
This square ad template promotes a wearable back-pain relief device using an editorial “medical news” framing to build instant credibility at the top of the funnel. The design mimics a publication hea...
Free — No credit card required
This square ad template promotes a wearable back-pain relief device using an editorial “medical news” framing to build instant credibility at the top of the funnel. The design mimics a publication header (“The Medical Times”) with a bold, black, headline-style question and a short quoted teaser that hints at new research—ideal for audiences who are unaware or skeptical and need context before they consider a product. A bright blue “Read Full Article” button anchors the message and drives a low-friction click. Below the text block, a lifestyle photo shows the device applied on the lower back, making the benefit unmistakable in one glance. A starburst badge (“Over 1.2M Treatments Completed”) adds social proof and reassurance. Typography is clean and newspaper-like; the palette is mostly white/black with strong blue accents for trust and action. Customize by swapping the publication name, updating the statistic badge, and replacing the device photo with your own wearable or therapy product while keeping the editorial hierarchy intact.
This template wins attention by borrowing the visual language of a trusted publication: a masthead, a bold “why” headline, and a quoted research teaser. For unaware audiences at TOF, that editorial wrapper lowers skepticism and reframes the ad as useful information rather than a sales pitch. The credibility trigger is reinforced by the clinical-looking device shown in-context on the lower back, making the benefit instantly legible. Social proof is concentrated in the starburst badge (“Over 1.2M Treatments Completed”), which reduces perceived risk and signals popularity. The blue CTA behaves like a news-site button, aligning with the promised experience (learn more) and increasing click-through to longer-form education—best practice for health offers where trust precedes conversion.
Adults 30–65 who experience recurrent lower-back pain and are wary of medication-heavy solutions. They respond to evidence, doctor language, and article-style education before committing to a device purchase. Also suited to caregivers researching at-home relief options for partners or parents.
Free — No credit card required