
This 9:16 Story template is built to promote concert-ready earplugs and hearing protection with a hard-hitting prevention message. A large, realistic 3D ear fills the center, with a black earplug seat...
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This 9:16 Story template is built to promote concert-ready earplugs and hearing protection with a hard-hitting prevention message. A large, realistic 3D ear fills the center, with a black earplug seated inside to make the product benefit instantly understandable. On the left, stylized soundwave graphics visually “hit” the ear, while a small stat callout (“15 min above 110 dB = Permanent Hearing Loss”) adds credibility and an educational hook. The headline in bold, all-caps typography—“15 MINUTES OF LOUD MUSIC. LIFETIME OF REGRET?”—uses fear of loss to stop the scroll at top-of-funnel awareness, especially for people who don’t yet think about hearing damage. A minimal beige background and soft gradients keep the design clean and premium, while the award badge (“reddot winner 2024”) functions as authority and quality proof. Brands can easily swap the earplug render, update the decibel statistic, add a stronger CTA button, and recolor the soundwave accents to match their identity without losing the template’s stark, safety-first impact.
This creative works because it converts an invisible risk into a concrete consequence. The fear-of-loss headline (“Lifetime of regret”) leverages loss aversion, a powerful trigger for audiences who chase experiences like concerts and nightlife. The decibel micro-stat adds authority and makes the claim feel factual rather than preachy—ideal for top-of-funnel awareness targeting users who are unaware or indifferent to hearing damage. Visually, the oversized ear and earplug create instant comprehension on a fast-scrolling Story placement, while the soundwave graphic dramatizes exposure without needing complex explanation. The minimal, premium palette and design-award badge signal quality, helping remove the common objection that earplugs are uncomfortable or “uncool.” Overall, it follows best practices: single focal point, high-contrast headline, one key fact, and a clear brand area for trust and recall.
Designed for people who attend concerts, clubs, and festivals and routinely listen to loud music—often without considering long-term hearing damage. It fits health-conscious, style-driven buyers who want discreet, premium protection rather than bulky safety gear. Best for mobile-first audiences who react to bold headlines and simple, science-backed facts.
Free — No credit card required