
This 9:16 Story template promotes a cognitive-focus nootropic supplement using a clear side-by-side comparison against “Adderall.” A warm pastel gradient (peach to yellow) sits behind playful wavy lin...
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This 9:16 Story template promotes a cognitive-focus nootropic supplement using a clear side-by-side comparison against “Adderall.” A warm pastel gradient (peach to yellow) sits behind playful wavy line art, while two rounded white cards create a clean, scanable split layout. The left card features a sharp product bottle and a benefit checklist with checkmarks (e.g., enhances cognition, lower stress, calm energy, non-addictive, 100% safe). The right card shows a blurred competitor-style bottle labeled “Adderall” with the name crossed out and a list of negative outcomes marked with X icons (dependency, anxiety, insomnia, increased heart rate, high blood pressure, withdrawal). This structure fits mid-funnel consideration: it targets solution-aware users who want focus support but fear side effects. Curiosity is sparked by the bold headline “Adderall Curious?” while safety reassurance is reinforced through the benefit-heavy left column and the medical-style disclaimer line at the bottom. Brands can customize by swapping the bottle render, rewriting claims to compliant, evidence-backed wording, and adjusting the accent colors to match packaging while keeping the split comparison framework intact.
This template works because it combines a curiosity hook with a fast, low-effort comparison. “Adderall Curious?” invites solution-aware viewers who already understand the focus problem and are evaluating options. The split layout uses cognitive fluency: a checklist of positives on the left versus X-marked negatives on the right makes the choice feel obvious in seconds. Fear-avoidance is activated by naming common side effects (anxiety, insomnia, dependency), while safety reassurance is reinforced through clean white panels, medical-like iconography, and a visible disclaimer line, signaling responsibility. For mid-funnel consideration, this is effective because it answers the core objection—“Will this mess me up?”—before asking for a click. Best practice: keep claims specific and compliant (avoid absolutes), but preserve the strong visual contrast that communicates risk vs benefit instantly on mobile.
Designed for adults 20–45 who want better focus, calm energy, and productivity without relying on prescription stimulants. They compare options, read labels, and respond to clear pros/cons—especially when safety and side effects are addressed upfront.
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