This doesn't look like persuasive copy. Fieldmaster is calibrated for sales pages, emails, ads, and landing pages. Scores below may not be meaningful for this type of input.
Short text — scores are less reliable under 200 words. More copy = sharper results.
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DIG Studio™ Fieldmaster
v11.0
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Your copy's rhythm
How your text moves — each peak and valley is a shift in energy
WorkingOverloadedAnchoringDead
Every section of your copy — green sells, grey doesn't
SellingProvingToo muchEmpty
What's working and what's not
What this means together
Fieldmaster Quick Start
Everything you need to know on one page. Zero jargon.
Your Score
Fieldmaster gives your copy one number (8–92) and four diagnostic scores. The number is the overall verdict. The diagnostics tell you exactly what's working and what isn't.
75+Ship it. Fine-tune if you want, but this copy is working.
55–74Solid bones. Open the weak cards. Fix those specific problems.
35–54Structural issues. Don't tweak — address whatever dimension is dragging you down.
< 35Rewrite. Start from the one thing you want the reader to believe.
The Four Questions
Is your copy alive?
Does your writing keep moving or flatline? Rhythm changes, fresh vocabulary, and tonal variety keep readers engaged. Same ideas repeated the same way kills it.
Is it actually closing?
Are you building desire AND asking for action? You need both. Desire without an ask is a blog post. Commands without desire is spam.
Did you prove it?
Numbers, names, and real results vs. vague claims like "might" and "could." The gap between proof and fluff is your credibility score.
Does it all fit together?
Good copy holds together zoomed out AND zoomed in — full page, sections, paragraphs, sentences. If any level breaks, the structure has a crack.
Reading the Visuals
Rhythm lineYour copy's EKG. Peaks and valleys = alive. Flat = dead.
Strip barEvery section color-coded. Green sells. Blue proves. Yellow overloads. Grey is empty.
Score cardsClick any card to expand the deep-detail chart for that dimension.
Share cardScreenshot-ready image for clients, teams, or your own records.
Workflow Recipes
New copy
Write first draft → score it → fix the weakest dimension → re-score. One round usually gains 10–15 points.
Editing existing copy
Score before you touch anything — that's your baseline. Edit → re-score. Did the number go up?
Working with AI
Score your draft → give it to AI → score the AI output. If it dropped, use the diagnostic cards to write a targeted fix prompt: "Closing score dropped — add more urgency in the final three paragraphs."
With collaborators
Score their deliverable. Screenshot the report. Objective feedback, not opinion. "Your proof score is 28 — I need more numbers and specifics."
A/B decisions
Score both versions. Higher Fieldmaster = better structural foundation. Not a guarantee, but the odds are with you.
What Fieldmaster Does Not Tell You
Fieldmaster measures the structural physics of your copy — the engine underneath. You still supply the strategy, the insight, and the offer.