Create Your Transformation Manifesto
Once you’ve done the before/after work, you’ll want to distill it into a single sentence.
You can use a powerful “from → to” statement. Think of it like a mini-manifesto. Something that captures the emotional and tangible shift your course delivers.
For the brand voice course, this could look like either:
“From carbon-copy content → to bigger-than-life brand voice”
Or:
“From editing purgatory → to scalable, streamlined style”
It doesn’t always have to be a “from to” statement. Here are some other examples:
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Digital Course Academy by Amy Porterfield: “Create and Launch A Profitable Digital Course”
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Copy School by Copyhackers: “Masterfully plan and write everything. And anything. Across the entire customer journey.”
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B-School by Marie Forleo: “Transform your business. Make a difference.”
Use That Transformation Everywhere (Yes, Everywhere)
Now that you’ve done the hard part, this is where you rinse and repeat. Your core transformation message should show up in every part of your launch content—especially your emails.
Pre-Launch (Problem Aware)
During this time, your audience is somewhere between problem aware and solution aware. This makes it the best time to tease the transformation.
Your email strategy before your official launch might straddle:
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Insights – Show them you understand the problem and know how to solve it.
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Storytelling – Help them imagine their new future (without mentioning your course yet).
How much before your official launch, you ask? There’s no need to overthink it says Direct Response Email Copywriter 7 Strategist Zachary Hyde. “If you haven’t emailed your list in a while, then you need to shift your priorities to fixing that first. Because you’re putting the cart before the horse here.”
In the Launch (Solution Aware)
At this stage, your readers know they have a problem.
What they don’t know yet? That your course is the solution.
This is where your email sequence starts showing them how life could look after they cross the bridge—with you guiding the way.
Your goal: To stir desire for the transformation by making it real, specific, and reachable.
Instead of listing your modules or jumping straight to features or saying how excited you are about your launch…
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Tell transformational mini-stories. Feature stories of people like them—either past students or hypothetical situations. Ex: “When I first met Sarah, she was stuck rewriting every LinkedIn post five times. Now? She’s repurposing one post into 10 and booking sales calls weekly.”
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Zoom in on “before” vs. “after” scenarios. Create contrast-rich snapshots to help readers see themselves in the story. Ex: “Before: Second-guessing every headline After: Writing scroll-stopping copy in 15 minutes flat.”
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Use visual, sensory language. Let them feel what the transformation will feel like. Ex: “Imagine waking up on launch day knowing your copy’s done, your voice is crystal clear, and your audience is already replying with ‘I needed this.’”
Don’t be afraid to show off your own story and transformation, too. Be filled with personality, engage the reader, hook them in. It’ll pay off – not scare them off.
Zachary Hyde doubles down on this idea, stating that “your audience chose your personality and your weirdness to come through the noise and BS of their overcrowded inbox. If it fits your brand, you’re not faking it. Your real goal is to connect with your ideal audience, not worry about things like deliverability.”
During Mid-Launch: Product Aware
Now they’re evaluating. Comparing. Considering.
Zoom in on the how — how the course works, what they’ll learn, and how that gets them where they want to go.
Use bullets that say:
✔ What they’ll do differently
✔ What tools or templates they’ll walk away with
✔ What kind of results are possible
Language like “discover,” “learn,” and “implement” helps them visualize the step-by-step journey — without overwhelming them with too much info.
Closing: Product Aware with High Intent
Now it’s go time. You just need that final push, that final promise that you can deliver the transformation. Yes, bonuses, urgency, and extras work well here. But in terms of the transformation, you’ll need to double-down on testimonials, reviews, or student wins—ideally in their own words.
Not because it makes you look good. But because it helps your readers see themselves in the success story.
Use transformation reframes to address objections. Help them shift their mindset from “Can I really do this?” to “I can’t not do this.”
For example:
“You don’t need 10+ years of writing experience. You need a clear message—and a process that helps you say it with confidence.”
End with vision. Wrap your final emails in possibility—remind them what’s waiting on the other side.
For example:
“This time next week, you could be writing content in half the time—and actually liking what you publish.”
Summary of the Launch Sequence + the Transformation
Okay, let’s review.
1. Pre-Launch (Problem Aware)
Highlight: The desire for transformation
→ Tease the future state. Focus on the emotional shift they’re craving (freedom, confidence, clarity).
2. Launch (Solution Aware)
Highlight: Your course as the bridge
→ Show how your offer is the vehicle that gets them from “before” to “after.”
3. Mid-Launch (Product Aware)
Highlight: How the transformation happens
→ Walk through the steps, tools, and support they’ll get. Focus on momentum and capability.
4. Closing (High Intent)
Highlight: Proof of transformation
→ Share results, testimonials, and success stories. Help them see themselves in the outcome.
You don’t need to be a pro copywriter to write a launch that converts—you just need to anchor everything in the transformation your course delivers. With each email, you’re guiding your audience closer to the future they want. And you? You’ve got what gets them there.