Is it content or copy? Yes.

You’ve got the content. You’ve got the copy. The blog’s running. The website’s been rewritten.

Maybe you even hired a freelancer or a strategist or an in-house writer. But it still feels... off. Like you’re putting in the effort, and the results don’t match.

  • People are visiting your site, but not taking the next step.
  • Your lead magnet gets downloaded, but no one replies.
  • Your sales calls feel disconnected from what people saw online.

So you try the obvious fixes.

Rewrite the CTA. Add a PS. Tweak the subject line. Maybe what you really need is a stronger hook or a more persuasive lead magnet…

But what if that’s not it?


There used to be a big debate: content vs. copy.

You don’t hear that argument much anymore. Not because we solved it, because we skipped past it.

AI can write a blog post in 30 seconds. But that’s part of the problem. Buyers are flooded with “content.” And also thanks to AI, it’s getting harder to tell who to trust.

Add to that the fact that no one moves through a funnel the way we want them to. They don’t start with content, get nurtured by email, and end up on a sales page.

They pop in and out. Skim your LinkedIn. Ignore your emails. Come back three weeks later and click “book a call.”

That’s not a funnel. It’s a flywheel. (And it can feel like chaos.)

So the real question isn’t “Is this content or copy?”

👉🏻 It’s this: What does your buyer need to hear right now, right here, to take the next step? And where do you need to intentionally blur the lines to make that happen?


👋🏻 Welcome to issue 56. Still built on buyer psychology. Still saving inboxes everywhere from mediocre marketing. (Did someone forward this to you? Subscribe ​here​.)


The simplified version goes like this:

Content is meant to educate, inform, entertain, or inspire.

  • Think blogs, newsletters, lead magnets, LinkedIn posts.

Copy is meant to persuade and drive action.

  • Think sales pages, email sequences, websites, CTAs.

In theory, they’re distinct. But in practice? That neat division rarely holds.

You don’t need to memorize textbook definitions. But if you’re handing off work, it pays to know the difference.

A content writer isn’t the same as a conversion copywriter. And a messaging strategist isn’t there to write your blog posts.

When you know the difference, you can assign the right task to the right person, and avoid the frustration of getting decent work that still misses the mark.

Content that drives action often teaches. Copy that converts often reflects beliefs we’ve already bought into.

And both must connect before they ever convert.

That connection, the emotional resonance, the moment your reader says “Yes, that’s me”—that’s what most content misses. Especially when you’re juggling deadlines, managing deliverables, or trying to delegate without diluting your voice.


I’ve been deep in this work lately

I’m preparing to launch something new, and that means I’ve been creating a lot of content: pre-launch posts, a sales page, emails (including this one).

And while I wasn’t trying to define content vs. copy (I’m clear on that), I was noticing how often each piece had to do more than one job.

Some of it was validating assumptions. Some was offering a quick win. Some was prepping people to take the next step.

That blurred line between content and copy? It's not theoretical.

And that’s what inspired this newsletter.


Here’s what it looks like in real life

I posted a poll on LinkedIn to test a theory. I thought the biggest issue for my audience was blank-page syndrome. But what came back told a different story:

And here’s some of what I heard in the DMs:

→ “I have too many ideas. That’s the problem.”
→ “I always overwrite and then delete it all.”
→ “I’m trying to be helpful but end up confusing people.”

That post looked like content, and it was.

But it was also research. Positioning work. A reality check. And voice-of-customer gold. It gave the language I used for future posts, the wait list landing page, the sales page…

That’s not just a writing insight; it’s a psychological one.

When your content reflects what someone is already feeling, it creates emotional safety. That’s confirmation bias at work: “You get me. I can trust you.”

And once trust is there, people are far more open to your ideas, offers, or next steps.


This is where content gets hard

Not because you’re not a good writer, or because your team isn’t capable.

But because you’re asking every piece of content to do five things at once: teach, connect, reflect your brand, sound like a real human, and maybe even move someone closer to a buying decision.

No wonder it feels like a bottleneck.

When I first offered done-with-you services, a founder came to me for support with messaging and his website.

He thought he’d finally have a URL he was proud to share. What he didn’t expect? That he’d have the foundation for everything else: newsletters, sales calls, LinkedIn content… he even shortened his sales cycles because he understood how to be strategic with his content and copy.


Why this matters more now

There was a time when we could treat content and copy like separate steps in a funnel.

Content built awareness. Copy closed the sale.

Everyone behaved like tidy little leads, moving from “know” to “like” to “trust” to “buy” in perfect sequence.

But that’s not how buyers behave anymore. Not your clients. Not mine. Not even you.

Now, the buyer’s journey looks more like an ecosystem, or a flywheel (or a tornado).

So let’s stop building content plans around acronyms your buyers have never heard of, and start building trust instead. (And honestly, the only TOFU most people care about is the kind you can pan-fry.)

You’ve seen this play out: someone bounces from your homepage to your podcast, disappears, then DMs you months later.

Today’s buyers don’t move linearly. They collect evidence. They stack trust over time. That’s why every message has to stand on its own. Because whether it’s someone’s first touchpoint or their fifteenth, they’re asking: “Can I trust you?”

So, yeah, the old rules? Not exactly helpful anymore.

The line between content and copy has to blur. Because every touchpoint could be the moment someone decides to trust you. Or not.

That’s why thinking strategically about every piece you write, whether it’s a LinkedIn hook or lead magnet headline, isn’t just smart. It’s necessary.


Here’s what makes it easier

Before you write anything (a post, a slide deck, a nurture email, a website section), ask:

  • How do I want people to feel by the time they finish this? Seen? Curious? Confident? Ready to click?

Seriously. Pause and answer it. Because if you don’t know, neither will they.

And here’s what happens when your message is emotionally flat:

  • People skim and forget it
  • They don’t see themselves in it
  • They never take the next step (even if they needed what you’re offering)

That one question changes what you include… and what you cut. So before you hit publish, ask what you want them to feel. Then write like that’s the goal.


Let’s be clear about something else

  • Overexplaining ≠ helping.
  • More context ≠ more connection.
  • More words ≠ more trust.

If your content is overwhelming, it’s going to confuse or exhaust your reader. And when that happens, they disengage.

Decision fatigue is real. The more your reader has to work to understand, the less likely they are to take action.

When content asks too much of the reader: too many ideas, too much setup, it creates friction. And friction kills momentum.

That’s true whether you’re:

  • The founder writing your own posts
  • The marketing lead reviewing the new sales page
  • The content manager trying to connect the dots between the brand deck and what goes on the website

I partnered with a mid-sized B2B company where sales and marketing were working in silos. Proposals were information dumps. Marketing copy was all persuasion. Nothing was aligned.

Their fractured messaging caused mistrust. In a nonlinear journey, it’s not a copy or content question. It’s about how you say the right thing in the right place to the right person. They were losing deals because different touchpoints were telling different stories.

And friction doesn’t just lose buyers. It confuses teams and slows launches too. Clarity is a kindness, to your audience and your business.


So… how do you know if your content is working?

It’s not just about likes. Or views. Or opens.

Those are surface signals. What you’re looking for are the real cues, the ones that tell you your message is resonating and trust is building.

Here’s what that looks like:

  • People quoting your words back to you: on sales calls, in replies, even in their own content
  • DMs that say “This hit hard” or “I’ve been thinking about this all day”
  • Sales calls that feel more like a continuation than a cold start
  • Clear alignment across your content, copy, and conversations (like your brand actually sounds like one person across channels)

When someone says, “It’s like you’re in my head,” it’s not just a compliment. It’s a buying signal. A cue that your words mirrored their thoughts: lowering resistance, triggering familiarity, and building trust.

If you’re not seeing these signs, it doesn’t mean your offer is wrong or your content is useless. It probably means the message isn’t meeting your buyer where they are.

And that’s fixable, with the right strategy.


A quick "is this any good?" test

Take a recent post or email and run it through these three questions:

  1. Does it make your reader feel something: seen, safe, curious, confident?
  2. Is the main idea clear within the first couple lines?
  3. Would your ideal client forward it to someone and say, “This is what I’ve been talking about”?

If not, don’t scrap it. Refine it. That’s the work. Clarifying the signal so it actually connects. (And shameless plug: that’s exactly what we can tackle together in my new offer.)


Want to get this right more often?

That’s exactly what I’ve been building toward.

On Thursday, I’m opening the waitlist for a new offer that will help you create content that actually works, whether you're writing it yourself or leading a team that needs to. Those of you who come to my LinkedIn Live tomorrow will hear about it first.

It’s not another swipe file or plug-and-play template. It’s strategic support that helps you write content that connects. On purpose. (It’s what I wish I could’ve joined when I felt stuck on LinkedIn and wondered if it was even worth it.)

👀 Early access opens soon. Stay tuned.


Until next time,
Stacy


P.S. Messaging, positioning, content strategy, sales pages… I do this work across brand levels. Whether you’re a solo founder scaling up, or managing a team that’s producing content on your behalf, this applies to you. Hit reply and tell me where you’re stuck. I’ll tell you what’s worth fixing first.

Here’s a few ways I can help right now:

✍️ Copy Audit: Get a fresh set of eyes (mine 🙃) on your website, sales page, or key asset. You’ll walk away with clarity, confidence, and easy-to-implement fixes.

🧠 Strategy Session: Not sure what’s working, what’s not, or where to start? Let’s dig in. One session, big clarity.

🤝 Let’s Talk: Thinking bigger? If you’re looking for done-for-you support or a more comprehensive project, let’s hop on a free discovery call and chat about what that could look like.




Stacy Eleczko

Smart brands skip the hacks and get strategic. Learn how to position, message, and sell—without sounding like everyone else. 👇🏻