The Blacklist: Words That Kill Conversion

A Copywriting Exorcism for Online Marketers & Affiliates

If your copy reads like it was ghostwritten by a beige filing cabinet, you’re not just boring people – you’re bleeding conversions. Certain words and phrases are like garlic to a vampire audience… one whiff and they’re gone.

This isn’t about “grammar” or “style.” This is about survival. So here’s your Blacklist—the dead, tired, conversion-killing phrases you must banish. And because I’m not just here to roast your copy, I’ll give you spicy replacements that wake people up and make them click.

 

  1. “Check Out Our Latest Blog Post”

Why it kills: It screams “homework.” Nobody wakes up craving to “check out” anything. It’s vague, limp, and sounds like your 2010 intern wrote it.

Say this instead:

  • “The 3-minute read that’ll double your clicks.”
  • “How one funnel tweak made me $1,427—full breakdown inside.”

 

  1. “Solutions for All Your Needs”

Why it kills: This is the junk drawer of copy. It doesn’t say who you help or how. It reeks of corporate brochures left in dentist lobbies.

Say this instead:

  • “Stop leaking leads. Start banking them.”
  • “Turn your funnel from a colander into a firehose.”

 

  1. “We’re Passionate About Helping Our Customers”

Why it kills: Passion is cheap. If you have to announce it, you don’t show it. Also, nobody’s buying passion—they’re buying outcomes.

Say this instead:

  • “We hate watching marketers burn ad spend—so we built a fix.”
  • “Here’s how we shave hours off campaigns (without the caffeine shakes).”

 

  1. “Leverage Synergies”

Why it kills: Unless you’re trying to seduce a bored MBA, stop. This phrase makes people’s brains glaze like a Krispy Kreme.

Say this instead:

  • “Team up. Double your firepower.”
  • “When A meets B, your conversions explode.”

 

  1. “Cutting-Edge”

Why it kills: If you have to tell me it’s cutting-edge, it’s already dull. Feels like a line scraped from a 1998 press release.

Say this instead:

  • “Hotter than Google’s last algorithm leak.”
  • “This is so fresh it still has that ‘beta smell.’”

 

  1. “Click Here”

Why it kills: It’s the stale bread of CTAs. No curiosity, no promise, no reason why.

Say this instead:

  • “Steal the template.”
  • “Show me the funnel hack.”
  • “Yes, I want in before midnight.”

 

  1. “Act Now!”

Why it kills: Overused to death. It feels like a used car dealer with sweat stains and a megaphone.

Say this instead:

  • “Clock’s ticking—your bonus disappears in 17 minutes.”
  • “Your competition’s already loading this page. Beat them.”

 

  1. “Industry-Leading”

Why it kills: Meaningless fluff. Who crowned you leader? Your mom?

Say this instead:

  • “Used by 7,432 affiliates who actually cash checks.”
  • “The toolkit behind $18M in annual revenue.”

 

  1. “Innovative”

Why it kills: It’s the word companies use when they can’t prove results. It’s filler, not persuasion.

Say this instead:

  • “So simple it feels like cheating.”
  • “Turns your dusty funnel into a money printer.”

 

  1. “Best in Class”

Why it kills: Translation: “We couldn’t think of anything interesting.” Nobody types “best in class” into Google.

Say this instead:

  • “This beats every other [tool/course/software] we tested.”
  • “The unfair advantage your competition hopes you don’t find.”

 

  1. “Unprecedented Times” (bonus round)

Why it kills: Stop trauma-bonding with your customers. They came for solutions, not a TED Talk about 2020.

Say this instead:

  • “The only certainty: your audience still buys.”
  • “Chaos? Perfect. Here’s how to profit from it.”

 

The Exorcism

Boring words don’t just sit there—they push people away. They make your brand sound generic, lazy and forgettable. And in Black Friday / Cyber Monday season or any campaign, forgettable = broke.

So here’s your challenge: Audit your copy like you audit your funnels. Every time you see a dead phrase, cut it, bury it, and replace it with something alive—something with teeth, humor, or proof.

Your words are your weapons. Don’t bring a foam sword to a gunfight.

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