What is the Hell Island vs Heaven Island framework?
Also known as: contrast copywriting, before and after framework, mind movie
Picture someone on a small island. Behind them, a hungry tiger. In front, water they’re scared to cross, and on the far shore, everything they want. The near island is Hell Island: where your reader is stuck right now, running the old plan that isn’t working. The far shore is Heaven Island: life after the change.
Travis Sago’s point is that desire doesn’t come from describing the far shore. It comes from the contrast between the two, plus a believable boat across. Show only the dream and it reads like hype. Sit them in the pain they’re already living first, and the payoff lands.
The difference between knowing the framework and writing copy that makes a stranger feel it is the same distance as knowing how a piano works and being able to play it. You can describe both islands in thirty seconds. Getting a real person to move because of what you wrote takes practice, feedback, and repetition.
That’s the craft. And the contrast behind the deal model works exactly the same way: lead with what they actually feel right now, never with your pitch.
Want the free Found Money Starter Guide and plain-English breakdowns of frameworks like this? Get them on my list →, or see where it all leads →.
FAQ
Why show Hell Island at all? Isn't it negative?
Desire comes from contrast, not from the dream alone. If you only describe Heaven Island it reads like hype. Naming the pain they live in right now is what makes the payoff believable and the change feel urgent.
What is the boat in this framework?
The boat is the believable way across the water: the plan that gets them from where they are to where they want to be. Without a credible boat, the gap between the two islands just feels like a fantasy.
How is this different from a normal before-and-after?
A before-and-after just states two facts. Hell Island vs Heaven Island is built to be felt, so the contrast does the persuading rather than the claims. Making that actually land on a stranger is a skill, not a template.
Related
Sources: Travis Sago: Make 'Em Beg To Buy From You / Royalty Ronin