Loop 059

The talk-to-five-buyers loop

A bounded customer-research workflow that interviews recent buyers in batches, tracks recurring objections, and proposes evidence-backed landing-page copy.

Ready-to-use prompt

Copy the loop

Improve [landing page or purchase page] using objections from recent buyers. Before contacting anyone, identify the approved buyer group, outreach channel, privacy rules, and message. Obtain explicit approval for the outreach. Interview buyers in batches of five, up to fifteen people total. Ask each person one question: What almost stopped you from buying? Record their exact words while protecting their identity and honoring any consent or communication requirements. After each batch, group repeated concerns and draft a proposed copy change for the point on the page where each concern is most likely to arise. Do not publish the copy without approval. Use the next batch to check whether the same concern still appears. Stop when the concern no longer repeats, fifteen interviews are complete, the outreach budget ends, or access is blocked. Finish with anonymized quotes, recurring concerns, proposed copy, evidence by batch, and the recommended page change.

Verify / stop

The proposed copy reflects repeated buyer objections rather than internal assumptions.

The final recommendation traces each proposed change to anonymized exact language from approved interviews and shows how the pattern changed across batches.

Context and guidanceWhen to use it, steps, safety notes, and related loops
Published
Updated

Use this when

Use this when landing-page copy may be missing the real objection that nearly prevented recent customers from buying.

How to run it

  1. Define the approved buyer group, outreach channel, privacy rules, and one-question message before contacting anyone.
  2. Interview five buyers, preserve their exact words privately, and group recurring objections without exposing identities.
  3. Draft copy where each concern appears in the buying journey, then use another batch to test whether it still repeats.
  4. Stop when the concern disappears, fifteen interviews finish, the budget ends, or access is blocked; do not publish without approval.

Why it works

Teams often write conversion copy from their own assumptions. Repeated buyer language provides a stronger signal about what nearly stopped a real purchase and where reassurance belongs.

Implementation note

External outreach and public copy changes require explicit approval. Protect identities, follow applicable consent and communication rules, and do not turn one memorable quote into a claimed pattern.