how to use AI to write sales pages that convert
I have written dozens of sales pages over the years, and I will be honest with you. using AI has not made it effortless, but it has made it roughly 3 to 4 times faster. the key is knowing how to direct the AI properly, because a generic prompt will give you generic copy that sounds like every other AI generated page on the internet.
in this guide I am going to show you my exact process for using Claude and ChatGPT to write sales pages that actually convert. I will cover the frameworks I use, the prompts that work, and the mistakes that will kill your conversion rate.
why most AI generated sales pages fail
before I show you how to do it right, let me explain what goes wrong when people just ask AI to “write me a sales page.”
the copy sounds generic and corporate. it uses vague benefits like “streamline your workflow” and “boost productivity” without getting specific about what the product actually does for real people.
it lacks emotional depth. good sales copy connects with the reader’s frustrations, desires, and fears. AI tends to stay surface level unless you push it to go deeper.
it reads like AI. there is a certain pattern to AI generated copy: perfectly structured, overly polished, and lacking the rough edges that make writing feel human. buyers can sense this, and it erodes trust.
the fix for all of these problems is better prompting and a structured approach. you do not just ask AI to write a sales page. you guide it through each section using proven copywriting frameworks.
the two frameworks you need to know
I use two main frameworks for sales pages: AIDA and PAS. sometimes I combine them. here is how each one works and when to use it.
AIDA: attention, interest, desire, action
AIDA is the classic sales page structure. it works best for products where the buyer already has some awareness of their problem.
| section | purpose | what to include |
|---|---|---|
| Attention | stop the scroll | bold headline, surprising stat, provocative question |
| Interest | keep them reading | explain the problem in detail, share relatable scenarios |
| Desire | make them want it | show the solution, paint the “after” picture, social proof |
| Action | get them to buy | clear CTA, urgency, risk reversal (guarantee) |
PAS: problem, agitate, solve
PAS works better for products where the buyer might not realize how big their problem is. you start by naming the problem, then agitate it (make them feel the pain more deeply), then present your solution.
| section | purpose | example angle |
|---|---|---|
| Problem | name the pain | “you spend 3 hours every week on tasks that should take 20 minutes” |
| Agitate | twist the knife | “that is 156 hours per year, nearly a full month of work, wasted” |
| Solve | present relief | “here is how to get those hours back” |
I generally use AIDA for higher priced products and PAS for products that solve a specific, painful problem. for most sales pages, I actually blend both. I open with PAS to hook the reader, then transition to AIDA for the middle and end sections.
section by section: writing your sales page with AI
let me walk you through each section of a sales page and show you how I use AI to write it. I am using Claude for these examples, but the approach works with ChatGPT, Gemini, or any capable AI.
section 1: the headline
the headline is the most important element on your page. if it does not grab attention, nothing else matters. I never let AI write my headline from scratch. instead, I use AI to generate options based on proven formulas.
my headline generation prompt:
“I am selling [product description] to [target audience]. the main benefit is [primary benefit]. the price is [price]. generate 15 headline options using these formulas: 1) how to [benefit] without [pain point], 2) the [number] step system for [desired outcome], 3) [shocking stat] about [problem], 4) stop [painful activity] and start [desired activity], 5) what [number] [audience members] know about [topic] that you do not. make each headline specific and concrete, not vague.”
from the 15 options, I usually find 3 to 4 that are strong. I then test them using VWO or a simple A/B test to see which one converts best.
headline formulas that consistently work:
| formula | example | best for |
|---|---|---|
| how to X without Y | “how to double your email list without paid ads” | problem aware audience |
| number + benefit | “7 ways to cut your tax bill by 40%” | list based pages |
| question + pain point | “still wasting 3 hours on invoicing every week?” | pain focused products |
| social proof + result | “the system 2,000+ freelancers use to find clients” | products with traction |
| before/after contrast | “from 2 clients to 20 in 90 days” | transformation products |
section 2: the opening paragraph
the opening paragraph needs to build on the headline and immediately make the reader feel understood. this is where PAS shines.
my opening paragraph prompt:
“write an opening paragraph for a sales page targeting [audience]. they are struggling with [problem]. the tone should be conversational and empathetic, like a friend who has been through the same thing. use first person. start by naming their specific frustration. do not use generic language like ‘in today’s fast paced world.’ be concrete and specific.”
the key phrase in that prompt is “be concrete and specific.” AI defaults to vague, general statements. you have to push it toward specifics.
good opening (specific): “if you are spending your Sunday nights building proposals that clients never respond to, I know exactly how that feels. I used to spend 4 to 5 hours on every proposal, carefully customizing each one, only to hear nothing back.”
bad opening (generic): “in the competitive world of freelancing, standing out from the crowd can be challenging. many professionals struggle with the proposal process.”
see the difference? the first one names a specific scenario. the second one could be about anything.
section 3: the problem section
this is where you go deeper into the problem. I use AI to brainstorm all the ways the problem manifests in the reader’s life, then I select the most relatable ones.
my problem section prompt:
“list 10 specific, concrete ways that [problem] affects [target audience] in their daily life. include emotional impacts, time wasted, money lost, and missed opportunities. be specific, not generic. for each point, describe a specific scenario they would recognize.”
from the 10 points, I pick the 3 to 5 most powerful ones and weave them into a narrative. the goal is to make the reader nod and think “this person gets me.”
section 4: the agitation
this is the part that separates okay sales pages from great ones. agitation makes the problem feel more urgent and painful. it is not about being manipulative. it is about being honest about the real consequences of not solving the problem.
my agitation prompt:
“take these 3 problems [list them] and write a section that shows what happens if [target audience] does not solve them in the next 6 to 12 months. be honest and specific, not fear mongering. show the compounding cost of inaction. use concrete numbers where possible.”
a good agitation section will include something like: “every month you delay, that is another $2,400 in revenue you are not earning. over a year, that adds up to nearly $29,000. that is not hypothetical. that is based on the average improvement our customers see.”
section 5: the solution and benefits
now you flip the script. you have established the pain, and now you present the relief. this is where you introduce your product and its benefits.
my solution section prompt:
“I am introducing [product name] as the solution to [problem]. write a benefits section that covers 5 to 7 key benefits. for each benefit, use this structure: benefit headline (what they get), 2 to 3 sentences explaining the benefit in practical terms, and a concrete example or number showing the result. write in second person (‘you will’ not ‘users will’). keep the tone conversational.”
section 6: social proof
social proof is critical for conversion. if you have testimonials, case studies, or numbers, this is where they go.
how to use AI for social proof sections:
I do not use AI to write fake testimonials. that is dishonest and will backfire. instead, I use AI to organize and format real testimonials for maximum impact.
“here are 8 customer testimonials [paste them]. select the 4 most compelling ones and arrange them in an order that builds credibility. start with the one that addresses the biggest objection, then show results, then show diversity of use cases. for each testimonial, suggest a bold pull quote of under 10 words.”
| social proof type | conversion impact | difficulty to get |
|---|---|---|
| video testimonials | very high | hard |
| case studies with numbers | high | medium |
| written testimonials | medium | easy |
| logos of clients | medium | easy |
| review scores (G2, Capterra) | medium | depends |
| number of customers/users | low to medium | easy |
section 7: pricing and offer
the pricing section needs to communicate value clearly. I use AI to help frame the pricing in a way that makes the investment feel reasonable.
my pricing section prompt:
“my product costs [price]. the main alternative is [alternative] which costs [competitor price]. my customers typically save [time/money saved] per month. write a pricing section that frames the cost as an investment rather than an expense. include a comparison to what they are currently spending (in time or money) to solve this problem manually. do not be pushy or use fake urgency.”
section 8: the CTA (call to action)
your CTA is the final push. I use AI to generate multiple CTA options and then test them.
CTA optimization principles:
| principle | bad example | good example |
|---|---|---|
| be specific | “Sign Up” | “Start Your Free 14 Day Trial” |
| reduce risk | “Buy Now” | “Try It Free, Cancel Anytime” |
| state the benefit | “Submit” | “Get My Custom Report” |
| create urgency (honest) | “Act Now!” | “Join 500+ Teams Already Using It” |
my CTA prompt:
“generate 8 CTA button text options for [product]. the action is [signup/purchase/trial]. include options that emphasize: no risk, immediate benefit, social proof, and simplicity. keep each under 6 words.”
section 9: the FAQ and objection handling
the bottom of your sales page should handle remaining objections. I use AI to predict objections and write clear answers.
my objection handling prompt:
“I am selling [product] at [price] to [audience]. what are the 8 most likely objections or concerns a potential buyer would have? for each objection, write a clear, honest answer that addresses the concern without being dismissive. if the objection is valid, acknowledge it and explain how we mitigate it.”
the complete workflow: from blank page to finished sales page
here is my end to end process, step by step.
step 1: research (1 to 2 hours). before opening any AI tool, I research my audience. I read reviews of competing products, browse Reddit threads and forums where my target audience hangs out, and note the exact language they use to describe their problems. this language becomes the foundation of my prompts.
step 2: outline (30 minutes). I create a simple outline of every section using the AIDA or PAS framework. no AI yet, just a skeleton.
step 3: first draft with AI (2 to 3 hours). I work through each section using the prompts I shared above. I do not accept the first output. I usually go back and forth with Claude 3 to 5 times per section, refining and pushing for more specificity.
step 4: humanize the copy (1 to 2 hours). this is the most important step. I read through the entire page and rewrite anything that sounds robotic, generic, or overly polished. I add personal anecdotes, remove corporate jargon, and break up walls of text. I make it sound like me, not like a machine.
step 5: add design notes (30 minutes). I annotate the copy with notes for the designer about layout, imagery, and visual hierarchy. where do I want a screenshot? where should a testimonial box go? where does the CTA need to be placed?
step 6: review and test (ongoing). I get feedback from at least one person who matches my target audience before publishing. after launch, I A/B test the headline and CTA within the first week.
time comparison
| approach | time to first draft | quality |
|---|---|---|
| writing manually | 15 to 25 hours | depends on skill |
| AI with no framework | 2 to 3 hours | low, generic |
| AI with frameworks (my method) | 5 to 8 hours | high, needs polish |
tools I use for AI sales page writing
| tool | what I use it for | monthly cost |
|---|---|---|
| Claude Pro | primary copy generation, brainstorming | $20 |
| ChatGPT Plus | second opinion, alternative angles | $20 |
| VWO | A/B testing headlines and CTAs | $245+ |
| Grammarly | proofreading and readability | $30 |
| Hemingway Editor | simplifying complex sentences | free |
| Unbounce | landing page builder with AI features | $99 |
| Hotjar | heatmaps to see where people drop off | $39 |
you do not need all of these. at minimum, you need Claude or ChatGPT ($20), and a way to publish your page. the testing and analytics tools are for optimization after launch.
for more on this, see our guide on best landing page builders solopreneurs.
mistakes that will kill your conversion rate
using AI output without editing. I cannot stress this enough. raw AI output converts poorly. it needs a human pass to add personality, specificity, and authentic voice.
writing for everyone. the more specific your target audience, the better your sales page will convert. a page that tries to appeal to “anyone who wants to be more productive” will convert worse than one targeting “freelance designers who spend too much time on client revisions.”
hiding the price. if prospects have to click through to another page or schedule a call to learn the price, you will lose a significant percentage of potential buyers. transparency builds trust. the exception is enterprise software where pricing is genuinely custom.
no social proof. I have tested pages with and without testimonials. social proof consistently improves conversion rates by 15 to 30%. if you do not have customer testimonials yet, use any credibility signal you have: years of experience, certifications, results from your own use.
too many CTAs. every page should have one primary action you want the visitor to take. having multiple options (“buy now,” “schedule a demo,” “download the guide,” “watch the video”) creates decision paralysis.
frequently asked questions
can AI write a complete sales page that converts without human editing?
no. I have tested this extensively. unedited AI sales pages convert 30 to 50% worse than pages that go through a human editing pass. AI gives you a strong foundation and saves hours of work, but the human touch in editing is what makes copy feel authentic and trustworthy.
which AI tool is best for writing sales copy, Claude or ChatGPT?
I find Claude produces more natural, conversational copy. ChatGPT tends to be more structured and formal. for sales pages, I prefer Claude because it is better at capturing an emotional, human tone. that said, I often use both and cherry pick the best elements from each.
how long should a sales page be?
it depends on the price and complexity of your product. for products under $50, a shorter page (1,000 to 2,000 words) usually works fine. for products over $200, longer pages (3,000 to 5,000 words) tend to convert better because buyers need more information to justify the purchase. I have seen 7,000 word sales pages outperform 1,500 word versions for a $997 course.
how do I test if my AI written sales page is working?
start by measuring your conversion rate (percentage of visitors who take the desired action). then A/B test one element at a time, starting with the headline. use Hotjar or a similar tool to see where people scroll to and where they drop off. if 80% of visitors leave before reaching the price section, your problem is in the copy above it.
is it ethical to use AI to write sales pages?
absolutely, as long as you are not making false claims or fabricating testimonials. AI is a writing tool, like a calculator is a math tool. the ethics are about what you say, not how you produce the words. be honest about your product, deliver on your promises, and using AI for the writing process is perfectly fine.
for more on this, see our guide on how to build a content calendar with ai in 2026 (free t.
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