bad at.
For example, a user might stop playing a game if they’re stuck on a single level for many days.
But this struggle is a great opportunity to use personalization to retain users.
By providing personalized support—helpful tips, links to resources, or, in some cases, discounts on helpful upgrades—you can retain users who otherwise churn out of frustration.
You can automate this tactic based on event triggers specific to your service or app. A few examples:
Here’s how this personalization might play out:
The dating app Tinder could calculate the number of matches each user receives and then compare it against the average number of matches across all users. Then it could identify users receiving a relatively low number of matches and deliver personalized content like tips on how to improve their profile. Alternatively, it could offer a discount on an upgrade or special feature that could solve the frustration.
Providing support to struggling users ultimately motivates them to stay.
Marketing news News you can use:
Plus, one new Demand Curve article this week:
New marketing jobs
If you're looking for a top growth role, check out the opportunities below from our job board.
Something fun: "Name that Marketing Acronym" via The Daily Carnage ![]()
Want more growth tactics? We're giving away our entire back catalog of tactics to folks who refer two friends to this newsletter. Here's your referral link to share: https://sparklp.co/385a143f. You can track your referrals here. We'll automatically email you the password-protected tactics page once you've referred two people.
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Who's Demand Curve? We’re who marketers and founders rely on to solve real marketing problems. We skip trends and fluffy stories and only share high-quality, vetted, and actionable growth content from the top 1% of marketers.
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See you next week.
— Nick, Grace, Joyce, Dennis, and the DC team. ![]() Nick Costelloe ![]() Grace Parazzoli ![]() Joyce Chou ![]() Dennis Buckley
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