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- 128: The Creative Multiplication Strategy
128: The Creative Multiplication Strategy
Framework Sunday: 3 angles × 3 formats × 3 funnel stages. The system that never runs dry.

The Creative Multiplication Framework: 27 Ads From 9 Decisions
3 angles × 3 formats × 3 funnel stages. The system that never runs dry.
Hey everyone, Chase here from CreativeOS.
Today I'm joined by Curtis Howland, VP of Marketing at Misfit, who regularly drops incredible content on all things ads, content, and performance on LinkedIn.
Today: Curtis’ The Creative Multiplication Strategy.
The direct application of this is incredible. What you'll get out of this:
The 3×3×3 framework that generates 27 unique ad concepts from 9 simple decisions
Exactly when to use each angle, format, and funnel stage (with real metrics)
How to map your next 27 creatives in under 30 minutes
Let's get into it.
The Core Idea: Multiplication, Not Brainstorming
Here's how most teams build creative:
They sit in a room and try to think of "good ad ideas." They brainstorm. They riff. They wait for inspiration.
That doesn't scale.
Here's how I build creative:
3 Angles × 3 Formats × 3 Funnel Stages = 27 Combinations
Each combination is a unique ad concept. Not a variation — a genuinely different creative approach.
You're not brainstorming 27 ideas. You're assembling them from a matrix. Every slot in the matrix has a purpose. Every combination has a reason to exist.
Let me break down each axis.

Axis 1: The 3 Angles
Every ad leads with one of three psychological angles. Each angle triggers different emotions and works on different audiences.
1. Pain Point
You're poking the problem. Making them feel the frustration they already have.
Frustration: "Still dealing with X after trying everything?"
Fear: "Your competitors figured this out 6 months ago"
Regret: "How much did that last agency cost you?"
Triggers: embarrassment, loss aversion, status anxiety
Pain Point ads work best on cold audiences who don't know you yet. You're not selling — you're acknowledging.
2. Desire
You're painting the outcome. Making them want what's possible.
Aspiration: "Imagine checking your dashboard and seeing this"
Freedom: "What would you do with an extra $40K/month?"
Status: "This is what 3x ROAS looks like at scale"
Triggers: ambition, envy, possibility
Desire ads work best on audiences who already know they have a problem. You're not convincing them something's wrong — you're showing them what right looks like.
3. Social Proof
You're borrowing trust. Letting others do the convincing.
Testimony: "We switched from X and cut CPA by 34% in 2 weeks"
Authority: "10,000 DTC brands use this. Here's why"
Relatability: "I was skeptical too. Then I saw our Q4 numbers"
Triggers: trust, FOMO, validation
Social Proof ads work best on warm audiences who are comparing options. They don't need to be sold — they need to be reassured.
Axis 2: The 3 Formats
Every ad lives in one of three formats. Each format has different strengths and different rules.
1. Static
Don't sleep on statics. They still drive 60-70% of conversions for most brands I manage.
Smartphone-quality beats studio 84% of the time in Stories
Fastest to produce, easiest to iterate
Test 10 statics in the time it takes to shoot 1 video
Use when: the value is immediately visible (fashion, jewelry, food)
2. Video
The first 3 seconds decide everything. I track hook rate (3-sec views ÷ impressions) religiously.
Below 25% hook rate? Kill it
30-40% is good
Above 40%? Scale it
Partnership Ads (running from creator's handle) = 53% lower CAC
Use when: the customer needs to believe it before they buy (skincare, supplements, transformations)
Quick rule: If they need to SEE IT, run statics. If they need to BELIEVE IT, run video.
3. Carousel
Best for education-heavy products and comparison selling.
Card 1 hooks with a problem or question — not your product
Average swipe-through on a good carousel is 1.4x higher engagement than single image
Use when: the buyer needs to understand WHY before they buy
(If carousels don't apply to your brand, substitute animated statics, GIFs, or another format that lets you tell a sequential story.)
Creative Playbook: Psychology & Strategy Masterclass
Most creative decisions are made on instinct. That's fine when you're starting — but it doesn't scale, and it leaves you guessing why some work lands and other work dies.
Tomorrow at 11am PST, we're hosting Sarah Levinger and Matthew Gattozzi for a live breakdown of the psychology and strategy behind creative that actually works.
📅 2/24 @ 11am PST
You'll learn:
The psychological principles behind creative that changes behavior
How to build strategic creative systems that compound over time
Live teardown frameworks you can steal and reuse
Bring your questions. Bring your work. We're breaking down creative live.
Axis 3: The 3 Funnel Stages
Every ad targets one of three audience temperatures. Each stage has different goals and different creative rules.
1. Top of Funnel (they don't know you)
Lead with a problem, bold claim, or pattern interrupt
80% of your creative volume should live here
You're earning attention, not asking for action
2. Mid Funnel (they've seen you, they're comparing)
Education, competitor comparisons, "why us" content
Carousels and founder stories work hardest here
You're building preference, not just awareness
3. Bottom Funnel (they're warm, they need a push)
Offers, urgency, risk removal, testimonials with CTA overlays
Bundles + free gifts work really well here
You're closing, not convincing
Now Multiply Them
Here's where it gets powerful.
Take one option from each axis and combine them:
Funnel | Format | Angle | = Creative Concept |
|---|---|---|---|
TOF | Static | Pain Point | Text graphic about a problem they have |
MOF | Video | Social Proof | UGC testimonial walkthrough |
BOF | Carousel | Desire | Transformation story with offer on last card |
That's 3 combinations.
There are 27 total.
3 angles × 3 formats × 3 funnel stages = 27 unique creative concepts.
Not 27 variations of the same ad. 27 genuinely different approaches, each with a specific purpose in your funnel.
How to Apply This Week
Here's how to put this into practice:
Step 1: Open a spreadsheet. Create a 3×3 grid for each funnel stage (or use the table format above).
Step 2: Fill in each cell with a one-sentence concept. Don't overthink it — just describe what the ad would be.
Step 3: Rank the 27 concepts by how easy they are to produce and how confident you are they'll work.
Step 4: Produce your top 9 this week. Three from each funnel stage.
Step 5: Review performance after 7 days. Which angles won? Which formats won? Double down on the winning combinations.
You now have a creative system, not a creative guess.
Why This Matters
Creative fatigue is real. But it's not a creativity problem — it's a systems problem.
When you brainstorm from scratch every time, you burn out. When you multiply from a matrix, you scale.
The brands that win on paid media aren't the ones with the best single ad. They're the ones who can produce volume without sacrificing relevance.
27 concepts. 9 decisions. 1 framework.
That's creative discipline.
Until next time,
Chase