Jon Benson calls himself “The Billion Dollar Copy Coach.” He’s been writing sales letters/VSLs since you were headed to Sam Goody with frosted tips and baggy jeans to cop the latest Matchbox Twenty CD.
He says he’s hacked ChatGPT to create A-list emails.
Something about a pre-prompt to get any email you need written – in about one minute – using only four words.
I feel like the copywriter in Jon wants to tell me it’ll also melt 15 pounds of stubborn fat and reduce the appearance of fine lines and wrinkles for just four easy installments of $19.95.
Who can this help?
- Marketers who sell products, services or digital offers – or would like to.
- Copywriters who need to get ahead of the AI tornado that’s about to bust out their windows and turn their houses inside out.
- Basically anyone wanting to use email in their business.
That you, bro? Cool, then here’s what Jon wants you to know.
Anyone can have ChatGPT cook up some emails. But without his quote-unquote Preprompting System, they won’t be effective.
Yes, even if your prompts are solid.
For example, you may tell ChatGPT: “You are a direct response copywriter. Write me three emails promoting a weight loss offer to men and women over 50. Focus on benefits. Keep the product a mystery.”
Decent prompt, right?
But here’s what GPT-4 spits out: “Hello there. I hope this message finds you in great health and high spirits. You’re receiving this email because you’ve shown interest in leading a healthier, happier life.”
I won’t bore you with the rest, but right away, you can see: that’s about as captivating as elevator music, innit?
So what if you could program Chat GPT to assemble near-instant emails with patterns that are already proven to convert like crazy?
‘Cause ole JB’s cracked the code.
But before we get to that, understand this – there’s only four types of emails you ever need to send:
- Engage: emails sent to welcome new subscribers or customers, or to reengage folks who dropped off the email cliff.
- Promote: emails that sell by leveraging tight patterns of persuasion.
- Inspire: emails that act as both content and motivation, preparing people to buy.
- Consume: emails that get customers to actually use what they bought.
Hence why Jon calls ’em EPIC emails.
Make sense? Sweet. Now scroll down, keep reading.
So how do you hack ChatGPT to bust out these EPIC emails lickety-split?
Simple. You use Jon’s plug and play framework.
Which looks like so:
- Answer a few questions, like what is your niche and who is your avatar?
- Then copy a long-ass preprompt Jon’s already written for ya.
- Paste it into ChatGPT.
- And watch in amazement as ChatGPT turns into a world-class copywriter right before your very eyes.
Now, instead of bland copy, all of a sudden ChatGPT’s firing off emails that are spicier than a ghost pepper.
- The subject lines pop like fireworks on the Fourth of July.
- The openers disrobe and cut straight to the chase.
- Benefits are stacked taller than a buffet plate on cheat day.
- And the call to action jumps out like Chris Hansen as soon as a pedo shows up with a pocketful of condoms.
These EPIC emails are short and fast (don’t make me make the joke) and you can ask ChatGPT to manufacture as many of them as you’d like.
Works for any niche in any industry you can think of.
Throughout the pitch Jon demos his preprompting, and I will admit, the resulting emails are better than what the average person would come up with on their own, or by trying to coax ChatGPT themself.
But on the other hand, I don’t think they’re quite as good as he was leading on.
Still sorta generic and it seems like you’d have to go in and make quite a few tweaks to get ’em just right.
Beyond that, I just can’t get myself to buy from someone who used hype and (probably) made-up stories to sell over $1 billion worth of garbage ClickBank products over the years.
But if you can? Be my guest.
Buy Jon’s ChatMail Pro solution for $97.
There’s two upsells when you go to check out, and likely more after that.