
This 9:16 skincare ad template is built for promoting a dermatologist-style “trifecta” routine: a bundled set of treatment products (cleanser/cream/serum) positioned as an easy, results-driven regimen...
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This 9:16 skincare ad template is built for promoting a dermatologist-style “trifecta” routine: a bundled set of treatment products (cleanser/cream/serum) positioned as an easy, results-driven regimen. The design is clean and clinical: a soft off‑white background, refined serif headline paired with modern sans typography, and a subtle circular shadow halo that frames three sleek black product shots in the center. Large percentage claims (100%, 94%) are used as visual anchors, each supported by short benefit lines about fine lines, glow, and even tone, plus a credibility footnote referencing an 8‑week clinical study. Strategically, this is mid‑funnel consideration creative for product-aware shoppers. It leverages trust and results triggers—quantified outcomes, “agree/saw improvement” language, and clinical-study framing—to reduce risk and justify a premium purchase. It works especially well for audiences comparing routines, because the bundle visual instantly communicates completeness. Customize by swapping the three packshots, updating the claim blocks to your study stats, and adapting the headline to your routine promise while keeping the minimal, medical-grade aesthetic.
This template performs because it translates skincare benefits into quantified proof. The oversized percentages act as instant heuristics—viewers don’t need to read long copy to infer efficacy—while the small lines (“saw improvement,” “agree…”) mimic clinical survey language that feels credible. The footnote referencing an 8‑week study reinforces trust without clutter. It’s aligned to mid‑funnel consideration and a product‑aware audience: people already interested in treatment routines now need reassurance, differentiation, and risk reduction. Showing three products together also supports bundle economics by framing the purchase as a complete system, not a single item. The minimal, black‑on‑cream aesthetic signals premium and “derm-grade” authority, a best practice for skincare ads where cleanliness and readability directly influence perceived safety and quality.
Designed for skincare shoppers (often women 25–55) who already recognize treatment routines and want proof before committing to a full set. It fits detail-oriented buyers comparing brands, ingredients, and outcomes, and responds well to clinical language and quantified claims.
Free — No credit card required