
This 9:16 Story template is built to promote concert earplugs or hearing-protection wearables with a high-impact “breaking news” hook. A neon club scene fills the background: a DJ in profile wearing s...
Free — No credit card required
This 9:16 Story template is built to promote concert earplugs or hearing-protection wearables with a high-impact “breaking news” hook. A neon club scene fills the background: a DJ in profile wearing small in-ear plugs, lit by saturated magenta and cyan stage lights. The bottom third uses a clean, high-contrast white text box with a red “BREAKING NEWS:” label and a bold, black, all-caps headline—designed for instant readability on mobile. Strategically, the creative plays on fear + curiosity at top-of-funnel awareness: it reframes hearing damage as an urgent, time-sensitive risk, then teases a “secret” solution. The newsroom visual language adds authority and makes the claim feel noteworthy without needing long copy. This approach works especially well for nightlife audiences who don’t think about hearing protection until it’s too late. Customize by swapping the DJ photo for your event context (festival, club, rehearsal), updating the headline to your key benefit (clarity, comfort, reusable), and adding your product packshot, logo, and a simple CTA in the white panel while keeping the red accent for urgency.
The template wins attention by borrowing the visual grammar of urgent news: a red “Breaking News” tag and a bold, all-caps headline. That instantly signals importance and activates fear of loss (hearing damage) while the word “secret” adds curiosity—two strong triggers for unaware audiences. In top-of-funnel awareness, people aren’t comparing brands yet; they need a reason to care. The lifestyle DJ image provides contextual relevance and credibility, implying that insiders in loud environments take protection seriously. The high-contrast white text panel improves mobile readability and makes the message skimmable in seconds, a best practice for Story placements. Overall, it creates a fast problem–tease framework that naturally leads to a “learn more” click for education and product introduction.
Nightlife lovers, festival attendees, and working DJs aged 18–35 who spend time in loud venues and rarely plan for hearing protection. They respond to bold visuals, authority cues, and a clear promise of a simple fix that can be used immediately before a show.
Free — No credit card required