
This 9:16 Story template mimics a real iMessage conversation to promote festival earplugs as a must-pack accessory. The layout uses a soft lavender header and a dark, blurred purple/blue gradient back...
Free — No credit card required
This 9:16 Story template mimics a real iMessage conversation to promote festival earplugs as a must-pack accessory. The layout uses a soft lavender header and a dark, blurred purple/blue gradient background, with high-contrast chat bubbles (white and iMessage blue) that instantly feel familiar and credible. A preview card at the bottom features a product shot of earplugs outdoors, plus a clear link line—perfect for driving taps without needing heavy copy. Strategically, it’s top-of-funnel awareness aimed at people who aren’t actively shopping for hearing protection yet. The dialogue frame introduces the idea naturally (“tickets locked and loaded… now we just need earplugs”), leveraging preparedness and fear of damage while keeping the tone friendly and low-pressure. Because it reads like a message from friends, it reduces ad resistance and makes the product feel like standard festival gear. Brands can swap the chat text, the preview image, and the link label to fit different models (music venues, clubs, travel, motorsports) while keeping the believable messaging UI and strong mobile-first hierarchy.
This template works because it sells hearing protection through social normalization rather than technical claims. The iMessage-style UI triggers familiarity and “this is what my friends do,” making earplugs feel like a standard festival essential. The conversation structure creates preparedness motivation and subtly activates fear of damage (“we need earplugs”) without sounding alarmist. As a TOF awareness asset for an unaware audience, it introduces the product in context—right after buying tickets—when people are mentally assembling their checklist. The link-preview card functions like a native share, reducing friction and guiding a single, clear action: tap through to learn more. Best practices shown here: mobile-first 9:16 hierarchy, minimal cognitive load, and authenticity cues that decrease ad skepticism.
Designed for festival-goers and concert lovers who buy tickets early and plan outfits and essentials on mobile. It speaks to social groups organizing nights out, who want comfort and safety without sacrificing the experience.
Free — No credit card required