
This 9:16 Story template is built for women’s urinary health brands promoting a UTI-support supplement or program via a quick quiz. The design opens with a bold, friendly headline (“Take our quiz…”) a...
Free — No credit card required
This 9:16 Story template is built for women’s urinary health brands promoting a UTI-support supplement or program via a quick quiz. The design opens with a bold, friendly headline (“Take our quiz…”) and a large white quiz card that asks a single, relatable question: “How often do you get UTIs?” The multiple-choice list mimics a mobile questionnaire, with a pink highlight bar and a pointing hand drawing attention to an answer—perfect for stopping the scroll. Below, a simple bathroom illustration of a woman on a toilet communicates the pain point instantly without needing product claims. The cool grey background and clean sans-serif typography keep it clinical and trustworthy, while the playful illustration adds approachability. Strategically, it’s top-of-funnel awareness for an “unaware” audience: the quiz format leverages curiosity and self-identification, reducing resistance and making the next step feel low-commitment. Brands can easily swap in their name, adjust the question (e.g., urgency, burning, frequency), and tailor outcomes to segment leads for email/SMS nurturing.
The template works because it packages a sensitive health topic into a low-friction quiz. Curiosity (“What will my result be?”) and relatability (“How often do you get UTIs?”) invite self-identification without demanding immediate purchase intent. The single-question card mirrors familiar mobile survey UI, signaling ease and safety, while the pink highlight and pointing hand create a clear visual path to the “answer,” boosting attention and comprehension in a fast scroll. As a TOF awareness asset for an “unaware” audience, it avoids heavy medical claims and instead opens a conversation, making the click feel like seeking information rather than buying. This aligns with best practices for health ads: simple framing, high clarity, and a soft CTA that moves users into a quiz/results page where education and segmentation can happen.
Women who experience recurring urinary discomfort and are curious whether their symptoms are “normal,” but aren’t actively shopping for a solution yet. Mobile-first audiences who respond well to low-pressure self-assessments and prefer discreet, educational next steps.
Free — No credit card required