You want to remove any guessing about your dream client and be so sure of what they're going through. So that all of your messaging sounds as if it was created just for them. That's when the big conversions happen.
Have you ever felt like you’re doing all the right things, but your messaging just isn’t landing? You’re showing up, you’re writing content, you’re launching—but the engagement isn’t there, and sales aren’t where you want them to be.
If that sounds familiar, you’re in the right place. Today, I’m about to give you a look into my process for doing simple market research to elevate your messaging, increase engagement, and boost your conversions.
Market research is the foundation of compelling, high-converting messaging. When you deeply understand your audience—their fears, desires, and struggles—you can craft copy that makes them think:
“Wow, she really knows how I feel.”
“That’s exactly what I’ve been journaling about.”
“How did she know that?”
When your dream clients feel like you truly understand them, trust builds. And trust leads to conversions.
If you don’t take the time to conduct proper market research, here’s what happens:
Weak or generic messaging that blends in with every other entrepreneur in your niche.
Low engagement and poor conversions because your content doesn’t resonate.
Launching offers that don’t sell because they haven’t been validated.
Attracting the wrong audience because you’re using the wrong language.
Sound familiar? If so, don’t worry—because I’m about to walk you through exactly how to fix it.
Your market research calls need to be with actual dream clients, not just anyone who will chat with you. Here’s where to look:
Current or past clients who fit your ideal client profile
Engaged followers on social media (those who comment, DM, or share your content)
Facebook groups where your dream clients hang out
People who have expressed interest in your offer (even if they haven’t purchased yet)
These calls don’t need to be long—just 20 to 30 minutes each. The goal is to get inside your audience’s head and hear their real thoughts, fears, and desires.
Pro tip: Schedule these calls within one week so you can keep momentum and take action on the data quickly.
Choose 8-12 questions from my free Market Research Blueprint guide (you don’t need to ask all of them):
You don’t need to ask everything—just the most relevant questions. Here are a few examples:
What’s your biggest struggle when it comes to [problem your offer solves]?
What have you tried before that didn’t work?
How does this problem affect your day-to-day life?
What would an ideal outcome look like for you?
If you could wave a magic wand and fix this, what would change?
Why is this so important to you?
Have you invested in a similar solution before?
What made you hesitate before buying?
What would make you feel confident in investing in a solution like this?
What is your biggest frustration with [problem you solve]?
Why do you think you haven’t had success yet?
How long have you been struggling with this?
What have you tried in the past? Did it work? Why or why not?
What’s your ultimate goal in this area?
If you could wave a magic wand, how would things be different?
Bonus tip: Use the “5 Whys” method. When someone gives you an answer, ask “Why?” five times to get to the deepest emotional drivers.
Make your interviewee feel comfortable. Use silence to encourage them to open up. Don’t interrupt. Don’t lead their answers. Just listen.
Record the calls (with permission) so you can focus on the conversation instead of frantically taking notes.
After your calls, go back through the recordings and pull out:
Exact phrases and words they used to describe their problems
Common themes (e.g., recurring fears, struggles, or desires)
Specific emotions (e.g., frustration, overwhelm, excitement)
Then, use these words verbatim in your content. When your audience sees their own thoughts reflected in your messaging, they feel an instant connection.
One of the most powerful aspects of market research is its ability to help you validate your offer before you create it. Ask yourself:
Does my audience truly need this solution?
Have they tried something similar before?
Are they actively looking for a solution, or will I have to educate them first?
What objections do they have about investing in this type of solution?
Not interviewing enough people – A small sample size leads to misleading insights.
Only talking to current clients – You need fresh perspectives to understand evolving needs.
Asking leading questions – Let them speak naturally rather than steering them.
Not documenting responses properly – Keep an organized spreadsheet or doc.
Failing to act on your research – Data is useless unless you apply it to your messaging.
Surveys can supplement your research by capturing broader audience trends. Keep them short and focused:
Use multiple-choice for easy analysis.
Include open-ended questions for deeper insights.
Offer a small incentive for completion (e.g., a free guide or discount).
Your audience is already engaging with you—use that! Post questions in stories, LinkedIn polls, or in your Facebook group to gather insights in real time.
Study Amazon book reviews, competitor testimonials, and online forums. Look for:
Repeated complaints or praise.
Gaps in existing solutions you can fill.
The exact wording customers use to describe their problems.
Once you have insights, refine your messaging with A/B testing:
Test different email subject lines based on audience pain points.
Compare two versions of a landing page to see which copy converts better.
Run social media ads with different messaging to gauge response.
Once you have your market research data, here’s how to apply it:
Keep a Google Doc with all the insights from your research. This makes content creation 10x easier because you can pull real phrases instead of guessing.
Before creating a new offer, check your market research:
Does your audience actually want this?
Are they willing to pay for it?
What are they currently struggling with that this solves?
Sales pages: Use exact phrases from your research.
Emails: Open with a pain point they described.
Social posts: Mirror their thoughts to create engagement.
Webinars & trainings: Address their fears & desires directly.
Market research is the difference between struggling to connect and becoming a trusted expert in your niche. When you do this watch your engagement, leads, and sales grow.
If you want a simple workbook to performing MR and gathering deep insights into your dream clients, grab my free Market Research Blueprint.
Erin xx
Thank you for listening to this episode of Copy to Freedom: The Podcast. Subscribe for more lighthearted, inspirational, and actionable chats about business, marketing, and reclaiming your freedom.
Connect with Erin:
Website: https://erinmorris.co/
Instagram: @LaunchWithErin
You want to remove any guessing about your dream client and be so sure of what they're going through. So that all of your messaging sounds as if it was created just for them. That's when the big conversions happen.
Have you ever felt like you’re doing all the right things, but your messaging just isn’t landing? You’re showing up, you’re writing content, you’re launching—but the engagement isn’t there, and sales aren’t where you want them to be.
If that sounds familiar, you’re in the right place. Today, I’m about to give you a look into my process for doing simple market research to elevate your messaging, increase engagement, and boost your conversions.
Market research is the foundation of compelling, high-converting messaging. When you deeply understand your audience—their fears, desires, and struggles—you can craft copy that makes them think:
“Wow, she really knows how I feel.”
“That’s exactly what I’ve been journaling about.”
“How did she know that?”
When your dream clients feel like you truly understand them, trust builds. And trust leads to conversions.
If you don’t take the time to conduct proper market research, here’s what happens:
Weak or generic messaging that blends in with every other entrepreneur in your niche.
Low engagement and poor conversions because your content doesn’t resonate.
Launching offers that don’t sell because they haven’t been validated.
Attracting the wrong audience because you’re using the wrong language.
Sound familiar? If so, don’t worry—because I’m about to walk you through exactly how to fix it.
Your market research calls need to be with actual dream clients, not just anyone who will chat with you. Here’s where to look:
Current or past clients who fit your ideal client profile
Engaged followers on social media (those who comment, DM, or share your content)
Facebook groups where your dream clients hang out
People who have expressed interest in your offer (even if they haven’t purchased yet)
These calls don’t need to be long—just 20 to 30 minutes each. The goal is to get inside your audience’s head and hear their real thoughts, fears, and desires.
Pro tip: Schedule these calls within one week so you can keep momentum and take action on the data quickly.
Choose 8-12 questions from my free Market Research Blueprint guide (you don’t need to ask all of them):
You don’t need to ask everything—just the most relevant questions. Here are a few examples:
What’s your biggest struggle when it comes to [problem your offer solves]?
What have you tried before that didn’t work?
How does this problem affect your day-to-day life?
What would an ideal outcome look like for you?
If you could wave a magic wand and fix this, what would change?
Why is this so important to you?
Have you invested in a similar solution before?
What made you hesitate before buying?
What would make you feel confident in investing in a solution like this?
What is your biggest frustration with [problem you solve]?
Why do you think you haven’t had success yet?
How long have you been struggling with this?
What have you tried in the past? Did it work? Why or why not?
What’s your ultimate goal in this area?
If you could wave a magic wand, how would things be different?
Bonus tip: Use the “5 Whys” method. When someone gives you an answer, ask “Why?” five times to get to the deepest emotional drivers.
Make your interviewee feel comfortable. Use silence to encourage them to open up. Don’t interrupt. Don’t lead their answers. Just listen.
Record the calls (with permission) so you can focus on the conversation instead of frantically taking notes.
After your calls, go back through the recordings and pull out:
Exact phrases and words they used to describe their problems
Common themes (e.g., recurring fears, struggles, or desires)
Specific emotions (e.g., frustration, overwhelm, excitement)
Then, use these words verbatim in your content. When your audience sees their own thoughts reflected in your messaging, they feel an instant connection.
One of the most powerful aspects of market research is its ability to help you validate your offer before you create it. Ask yourself:
Does my audience truly need this solution?
Have they tried something similar before?
Are they actively looking for a solution, or will I have to educate them first?
What objections do they have about investing in this type of solution?
Not interviewing enough people – A small sample size leads to misleading insights.
Only talking to current clients – You need fresh perspectives to understand evolving needs.
Asking leading questions – Let them speak naturally rather than steering them.
Not documenting responses properly – Keep an organized spreadsheet or doc.
Failing to act on your research – Data is useless unless you apply it to your messaging.
Surveys can supplement your research by capturing broader audience trends. Keep them short and focused:
Use multiple-choice for easy analysis.
Include open-ended questions for deeper insights.
Offer a small incentive for completion (e.g., a free guide or discount).
Your audience is already engaging with you—use that! Post questions in stories, LinkedIn polls, or in your Facebook group to gather insights in real time.
Study Amazon book reviews, competitor testimonials, and online forums. Look for:
Repeated complaints or praise.
Gaps in existing solutions you can fill.
The exact wording customers use to describe their problems.
Once you have insights, refine your messaging with A/B testing:
Test different email subject lines based on audience pain points.
Compare two versions of a landing page to see which copy converts better.
Run social media ads with different messaging to gauge response.
Once you have your market research data, here’s how to apply it:
Keep a Google Doc with all the insights from your research. This makes content creation 10x easier because you can pull real phrases instead of guessing.
Before creating a new offer, check your market research:
Does your audience actually want this?
Are they willing to pay for it?
What are they currently struggling with that this solves?
Sales pages: Use exact phrases from your research.
Emails: Open with a pain point they described.
Social posts: Mirror their thoughts to create engagement.
Webinars & trainings: Address their fears & desires directly.
Market research is the difference between struggling to connect and becoming a trusted expert in your niche. When you do this watch your engagement, leads, and sales grow.
If you want a simple workbook to performing MR and gathering deep insights into your dream clients, grab my free Market Research Blueprint.
Erin xx
Thank you for listening to this episode of Copy to Freedom: The Podcast. Subscribe for more lighthearted, inspirational, and actionable chats about business, marketing, and reclaiming your freedom.
Connect with Erin:
Website: https://erinmorris.co/
Instagram: @LaunchWithErin
Are you hitting your dream launch goals?
Are you moving away from 1:1 coaching and into scalable offers?
Is it time you reclaimed your freedom?
Get a no-fluff look into the strategies I use with my multi-6-figure clients.
Listen in on actionable conversations about buyer psychology, launch strategies, and creating soulful copy for instant connections and big conversions.
These strategy calls have previously been reserved for my DFY high-ticket clients and are valued at over $250.
All you have to do is leave the show an honest review. Take a screenshot and send it to [email protected] and you’ll go into the monthly draw to win a 30-min 1:1 strategy call.
These calls will be a game-changer if you’ve got an upcoming launch or need an existing piece of copy improved.
I built a lifestyle-first business and I can’t wait to help you do the same.
As a copywriter for creatives, I’ll help you earn more and live BIG as you scale your brand to make more while doing less.
For every 10 sales pages that sound the same, there is ONE that stands out and makes the reader laugh, cry and rejoice – “Babe, I found her!”
I built a lifestyle-first business and I can’t wait to help you do the same. As a copywriter for creatives, I’ll help you earn more and live BIG as you scale your brand to make more while doing less.
For every 10 sales pages that sound the same, there is ONE that stands out and makes the reader laugh, cry and rejoice – “Babe, I found her!”
You wonder, how did she do it? How did she just make me drop $3,000 without blinking an eye?
The secret…
Connection-first copy.
When you stop “trying” to make your audience do something and focus on getting your audience to say, “Yes, that’s me!”, you'll have words that connect. And connection creates conversions.
Subscribe to Copy to Freedom: The Copywriting Podcast for coaches and course creators on your fav platform.
GRAB YOUR AIRPODS & GET LISTENING: