Content Blocks™ are the conversion elements you layer on top of your SCRIPT™ to turn it into a specific content asset. Your SCRIPT contains the core persuasion copy — the story, the proof, the system, the mechanism. Content Blocks handle the conversion mechanics — the psychology that turns a reader, viewer, or attendee into a customer.
Think of it this way: your SCRIPT is the meal. Content Blocks are the spices. The same base ingredients — your headline, challenges, origin story, mechanism, system reveal, and CTA — get seasoned differently depending on the format. A written Enrollment Amplifier™ needs more blocks because it has to handle every objection without you in the room. A live workshop needs fewer because you're there to read the room.
Rule 1: Content Blocks are never standalone. They always attach to a SCRIPT block or sit between SCRIPT blocks. A Value Stack without a Picture block (system reveal) is meaningless — what are they stacking value for?
Rule 2: Not every asset uses every block. Each content format has its own recipe — a specific combination of blocks that serves that format's conversion goal. Using all 13 in a single asset would overwhelm. Each downstream tool (EA Builder, Workshop Builder, etc.) specifies which blocks to use and where they go.
What it does: Keeps people engaged until the end of your event, workshop, or challenge by using ethical bribes, strategic teasers, and open loops that make leaving feel like a loss.
Why it matters: The average webinar loses 30-50% of attendees before the offer. Every person who leaves early is a customer you'll never make. Sticky Stuff keeps them in the seat.
"Stay until the end for a surprise!"
Vague. No curiosity. They'll leave at minute 30.
"At the end of today's workshop, everyone who stays gets my complete [specific tool name] — the same worksheet my private clients pay $500 to access. I'll drop the link in chat at the end."
Specific, high perceived value, clear delivery mechanism.
| Type | Example | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Free Tool/Template | "Everyone who stays gets my [Roadmap Step] worksheet" | Workshops, webinars |
| Bonus Content | "I'm revealing the #1 mistake at the very end — most people won't expect this" | Videos, challenges |
| Live Q&A | "I'm doing live hot seats at the end — I'll audit YOUR [thing] on the spot" | Workshops, coaching calls |
| Price Incentive | "If you're still here when I drop the link, you get the founding member price" | Webinars with offers |
What it does: Lists every deliverable with its standalone market value, then reveals your actual price — creating a massive gap between perceived value and real cost.
Why it matters: People don't buy on price. They buy on value relative to price. A $199/month membership sounds expensive until you see it stacked against $5,000+ in deliverables. The gap does the selling.
| Weekly calls | $50,000 value |
| Community access | $25,000 value |
| Total | $75,000 value — yours for $97/month! |
Nobody believes weekly group calls are worth $50,000. This kills trust instantly.
The fix is simple — use real market comparisons. What would a private coach charge? What does the alternative course cost? What would they spend piecing this together on their own?
| Complete 9-step system delivered step by step | $3,000 |
| Weekly live coaching calls | $500/month |
| Community access + daily peer support | $200/month |
| Templates, frameworks, and tools | $500 |
| Direct access to [coach name] | $300/month |
| Total Value | $4,500+ |
Your investment: $199/month — that's $6.63 per day.
What it does: Shows fence-sitters what's happening on the other side of the decision. Not manufactured fear — real social proof of what members are experiencing right now.
Why it matters: Fear of missing out only works when there's something real to miss. The FOMO Framework creates that reality by showing wins, momentum, and community energy that outsiders can see but can't access.
"Don't miss out! Only 3 spots left! Act now or you'll regret it forever!"
Manufactured, desperate, and everyone sees through it.
"This week inside the community: Sarah launched her first workshop and got 12 signups. Marcus just hit $5K MRR. And tomorrow we're doing a live teardown of Jennifer's sales page. That's what happens in here — every single week."
Real activity, real names, real results. Makes them want in.
What it does: Flips the buying decision from "will this work?" to "am I confident enough in myself to follow through?" It assumes your system delivers — the only variable is them.
Why it matters: Most objections sound like "I'm not sure this will work" but actually mean "I'm not sure I'LL work." The Confidence Filter addresses the real objection by making it explicit. It also pre-qualifies — people who aren't committed self-select out, which means better clients and lower refunds.
Desperate. Puts the burden of proof on you instead of them.
The Confidence Filter does the opposite — it puts the decision back on them:
Assumes the system works. Questions their readiness. Challenges them.
What it does: Removes or reduces the perceived risk of signing up by putting the burden on you — through guarantees, trial periods, or ROI confidence statements.
Why it matters: Even after someone wants your offer, risk stops them. "What if it doesn't work? What if I waste money? What if I can't cancel?" Risk Reversal eliminates the last barrier between desire and action.
| Type | Example | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|
| Money-Back Guarantee | "Try it for 30 days. If you don't see value, I'll refund every penny." | You absorb all risk |
| ROI Confidence Statement | "If this doesn't pay for itself within 90 days, I'll work with you until it does." | Shared risk |
| Cancel Anytime | "No contracts. No commitments. Cancel in one click whenever you want." | Low-friction exit |
| Results Guarantee | "Follow the system for 90 days. If you don't get [specific result], I'll [specific remedy]." | Outcome-based |
"100% satisfaction guarantee!"
Means nothing. Every product says this. Zero credibility.
"Join today. Show up. Do the work. If after 30 days you don't feel like you've gotten at least 10x your investment in value — email me and I'll refund you. No forms, no hoops, no questions."
Specific, generous, easy process. Makes saying yes feel safe.
What it does: Creates a genuine deadline or limitation that compels action now instead of "later" — which is where most sales go to die.
Why it matters: "I'll do it later" is the #1 killer of conversions. Not objections. Not price. Procrastination. Scarcity and urgency create a cost to waiting — but only if it's real.
| Type | Example | Why It's Real |
|---|---|---|
| Price Increase | "Founding member pricing ends March 1st. Price goes to $249/month." | You actually raise the price on that date |
| Enrollment Window | "Doors close Friday. Next cohort opens in 6 weeks." | You actually close enrollment and run cohorts |
| Bonus Deadline | "Join by Sunday and get a free 1-on-1 strategy session with me." | You actually deliver the bonus and stop offering it |
| Capacity Limit | "I cap the community at 50 members to keep coaching personal." | You actually cap it and waitlist the rest |
Specific date, real consequence, clear benefit to acting now.
What it does: Addresses the most common reasons people don't buy — price, time, trust, timing — before those objections become reasons to close the tab or leave the room.
Why it matters: Unspoken objections are the deadliest. When someone thinks "I can't afford this" but doesn't say it, there's nothing you can do. The Objection Crusher makes the silent objections loud — and handles them.
| Objection | What They're Thinking | How to Crush It |
|---|---|---|
| "Too expensive" | The price feels bigger than the value | Daily cost breakdown + comparison to what they've already spent on things that didn't work |
| "No time" | They're overwhelmed and can't add one more thing | Show how the system SAVES time (or reduces existing work), and state the weekly time commitment |
| "Not sure it'll work for me" | They've been burned before by other programs | Testimonials from people LIKE them + the Confidence Filter |
| "I need to think about it" | They want to but fear making a mistake | Risk Reversal + "What's the cost of waiting another 90 days?" |
| "My situation is different" | They don't see themselves in the offer | Diverse testimonials + "I've worked with [X] different niches" |
"Trust me, this is worth it."
"Trust me" is the weakest phrase in sales.
"People pay executive coaches $500+ per hour for generic leadership advice. You probably spent more on the last retreat that changed nothing by Monday morning. This is $6.63 per day — with coaching, community, and a complete system."
Specific comparison, daily cost breakdown, anchored to real alternatives.
What it does: Puts your audience at a decision point. Two paths. One leads to more of the same (the pain they already know). The other leads to the result they want. They must choose.
Why it matters: Most people won't decide unless they're forced to. The Fork in the Road creates a moment of clarity — not manipulation, but honest confrontation with the choice they're already facing.
This is counterintuitive — you're telling people NOT to buy. It works because it filters out bad-fit clients and makes good-fit clients more committed.
What it does: Tells the full arc of a transformation — yours or your client's — from struggling with the challenges to discovering the mechanism to achieving the result. It's deeper than the origin story in your SCRIPT R-block.
Why it matters: Stories sell better than features. The Hero's Journey creates emotional connection because the audience sees themselves in the "before" — and wants what the "after" has.
"Meet Sarah. She was struggling. Then she found my program. Now she's successful."
No specifics, no emotion, no credibility.
"Meet Marcus. Two years ago, he was a fitness coach posting 5 times a day on Instagram, getting 12 likes per post, and making $800/month. He'd spent $4,000 on courses and couldn't name a single strategy that worked. Three months after installing the Customer Engine, he has 73 paying members at $149/month — $10,877 in MRR — and posts twice a week."
Specific pain, specific cost, specific result, specific timeline.
What it does: Provides step-by-step instructions, templates, and examples that show people exactly what to do next. No ambiguity. No "figure it out."
Why it matters: The gap between "I understand" and "I'm doing it" is where most people get stuck. The Actions Block closes that gap by giving them the exact playbook — numbered steps, specific tools, clear deliverables at each stage.
| Format | How It's Used |
|---|---|
| Courses & coaching | Each module ends with "Your 3 actions this week: [1], [2], [3]" |
| Workshops | "Here's what to do after today's event" — clear next steps |
| Enrollment Amplifier | "What happens when you join: Step 1, Step 2, Step 3" |
| Emails | One clear CTA with specific instructions |
"Now go implement what you've learned!"
Implement what? How? In what order? They'll do nothing.
"What happens when you join: (1) You get immediate access to the community. (2) You complete your intake assessment by Friday. (3) You attend your first live coaching call next Tuesday. (4) You start Step 1 of your roadmap that same week."
Numbered. Timed. Specific. They can see themselves doing it.
What it does: Gives prospects and customers specific, actionable tasks that create micro-commitments and quick wins — building momentum that drives them toward the full program.
Why it matters: People who take action are more likely to buy. People who take action after buying are more likely to stay. Homework Assignments create both — engagement before the sale and results after it.
"Think about your goals and reflect on what you've learned."
No deliverable. No deadline. No accountability. They'll do nothing.
"Before our next call, write your MDM — all 5 elements, under 25 words. Post it in the community channel with the tag #myMDM. I'll score it live on Tuesday."
Specific task, specific deliverable, specific deadline, specific accountability.
What it does: Paints two vivid futures side by side — the future where they keep doing what they're doing (the pain path) and the future where they take action (the result path). Forces a final emotional confrontation with the decision.
Why it matters: The Warning comes near the end, after they've seen everything — the system, the proof, the price, the value. At this point, the logical case is made. This block makes the emotional case. It's the moment they feel the weight of not deciding.
Manipulative. Pressure-based. No specifics. Makes them feel bad, not motivated.
The Warning is NOT a guilt trip. It's a mirror. You're reflecting their own words, their own situation, their own frustrations back at them — and asking which version of the future they want.
Uses their exact obstacles (leadership books, productivity systems), their exact pain (nights and weekends), and their exact mechanism (routing change). It's a mirror, not a threat.
What it does: Provides a final, condensed summary of the entire offer — for the people who scrolled straight to the bottom. According to legendary copywriter Dan Kennedy, the P.S. is the second-most-read element after the headline.
Why it matters: A huge percentage of readers are scanners. They read the headline, scroll to the bottom, and decide from there. The P.S. gives them the complete picture in 2-3 lines — price, value, proof, and link.
"P.S. — Don't forget to sign up!"
Says nothing. Waste of the second-most-read position.
"P.S. — That's $6.63 per day for the complete Liberated Leader™ System, weekly coaching, community support, and every tool you need to get your nights and weekends back in 90 days. Marcus installed it 3 months ago and hasn't worked a weekend since. [ENROLLMENT LINK]"
"P.P.S. — Still not sure? Email me at [email] with the subject line 'Liberated Leader Question' — I read every one."
Daily cost, full value summary, real proof point, link, and a low-friction exit for the uncertain.
| # | Block | One-Line Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sticky Stuff | Keep people engaged until the end using ethical bribes and teasers |
| 2 | Value Stack | Show the gap between total value and price |
| 3 | FOMO Framework | Show what's happening for those already enrolled |
| 4 | Confidence Filter | Assume the system works — question their commitment |
| 5 | Risk Reversal | Remove buyer risk through guarantees and promises |
| 6 | Scarcity & Urgency | Give a real reason to act now — never fake |
| 7 | Objection Crusher | Answer objections before they're spoken |
| 8 | Fork in the Road | Disqualify bad fits, attract committed buyers |
| 9 | Hero's Journey | Extended transformation story with specifics |
| 10 | Actions Block | Exact steps to follow — remove all guesswork |
| 11 | Homework Assignment | Specific tasks that build momentum and micro-commitments |
| 12 | The Warning | Old path vs new path — the final emotional confrontation |
| 13 | P.S. Block | Last-chance summary for scanners — second-most-read element |
Each downstream asset uses a specific combination of Content Blocks. You don't need to memorize this — each AI builder tool handles it automatically. But here's the pattern so you understand the logic:
The Enrollment Amplifier™ uses the most blocks because it's a standalone document that has to handle everything without you in the room — Value Stack, Fork in the Road, Confidence Filter, Objection Crusher, Scarcity & Urgency, Risk Reversal, The Warning, and the P.S. Block.
A Winning Workshop™ uses many of the same conversion blocks (Value Stack, Fork in the Road, Confidence Filter) but adds Sticky Stuff to keep people engaged and Homework Assignments for live interaction. It doesn't need a P.S. because you're presenting live.
Courses and coaching content (Modules Mastery™) lean heavily on Actions Blocks and Homework Assignments — the teaching and implementation blocks rather than the selling blocks. They may include Hero's Journey stories to inspire and motivate.
Content Blocks attach to your SCRIPT — they don't stand alone. If you haven't built your SCRIPT yet, start with the "How to Build Your SCRIPT" guide. Your SCRIPT is the foundation that everything else layers on top of.
Your EA is the first deployable asset and uses the most Content Blocks. Follow the "How to Build Your Enrollment Amplifier" guide or use the EA Builder AI tool. Your SCRIPT + the EA Content Blocks = a complete sales document in an afternoon.
Come back to this guide whenever you're reviewing an asset and something feels "off." Usually it means a block is missing, weak, or misplaced. Knowing what each block does — and why — makes you a better editor of your own content.
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