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Reference

"Chris Morrow: Funnels, Ads, and Marketing Context (Pocket Marketer)"

A Day 3 direct-response session from Chris Morrow on joining the conversation in the customer's head, customer awareness levels, Facebook ad anatomy, and giving AI deep business context, plus a live funnel diagnosis.

On this page

Chris Morrow took a Day 3 slot, introduced by moderator Terry, to walk through how he moved from local SEO into direct-response marketing, paid traffic, and funnel optimization. He frames everything he does as funnels and ads (copy, persuasion, lead gen) and reports owning 23 companies doing roughly $30 million a year across the portfolio. The talk is half teaching (the customer awareness spectrum, intent mapping, the anatomy of a Facebook ad, and how to give AI enough context to stop producing generic output) and half live Q&A, including a hands-on diagnosis of an attendee's $500 to $700 cost-per-lead problem. He also introduces Pocket Marketer, an AI CMO tool aimed at non-technical "second act entrepreneurs."

Main takeaways

  1. Marketing is joining the conversation already happening in the customer's head. Lead gen works when you put something in front of someone they are already waking up thinking about, so they feel "this is what I've been looking for."

  2. AI is "dumb" without deep business context. Any LLM (Claude, ChatGPT, his own tool) produces generic, low-quality output until you feed it extreme context about the business, the customer, the offer, and the awareness level. The value of his system is the structured extraction of that context.

  3. Match copy to the customer's awareness level, and target only one or two levels at a time. Drawing on Gene Schwartz's Breakthrough Advertising, he maps five awareness stages (unaware, problem aware, solution aware, product aware, most aware) and stresses that copy cannot be relevant to all of them at once.

  4. Pocket Marketer extracts business context with a 12-question interview, then markets "forever." It is positioned as a world-class CMO "in your pocket" for $147 per month, aimed at non-technical "second act entrepreneurs," not at the sophisticated SEO audience in the room.

  5. Use static images over video for Facebook ad creative in most cases. Video creative multiplies "click depth" (the video opens full screen with sound before the user can reach the landing page), so unless the video is doing deliberate qualification work, a single image with short text usually lowers cost per lead.

  6. Funnels are hard, which is why most people quit. He cites a tool built by his friend Tyler that scrapes the Facebook Ad Library, claiming there are 36 times more advertisers who spent at least $1,000 then quit than there are advertisers with currently active ads.

  7. Funnel hacking is fast, but building from awareness and intent beats copying. He prefers reverse-engineering working funnels via the Meta Ad Library and the Google Ads Transparency Center, but warns that most competitor funnels do not actually work, so building from research (avatar, pain point, awareness, intent) is more reliable than patching someone else's copy.

Key points

Chris Morrow: background and portfolio

Core philosophy

On AI

Awareness spectrum (Gene Schwartz)

Intent mapping

Funnel hacking

Pocket Marketer (the product)

Revenue Engineers (the free community)

Q&A: VSL (video sales letter)

Q&A: Facebook ad diagnosis (Australian agency, SEO leads)

Other named references

Events Morrow hosts

Terry (moderator)

Source

Synthesized from the SEO ST Day 3 conference recording of Chris Morrow's session. No deck files were supplied for this talk (Morrow mentioned slides would be in the Google Drive, but none were provided). Names marked unverified above were transcribed phonetically. The original transcript filename reads "Chris Moore," but the moderator and the session's own takeaways confirm the surname is Morrow.