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Those Stubborn First Sentences: The Best Ways to Open Any Piece of Copy

The opening is the hardest sentence to write and the most important. Here are the proven types of leads and how to pick the right one for your copy.

Those Stubborn First Sentences: The Best Ways to Open Any Piece of Copy

The first sentence is the hardest one to write and the only one that guarantees the rest get read. If the opening does not pull, nothing below it matters, because nobody is there to read it. The good news: you do not have to invent an opening from nothing. There are proven types of leads, and your job is to pick the right one and execute it.

Why the opening carries so much weight

Sugarman said it best: the only job of the first sentence is to get the second one read. The opening is not where you sell. It is where you earn the next ten seconds of attention. Treat it as a hook, not a summary. The fastest way to lose a reader is to open with a definition, your company history, or “in this article we will.”

The proven types of leads

Borrowing from the direct-response tradition, most strong openings are one of these:

The offer lead. Open straight with an irresistible deal. Best when the offer itself is the strongest thing you have and the reader is ready to buy.

The promise lead. Open with the big benefit, the result they want most. “Add 50 yards to your drives.” Works when the desire is strong and believable.

The problem-solution lead. Name the reader’s pain sharply, then promise relief. Powerful because it proves you understand them before you ask for anything.

The big secret lead. Hint at knowledge they do not have and want. Curiosity pulls them in. “There is one thing the top 1% of copywriters do that the rest never learn.”

The proclamation lead. A bold, surprising claim that demands a reaction. Risky, but it stops the scroll. “Most marketing advice is written by people who have never sold anything.”

The story lead. Open in the middle of a scene. The two-young-men letter, the one-legged golfer. The reader follows a story without resistance.

How to choose

Match the lead to two things: how aware the reader is, and how strong each of your assets is.

When in doubt, the problem-solution lead is the safest strong choice, because feeling understood lowers the reader’s guard faster than anything else.

The practical method

Write ten openings, not one. Most writers stall because they try to perfect the first attempt. Instead, draft ten different leads fast, using different types from the list. The right one usually reveals itself, and it is rarely the first you wrote. Then make it short. A long, hedged opening is a weak opening. Cut until the first sentence is almost too small to stand on its own, and watch how hard it pulls.

Takeaway: Never write one opening. Draft ten, each a different type of lead, then keep the shortest one that makes the second sentence impossible to skip.

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