Ready to deploy

20 SMSF-suitable retirement planning appointments in 60 days. Funnel already built below.

Scroll down to see the landing page, VSL, ads, emails, and confirmation page we'd use to turn cold traffic into qualified conversations for your team.

Pay per result
no monthly retainer
100%
performance-priced
Yours
to keep, regardless
Walkthrough

What we found when we studied Evolve Wealth Management.

Before writing a word, we audited your positioning, competitive landscape, and audience signals. Three findings shaped every deliverable below, and none of it's templated.

Your Positioning

Your edge: Advice-first: suitability assessment before setup, not setup-first admin. That thread runs through every piece of content below.

Competitive Landscape

We studied the competitive landscape and what comparable advice offers are running. The scripts we built position Evolve Wealth Management differently.

Your Audience

The #1 thing on their mind before they book: Not sure whether an SMSF genuinely suits their situation or is just hype. Every piece of content below addresses it.

Your custom-made deliverables.

Every piece is finished, written in your voice, and yours to keep regardless of whether we work together.

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Advice first, setup only if it genuinely suits you. We assess your situation, tell you a straight yes or no on an SMSF… See more
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Advice first, setup only if it genuinely suits you. We assess your situation, tell you a straight yes or no on an SMSF… See more
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Ad creative
Concept

Angle
Primary text
Headline
Description
Who it speaks to
Video Ad Scripts 5 angles
Angle 1: Balance-as-gate qualifier

Variation 1 of 2
Over $200k and no one's told you if it fits
Headline: Is your $200k in super enough for an SMSF?

Hook options:
1. You've got over $200,000 in super, and no one's actually told you whether a self-managed fund would suit you.
2. Once your super passes $200,000 a self-managed fund becomes a real option, so why has no one walked you through it?
3. There's a point where "should I run my own super fund?" stops being a hypothetical, and $200,000 is roughly where it sits.

Once your super gets past a certain size, running your own fund goes from a nice idea to a genuine decision, and $200,000 is roughly where that line falls. The trouble is what happens next. You get silence from a big fund that's happy to keep you where you are, or a hard sell from someone who earns the day you sign. What you rarely get is a straight read on whether it fits your goals and your appetite for the responsibility. That's the read we give you, from advisers with 50+ years between them, licensed under GPS Wealth. Tap the link and you'll see how we work out whether a self-managed fund is right for someone in your position, before you commit to running one.
Variation 2 of 2
Under $200k, we'll tell you it's not yet
Headline: Not sure you're ready?

Hook options:
1. If your super's still building, a self-managed fund probably isn't for you yet, and we'll say so.
2. Not every super balance is ready for a self-managed fund, and a good adviser will tell you that.
3. Plenty of people ask us about an SMSF before it makes sense for them.

Running your own super fund carries real costs and real responsibility, so below a certain balance it usually costs more than it's worth. A lot of firms won't tell you that, because they earn either way. We'd rather you knew where you actually stand, and what to focus on until the numbers do add up. Follow the link and find out whether it's the right move for you now, later, or not at all.

Angle 2: The straight-talking disqualifier

Variation 1 of 2
A straight no, and how we get there
Headline: Sometimes the answer is no

Hook options:
1. Plenty of people who ask us about a self-managed fund get a straight no.
2. Not everyone should run their own super fund, and we'll say so to your face.
3. The most useful thing an adviser can tell you is when not to do something.

A self-managed fund suits some people and works against others, and the difference comes down to your balance, your goals, and how much you want to be involved. We look at all three before anyone mentions setting one up, which means the answer is sometimes no. Getting told that plainly, from someone licensed to give it to you straight, is the whole point of advice. Open the link and see how we work out whether a self-managed fund is right for you.
Variation 2 of 2
One question decides it
Headline: Is an SMSF right for you?

Hook options:
1. Before anyone sets up a self-managed fund, one question decides everything.
2. Everyone jumps to setting up the fund, and almost no one asks whether it suits them first.
3. Setting one up is easy. Working out whether you should is where the real advice lives.

Setting up a self-managed super fund is straightforward. Working out whether you should is where the real advice sits, and it's the part most people skip. Does it suit your goals, your balance and the way you want to live in retirement? Answer that properly and the rest follows. Get it wrong and you're stuck running something that never fit. Click the link and get a clear read on whether a self-managed fund suits you.

Angle 3: Keep the control, lose the admin

Variation 1 of 2
Too much admin is half the story
Headline: Told it's too much admin?

Hook options:
1. Been told a self-managed fund is "too much admin to bother with"? That's half the story.
2. The big funds want you to believe running your own super is a second job. It doesn't have to be.
3. "SMSFs are too much work" is the line you hear right before you stop asking questions.

There's truth in it. A self-managed fund does carry admin and compliance, and doing it alone would be a handful. That's exactly what we take off your plate. You keep the decisions about your own money; we handle the paperwork, the compliance and the deadlines. The trade-off people warn you about mostly disappears when it's run properly. Hit the link and see what running your own fund would actually involve for you.
Variation 2 of 2
Control without the second job
Headline: Keep control of your super

Hook options:
1. Wanting more control over your super shouldn't mean signing up for a second job.
2. You can have a real say in how your super's invested without drowning in paperwork.
3. Control and hassle usually come as a package. They don't have to.

Most people who look at a self-managed fund want the same thing: a genuine say in where their retirement money goes. What puts them off is the picture of endless forms and compliance they'd be running on their own. So we run it with you. You decide where your money goes; the admin, the compliance and the reporting sit with us. Open the link and see whether that kind of control is worth it in your situation.

Angle 4: Advice that isn't selling you a property

Variation 1 of 2
Every ad's selling you something
Headline: Nothing to sell you

Hook options:
1. Every super ad you've scrolled past today was selling you something: a property, a coin, a fund.
2. Notice how every self-managed super ad ends with something to buy?
3. There's a difference between advice and a sales pitch dressed as advice.

Most of what gets aimed at people with super is a product in disguise. A property to buy, an asset to hold, a fund to switch into, all with a commission at the end. Advice is different. We're licensed to give you a straight assessment of your super and your retirement, and there's nothing to purchase when we're done. Follow the link and get a read on your super from someone who isn't selling you anything.
Variation 2 of 2
Licensed advice, nothing to buy
Headline: Advice, not a product

Hook options:
1. Licensed advice on your super, with nothing to buy at the end of it.
2. What would you do with your super if no one was trying to sell you anything?
3. The value of real advice is what it saves you from, not what it sells you.

When the person looking at your super has nothing to sell you, the conversation changes. Instead of being steered towards a property or a different fund, you get a clear look at whether a self-managed fund fits your goals and what a stronger retirement setup looks like for you. That's what licensed, personal advice is meant to be. Tap the link and see what your super looks like without a sales pitch attached.

Angle 5: Strategy vs structure, who built the plan

Variation 1 of 2
Who built the strategy?
Headline: Who built your strategy?

Hook options:
1. Someone set up your self-managed fund, but did anyone ever build the strategy behind it?
2. Having a fund and having a plan are two very different things.
3. Your accountant can lodge the return. That's not the same as building your retirement.

Plenty of people have a self-managed fund set up and lodged every year, and no actual strategy sitting behind it. Someone handled the structure; nobody built the plan. The structure is just the container. What goes in it, how it's invested and how it carries you through retirement is where the real work lives, and it's usually the part that got skipped. Open the link and see what a proper strategy behind your fund would look like.
Variation 2 of 2
A fund holding cash and one investment
Headline: Admin isn't a plan

Hook options:
1. Your self-managed fund's been holding cash and a single investment for years. That's not a plan.
2. If your fund's been ticking along untouched, you're getting admin where you should be getting advice.
3. A fund that hasn't changed in years usually means nobody's been steering it.

A lot of self-managed funds sit there year after year holding a bit of cash and a single investment, getting their annual return lodged and nothing more. That's administration, not advice. Your goals move, the rules change, and the plan should keep up. If yours hasn't been looked at properly in years, it's probably working harder for the paperwork than for you. Click the link and get a fresh set of eyes on whether your fund is actually earning its keep.

Long-Form Explainer Video Script 1 complete script

Offer: SMSF suitability assessment and retirement strategy for Australians weighing up a self-managed super fund before retirement (advice-first, national by video). The free Discovery Session is what we invite people to book.
Estimated length: 6-7 minutes


Years from now, when you're actually retired, the way your super is structured today is either funding the life you pictured or costing you a decade of it. That's what's really sitting behind the question so many people your age are turning over right now.

Should you set up a self-managed super fund? Move your super into something you control, maybe hold property or other assets inside it, run it yourself? Or leave your super where it sits and build a proper strategy around it?

We're Evolve Wealth Management, and we made this video because that decision gets sold far more often than it gets thought through. A lot of people end up with a fund handed to them by someone whose job was to set one up, not to work out whether it suited them in the first place. Then they spend years running a structure that was never right for their situation, paying for the complexity and wondering if it was worth it.

The work we do starts one step earlier than that. Before anyone talks setup, a licensed adviser looks at your actual situation, your super balance, what you're trying to build, how much involvement you genuinely want, and works out whether a self-managed fund gets you to a better retirement or just a more complicated one. If it fits, we build the strategy around it. If it doesn't, you walk away knowing that too, which saves some people years of running the wrong thing.

A bit about who's giving you that read, because it should come from someone who's done this a lot. Across our team there's more than 50 years of combined experience, and we've worked with over 500 clients on their super and retirement. We give personal financial advice as an authorised representative of GPS Wealth, which sits inside the Count group, so the advice you get is licensed personal advice, not a product pitch dressed up as one.

Now, why this decision is worth getting right now rather than later.

The years just before you retire are the ones where the structural calls tend to lock in. How your super is set up, what it's invested in, how the tax works across the whole thing as you move from building your balance to living off it. Get that structure sorted early and the rest of retirement runs a lot calmer. Leave it, or let someone set up a fund because setting up funds is what they do, and you can spend the back half of your working life paying for a decision that was made for the wrong reasons.

Most people miss that the SMSF question is rarely just about the fund itself. It's really a way into the whole picture, the way your super, your investments and your retirement income all fit together to pay for the life you're planning. That wider picture is the actual work, and the fund is just one possible piece of it.

The service itself opens with a proper suitability read. Given your balance, your goals and how hands-on you want to be, does a self-managed fund genuinely make sense, or does keeping your super where it sits and building a strategy around it get you there with less to manage? As a rough marker, most people find the numbers only start to stack up once they've got over $200,000 in super, and even then it comes down to your situation, not the balance alone.

From there, if a fund does suit you, we design the strategy around your retirement rather than dropping you into a template. Where your super sits, how it's invested, how it's set up to meet the ATO's rules so you're not exposed later, and how it all lines up with the retirement income you'll actually need. And it doesn't stop at setup. The ongoing advice keeps the strategy on track through the years that follow, as your situation and the rules shift around it.

Let me get to the questions you're probably already turning over.

Aren't SMSFs a lot of work and responsibility? They can be, which is exactly why the first job is working out whether the extra control is worth it for you before you take any of it on. Plenty of people we talk to are better off leaving their super where it is, and we tell them so.

Will this cost me more than it's worth? For a lot of people it would, and that's the read you get first. You're paying to have the decision made properly once, rather than discovering three years in that the structure never fitted.

Is this just an adviser trying to sell me a fund? The whole point of assessing suitability before setup is that we're just as ready to tell you an SMSF isn't right for you. We turn people away from it regularly, because the advice answers to your situation, not to a product.

Do I even have enough to make it worthwhile? Under roughly $200,000 in super, a self-managed fund usually doesn't earn its keep, and we'll say so plainly rather than set one up anyway.

We're a good fit for some people and the wrong fit for others, and we'd rather sort that out early.

This is built for people somewhere in the last stretch before retirement who've built up real super and want a straight read on whether a self-managed fund belongs in their plan, from an adviser who'll design the retirement strategy around them either way. If you're early on with little behind you yet, or you're after a quick tip and a fast return, we're not the firm for you, and we'll be the first to say it.

If that does sound like you, the next step is simple.

Fill in the short form just below this video, and answer each question as accurately as you can. It only takes a minute, and it tells us where you're up to and whether a self-managed fund is even worth putting on the table for your situation. Based on what you share, we'll invite you to a free, no-obligation discovery session with one of our advisers, where we'll talk through your circumstances and whether what we do is a fit. There's no cost and no commitment for that first conversation.

A few of the people we've worked with put it better than we can. One wrote that Paul and the team at Evolve had delivered outstanding service and results across all their years working together. Another said Paul had guided them through their whole superannuation journey for many years. And a third simply said Paul and staff had made sure they got the best possible outcomes.

So to bring it back to where we started. The way your super is structured in the years before you retire is one of the calls you mostly can't take back, and it deserves a read from someone whose job is to work out what actually fits you, not to hand you a fund and move on. Whether a self-managed fund is right for you or not, you'll come away knowing, with a retirement strategy built around the life you're planning for.

Fill in the form below this video and answer each question as accurately as you can. We'll take it from there.

Confirmation Page Video Scripts 7 scripts
Video 1: - Welcome / intro (mandatory, lead video, no title on page)

Length: ~2:00

Thanks for booking, and welcome. If you're here, you're weighing up whether a self-managed super fund belongs in your retirement, and you'd like a straight read on it without the usual sales pitch. That's exactly what this is for, and a quick word on what happens next will make the day itself run smoother.

The session itself is a conversation, and one of our advisers will sit down with you, look at where your super's at, what you're trying to build, and how hands-on you actually want to be, then give you a genuine read on whether a self-managed fund gets you to a better retirement or just a more complicated one. If it fits, we'll talk about the strategy we'd build around it. If it doesn't, you'll hear that too, plainly. Either way you come away knowing where you stand.

Over the next few days we'll also send you a couple of short emails. They just cover the questions people tend to have before the call, so none of it reads as a hard sell, and it means we can spend the session on your situation rather than the basics.

Speaking of which, there are a few short clips below this one. Each answers a question we get asked a lot, whether an SMSF is worth the effort, what it really costs, whether we're only here to sell you a fund. Have a watch of the ones that speak to you before we talk. The more you've seen, the deeper we can go on the day, because we won't be starting from scratch.

That's it for now. We're on a phone or video call, whichever suits you, and there's no cost and no obligation for that first conversation. Have a look through the clips, and we'll talk soon.

Video 2: - Will an SMSF actually cost me more than it's worth?

Category: Price & Cost Objections
Length: ~2:15

Let me put the straight answer on the table first. For a lot of people, yes, a self-managed fund would cost more than it's worth, and that's the read we give them.

A self-managed fund carries its own running costs. There's the admin to keep up, an audit each year, and the compliance work sitting behind all of it, and those costs don't shrink just because your balance is small. So the maths only starts to work once there's enough in the fund for the benefits to outweigh what it takes to run. As a rough marker, most people find the numbers only begin to stack up once they've got over $200,000 in super, and even then it comes down to your situation, not the balance on its own.

What you're actually paying for in that first session is worth understanding. You're paying to have the decision made properly once, up front, instead of finding out three years in that the structure never suited you. That's the expensive mistake, running a fund that was set up because setting up funds was somebody's job, and carrying the cost of it for years.

So the adviser you speak with will be straight with you about whether the numbers work for your situation before anyone talks setup. If a self-managed fund doesn't earn its keep for you, you'll hear that, and we'll talk about what does. Bring your rough super balance to the call and they can walk through it with you.

Video 3: - Aren't SMSFs a lot of work and responsibility?

Category: Risk & Worst-Case Scenarios
Length: ~2:00

They can be, and that's the real starting point, not something we'll talk you out of worrying about.

When you run your own fund, you take on real responsibilities. You're across the investments, you're across the compliance, and you're keeping everything lined up with the ATO's rules so you're not exposed later. Some people genuinely enjoy that level of involvement and want the control that comes with it. Plenty of others don't, and there's nothing wrong with that.

Which is exactly why the first job in the session isn't setting a fund up, it's working out whether the extra control is worth the extra work for you specifically. A lot of the people we talk to are better off leaving their super where it sits and having us build a proper strategy around it, without them having to run anything. And when that's the case, we say so.

So if the responsibility side is what's giving you pause, that's a good reason to have the conversation, not a reason to avoid it. The adviser will talk through how much involvement a fund really asks of you, and whether that fits the retirement you're actually after. If it doesn't, there are other ways to get your super working harder that don't put the whole thing on your shoulders.

Video 4: - Is this only an adviser trying to sell me a fund?

Category: Legitimacy & Credibility
Length: ~2:00

It's a reasonable thing to be wary of, because it does happen, so here's plainly how we're set up differently.

The whole reason we assess suitability before setup is that it lets us tell you a self-managed fund isn't right for you. We turn people away from setting one up regularly, because the advice answers to your situation, not to a product. There's no fund we're trying to move, no quota, no reason for us to push you toward something that doesn't fit.

Part of how that works is our licensing. We give personal financial advice as an authorised representative of GPS Wealth, which sits inside the Count group. So what you're getting is licensed personal advice, held to that standard, not a product pitch dressed up to look like advice.

The way it plays out on the call is simple. Our adviser looks at your actual numbers and your goals, and gives you their genuine read. Sometimes that read is yes, a self-managed fund suits you, and we'll talk through the strategy we'd build. Other times it's no, keep your super where it sits and let's make it work harder a different way. Both of those are wins for you, and both are answers we're just as willing to give.

Video 5: - Do I even have enough to make it worthwhile?

Category: Success & Expectations
Length: ~1:50

This is one of the most common questions we get, and it deserves a straight number, so here's one.

Under roughly $200,000 in super, a self-managed fund usually doesn't earn its keep. The running costs are much the same whether the balance is large or small, so below that mark you're often paying for complexity without getting enough back to justify it. Above it, a fund can start to make sense, though even then it depends on your situation, not the balance alone.

So if you're sitting below that figure, we'll say so plainly rather than set one up anyway and let you find out the hard way. And if you're above it, that doesn't automatically mean a fund is right either. It means it's worth putting on the table and looking at properly.

Working that out for your circumstances is the point of the session. Our adviser will look at where your balance is, what you're trying to build, and whether a self-managed fund gets you there. If it's not worth it for you yet, you'll come away knowing that, and knowing what to do instead, which is worth having either way.

Video 6: - What if a self-managed fund isn't the right call for me?

Category: Risk & Worst-Case Scenarios
Length: ~1:55

Then that's a good outcome, and I mean that. Finding out a self-managed fund doesn't suit you, before you've set one up and started paying to run it, saves some people years of managing the wrong thing.

Most people miss that the self-managed fund question is rarely just about the fund. It's really a way into the bigger picture, the way your super, your investments and your retirement income all fit together to pay for the life you're planning. The fund is only ever one possible piece of that. So even when the answer on the fund is no, the strategy underneath it still counts, and that's what we build with you.

If a fund isn't the right call, our adviser will talk through what is. That might mean keeping your super where it sits and building a proper strategy around it, or restructuring things a different way so your retirement income holds up. You don't leave the conversation empty-handed just because the answer on the fund was no.

That's the whole idea. You come in asking one question, and you leave with a clearer read on your whole retirement, whichever way the fund decision lands.

Video 7: - Who am I actually getting advice from?

Category: Legitimacy & Credibility / Social Proof
Length: ~2:00

It's worth knowing who's behind the advice, and it should come from people who've done this a lot. Here's who they are.

Across our team there's more than 50 years of combined experience, and we've worked with over 500 clients on their super and retirement. This isn't a first rodeo for anyone you'll speak with. And as I mentioned earlier, we give personal financial advice as an authorised representative of GPS Wealth, inside the Count group, so it's licensed personal advice held to a proper standard.

The read that carries the most weight, though, is the one from people we've actually worked with. One of them wrote that Paul and the team at Evolve had delivered outstanding service and results across all their years working together. Another said Paul had guided them through their whole superannuation journey for many years. And a third simply said Paul and staff had made sure they got the best possible outcomes.

That's the kind of relationship we're after, the long-run one, not a one-off transaction. So when you get on the call, you're talking to a team that does this every day and intends to be around for the retirement you're planning, not just the setup. Have a look at the other clips, and we'll speak soon.

Pre-Appointment Email Sequence 8 emails
Email 1: Your discovery session

Subject: Your discovery session

Hi {first_name},

Your discovery session is booked, so this is a quick note on what it's for and how to get the most out of it.

The session is one conversation with a licensed adviser about whether a self-managed super fund actually suits your situation. No setup, no paperwork, no obligation to go ahead with anything. If an SMSF isn't the right call for you, we'll tell you, and we'll say why.

Before we speak, it helps to have a rough idea of a few things:

- Your current super balance, including any old accounts you've stopped thinking about
- Whether you're looking at this on your own or jointly with a partner
- What's making you consider an SMSF in the first place (more control, property, something else)

If you'd like a sense of how we work before the call, there's a short walk-through on the page you booked from. Worth a look, not essential.

Talk soon,
The team at Evolve Wealth Management

Email 2: "Aren't SMSFs a lot of work?"

Subject: The work question

Hi {first_name},

One thing most people raise early is the admin. Running your own fund sounds like a second job, and for some people it genuinely isn't worth the effort.

We weigh it up like this. The trustee responsibilities are real: an SMSF has to meet ATO rules, lodge annually, and stay audited. What varies is how much of that lands on you. Most of the compliance and administration can sit with specialists, so your side is closer to making decisions and signing off than doing the bookkeeping.

Whether that trade is worth it depends on what you're trying to get out of it. If you want control over how your super is invested, the structure can earn its keep. If you mostly want your super left alone to grow, it often doesn't, and a simpler option is the better answer.

That's the sort of thing we work through on the call, against your actual balance and goals rather than a general rule.

The team at Evolve Wealth Management

Email 3: What an SMSF review looks like

Subject: How the review works

Hi {first_name},

To give you a feel for the session, this is the ground a suitability review usually covers.

We start with your retirement, before the fund. What you want your income to look like, when you'd like to stop working, and what you already have working towards that. Then we look at your current super and what it's doing well, where you'd want more say, and how much responsibility you're comfortable taking on.

Only after that do we get to the SMSF question itself. By then it tends to answer itself, because you can see whether the extra control is worth the extra structure for someone in your position.

Across the team here that's more than 50 years of combined experience and over 500 clients, so this isn't the first balance we've looked at that sits where yours does.

Prefer to watch how it works first? There's a walk-through on your booking page that covers the same ground.

The team at Evolve Wealth Management

Email 4: When an SMSF earns its keep

Subject: When the numbers work

Hi {first_name},

A question worth sitting with before we speak: at what point does an SMSF actually pay for itself?

Broadly, there are three ways it can land.

At a smaller balance, the running costs of an SMSF eat into returns enough that a mainstream fund usually leaves you better off. The structure adds cost without adding much you'd use.

In the middle, it comes down to what you'd do with the control. If you'd genuinely use the fund to hold property or investments your current super can't, the flexibility can justify the running cost. If you wouldn't, it usually can't.

At a larger balance, the fixed costs of running the fund matter less as a share of what you hold, and the control tends to be worth more, so the case gets stronger.

The threshold we work to is around $200,000 in super before an SMSF is worth considering at all. Under that, the maths rarely stacks up, and we'll say so. Over it, whether it's right still depends on you, which is what the call is for.

The team at Evolve Wealth Management

Email 5: A tool you can use before we speak

Subject: A short checklist

Hi {first_name},

Something you can use whether or not you ever run an SMSF: a plain list of what a fund actually has to do each year, so the responsibility isn't a vague worry.

- Keep the fund compliant with the ATO's rules for self-managed super
- Lodge an annual return and have the fund independently audited
- Keep the investment strategy documented and reviewed
- Keep the fund's money and assets separate from your personal ones

Read that and one of two things happens. Either it looks manageable, in which case the control an SMSF gives you starts to look worth it. Or it looks like more than you want to take on, in which case you've saved yourself an expensive detour.

Bring whichever reaction you had to the call. Both are useful.

The team at Evolve Wealth Management

Email 6: "Is this adviser just selling me a fund?"

Subject: The sales question

Hi {first_name},

The doubt worth naming before we speak: how do you know we won't set you up with an SMSF regardless, because that's what suits us?

Look at how the session is built. It's a suitability review, and being told an SMSF isn't for you is one of its real outcomes. We turn people away from setting one up regularly, because for a lot of balances and goals a simpler option genuinely does the job better.

The advice comes under an Australian Financial Services Licence, which carries a legal duty to act in your best interest. That's the standard every recommendation has to meet, in writing.

If you Google around SMSFs you'll find plenty of stories of funds set up for people who never needed one, sold on the upside and never walked through the responsibility. That's the outcome the suitability step exists to prevent.

The team at Evolve Wealth Management

Email 7: Why more people are asking this now

Subject: Why now

Hi {first_name},

If it feels like SMSFs are coming up more than they used to, you're reading the market right.

More Australians want a say in how their super is invested, particularly the ability to hold property or assets a mainstream fund won't. At the same time the advice sector has tightened considerably since the Hayne royal commission, with higher professional standards on who can give personal advice and how. So there's more interest in SMSFs and a smaller pool of advisers licensed to properly assess whether one suits you.

That's a good moment to get a clear read on your own situation rather than act on what worked for someone at the barbecue. What suits them tells you very little about what suits you.

Your call is the place to get that read, specific to your balance and what you want retirement to look like.

The team at Evolve Wealth Management

Email 8: Before we speak

Subject: Before your call

Hi {first_name},

Your discovery session is close, so this is the short version of what to have ready.

- Your current super details, including any older accounts
- A rough sense of when you'd like to retire and what income you'd want
- Any specific plan behind the SMSF idea, like property, if you have one
- The questions you most want answered

You don't need to prepare beyond that. The session is a relaxed conversation, and there's no obligation to proceed with anything afterwards.

If anything's changed and the time no longer works, the booking page has the link to move it. Otherwise we'll see you then.

The team at Evolve Wealth Management

Broadcast Emails 6 emails
Email 1: Who benefits when someone tells you to set up an SMSF


Structure: Contrarian Call-Out, Dismantle, Alternative Framework
CTA level: none
Subject A: who benefits when you set up an smsf
Subject B: the smsf question and who you asked
Preview: The person answering usually has a stake in the answer.

"Should I set up a self-managed super fund?"

We get this from people in their fifties and sixties most weeks, and it's a harder question to get a clean answer to than it looks. The reason has less to do with SMSFs and more to do with who you tend to ask.

An SMSF setup service earns its fee the moment the fund exists, so the answer that pays them is yes. An accountant who runs the fund gains ongoing admin work. Even a friend who's happy with theirs is really just telling you an SMSF suited their situation, which may look nothing like yours. None of them are steering you wrong on purpose. They're answering a question that happens to have a convenient answer for them.

We look at it another way. An SMSF is one way to hold your super, and it earns its keep for some people while costing others money for control they never use. The work is deciding which one you'd be, and that gets settled before any paperwork does. Our SMSF page has said it plainly for years: an SMSF isn't suitable for everyone.

So before you weigh the vehicle, get clear on where you're trying to go. What income do you want in retirement, what do you actually want a say over, and what would you happily never think about again. Answer those first and the question of whether an SMSF fits gets a lot easier to settle. We'll come back to it over the next few weeks, one piece at a time.

Email 2: What a super balance has to clear before an SMSF makes sense


Structure: Concept, Framework, Takeaway
CTA level: none
Subject A: the balance an smsf needs to make sense
Subject B: why $200k keeps coming up with smsfs
Preview: Under a certain balance, the costs tend to outweigh the control.

An SMSF may be worth considering once you've got over $200,000 in superannuation. Below that, the running costs tend to eat into the very balance you're trying to grow.

That figure surprises people who've been told an SMSF is worth setting up as early as possible. It's worth understanding where it comes from, because it changes how you read any pitch to start one.

A self-managed fund carries fixed costs that a large industry or retail fund spreads across thousands of members. You wear them alone: an annual audit, the accounting and lodgement, plus the compliance work that keeps the fund inside ATO rules. On a smaller balance those fixed costs are a heavy percentage of what you hold. Grow the balance and they shrink to a rounding error, while the control and flexibility start to pay for themselves. Your balance is what tips that maths from a drag into an advantage.

So the takeaway is straightforward. Whether an SMSF can do more than your current fund isn't really the question, because it usually can. What counts is whether your balance is big enough that the extra cost buys you something worth having. Past roughly that threshold the structure can earn its keep. Under it, most people are paying for complexity they don't need yet, and a simpler fund does the same job for less.

Email 3: "I'll deal with my super properly closer to retirement"


Structure: Common Phrase, Reframe, Core Insight
CTA level: none
Subject A: "i'll sort my super out closer to retirement"
Subject B: the super decision that gets harder each year
Preview: Deferring this one feels careful. It usually costs more.

"I'll deal with my super properly closer to retirement."

If you've thought some version of that, you're in good company. Nearly everyone with a real balance has parked the bigger structural decisions for a quieter day. The catch is that those decisions don't sit still while you wait.

In the years just before you stop working, the structural choices carry the most weight and leave the least room to reverse. Whether your super moves into pension phase and when, how you draw it down, whether an SMSF would give you something your current fund can't: these compound over time. Sort the structure at fifty-five and the next decade works in your favour. Reach for it at sixty-four and some of the better options have already closed.

So the reframe is worth sitting with. "Closer to retirement" isn't the safer moment to decide, it's the more expensive one. The version of you with the most room to move is the one looking at this five or ten years out, not the one a few months from finishing up and trying to undo settings that have already locked in.

Deferring feels like the cautious choice. It's still a choice, and it's usually the costliest one on the table. Decide early, and decide once.

Email 4: Why we work out suitability before anyone sets up a fund


Structure: Misconception, Reframe, Teach, Embedded CTA, Keep Teaching
CTA level: embedded (soft)
Subject A: why we check suitability before setup
Subject B: the smsf step most services skip
Preview: Most SMSFs get set up before anyone checks they fit.

The common assumption is that getting an SMSF is a setup job: pick a provider, sign the forms, and you're running your own fund. That's how a lot of them come into being, and it's also why a fair number of people end up with a structure that never quite suited them.

The step that usually gets skipped is the one that should come first. Before a fund exists there's a real question to answer, and it's about you rather than the paperwork. Does your balance clear the point where an SMSF pays off. Do you actually want the control it gives, or would you rather not think about your super most of the year. Is there a specific reason you want your own fund, like holding property inside super, and does that reason hold up once you see the full cost. Setup services rarely ask, because the answer doesn't change what they sell.

We work the other way around. An adviser looks at your balance, your goals and your appetite for running a fund, and tells you whether an SMSF fits before a single form gets signed. Sometimes the answer is no, and we'll say so. If you've been circling the decision and want it looked at by someone with no fund to sell you, that's what the complimentary Discovery Session is for. It's free, there's no obligation, and you leave with a clearer view either way.

What that order changes is whose situation the answer is built around. When suitability comes first, the recommendation follows your goals and your balance instead of a service's need to set something up. Some of the people we talk to walk away without an SMSF and glad they asked. Others find it fits their situation well and set one up knowing exactly why. Both got an answer that was actually about them.

Email 5: The client who came in certain, and left without a fund


Structure: Client Story, Coaching Moment, Principles
CTA level: soft
Subject A: he was certain he needed an smsf
Subject B: the review that changed the question
Preview: Sometimes the right call is the fund you don't set up.

A client came to us a while back convinced he needed an SMSF before he retired. He'd read enough to feel like he was behind, a mate had set one up, and he wanted more control over where his super went. Early in the conversation we told him we might end up advising against it. He looked genuinely thrown.

We spent the meeting not on the fund but on what he was actually after: a reliable income from sixty, room to help his kids without knocking his own plan off course, and a super setup he didn't have to babysit. Only once those were clear did we look at structures. For his situation, tidying up a couple of old accounts and using his existing fund well did the job with far less for him to run, and an SMSF would have added cost and admin for control he didn't really want to use.

He left without the thing he came in for, and told us later it was some of the more useful advice he'd had in years. The lesson underneath it was about sequence more than super. He'd been shopping for a vehicle before he'd worked out the destination.

A few principles sit under that:

- Start with the retirement you want, then choose the structure to reach it. Work out the fund once your goals are clear.
- Control has a price. Sometimes it's well worth paying, and often it's paid for control that never gets used.
- The right advice is sometimes the recommendation not to do the thing you walked in wanting.

If you've been weighing up an SMSF and want it looked at by someone whose only job is to get your answer right, a Discovery Session is a free, no-obligation place to start. Worst case, you leave knowing the setup you've already got is the one to keep.

Email 6: Five questions to sit with before you touch your super


Structure: Concept, Framework, Takeaway
CTA level: soft
Subject A: five questions before you touch your super
Subject B: the checklist we run before any super change
Preview: Run these before anyone moves your super anywhere.

Before you set up an SMSF, roll over a fund, or change how your super is held, there are five questions worth sitting with. They're the same ones we work through in a first conversation, and you can make a start on your own.

- What income do I actually want in retirement, and from what age? Most structure decisions get simpler once that number is real rather than a guess.
- What do I genuinely want control over, and what would I happily hand off and never think about again? Control is the whole case for an SMSF, and only you can say how much of it you want.
- Whoever is recommending this change, do they earn anything different depending on what I choose? If they do, the advice can still be useful, as long as you read it knowing which way it leans.
- What does this cost me over ten or twenty years, not just this year? A percentage fee or an admin load looks small each year and large across a retirement.
- Does my balance clear the point where the extra cost of a fund actually pays off? For most people that's up around $200,000, and under it a simpler fund tends to win.

Answer all five clearly and you're in a strong spot to decide, and you might not need us at all. If two or three of them are fuzzy, that fuzziness is usually where the expensive mistakes live, and it's exactly what a first conversation sorts out.

A Discovery Session is free and carries no obligation. You bring the questions, we bring the experience, and you leave with a clearer view of whether anything needs to change before you retire. Across our team that's 50+ years of combined experience and 500+ clients we've worked through this same decision with.

6
Image Ads
Scroll-stopping static creatives mapped to funnel stage
10
Video Ad Scripts
Platform-ready variations across angles and audiences
2
Funnel Pages
Landing page and confirmation page for your funnel
1
Long-Form Explainer Video Script
Full video sales letter, written in your brand voice
7
Confirmation Page Video Scripts
Breakout content for education and trust
8
Pre-Appointment Email Sequence
Confirmation-to-appointment nurture sequence
6
Broadcast Emails
Email sequence

How the pieces fit together.

Every asset above plugs into one place in this flow. Once it's running, the only thing you see is qualified bookings on your calendar.

Paid Ads

Video + image Meta ads

Landing Page

VSL explainer to sell the offer

Application Form

Filters unqualified prospects

Qualified

Meets criteria

Book Appointment

Automated scheduling

Paid Client

Closed on the call

Not Qualified

Doesn't meet criteria

Rejected

Redirected away

Email Nurture

Ongoing email sequence

Done for you. Almost nothing for you to do.

We handle every piece of the build, deployment, and the first 30 days of campaign management. You film, we run.

Done by us24 items

  • Full VSL Funnel build and implementation
  • AI competitor and market analysis
  • Messaging and ad angle research
  • Audience targeting strategy and research
  • Video Sales Letter written in your brand voice
  • 20+ scripted social media video ads across multiple angles based on current market behaviour
  • Hook and headline variations for every ad
  • Static image ad creative pack
  • Pre-appointment email sequence
  • General email marketing sequence
  • Booking confirmation page video scripts
  • Production notes for filming all scripted content
  • All content editing
  • Landing page and confirmation page design, deployment and hosting
  • Lead qualifier form
  • Software integration and automation
  • Email campaign setup
  • Meta Pixel setup and conversion tracking
  • Meta ads campaign setup
  • Retargeting ad campaign for warm traffic
  • Ongoing campaign management
  • Ongoing creative testing and ad refresh
  • 24/7 direct messaging access
  • Full in-depth funnel performance reporting

Needed from you2 items

  • Film scripted video content
  • Guest access to software

Things people ask before booking.

If yours isn't here, it's the first thing we'll cover on the call.

So you just used ChatGPT?
ChatGPT isn't in our stack. We've built proprietary AI workflows that allow us to research your market, analyse your competitors, and produce finished deliverables with a level of speed, relevance, and accuracy that would normally take a full agency weeks. That's our competitive edge. Every piece of content you see on this page was built from original research into your brand, your audience, and what's actually working in your market right now.
What's a VSL funnel?
A VSL is a video sales letter. It's a long-form explainer video designed to call out a real pain point in your market, position you as the expert in your field, and lay out why your offer is the obvious solution. The funnel is the system built around that video. It runs on autopilot: ads bring in viewers, the VSL sells them, a qualifier filters out anyone who isn't a fit, and email sequences follow up with everyone else. The goal is to ethically serve as many new clients as possible without you manually chasing every lead.
Can't I just use these deliverables on my own?
Absolutely. Everything on this page is real, finished work you can take and start using in your business this week. Scripts, emails, ad copy, funnel strategy, it's all yours regardless of whether we work together. What we've found is that most business owners start strong but get buried in the technical side: setting up automations, configuring ad campaigns, building landing pages, connecting tracking. It adds up fast. That's why we offer a complete done-for-you service. We handle every piece of the implementation so nothing stalls and the system actually launches.
What exactly do you do?
We put more clients through your door. The marketing systems on this page are well-established, proven to work for service-based businesses, and used religiously by the biggest players in every industry. Every piece is already built for you. We implement the full system, launch it, and make data-driven adjustments along the way to keep performance improving.
What do I get out of it?
Qualified booked appointments through this funnel - and you only pay per qualified booked appointment. These are warm prospects who have already watched your VSL, understand your offer, and chosen to book. You're closing warm leads, not pitching cold ones. Once the system is producing, it scales: the same funnel can deliver 5x the volume with incremental budget increases. You only pay for the qualified booked appointments we produce.
How will this work for me?
These systems work because they follow the same structure that the highest-performing service businesses in the world use to acquire clients through paid media. The difference is that every piece has been customised around your specific brand, your positioning, and the gaps we found in your market. None of it's generic. We launch, watch the data, and optimise based on what the numbers tell us.
How do I film scripted content?
We give you the revised scripts with production notes and you film them however works best for you. Showing your face is preferred but not a requirement. You can film on your phone, read from a teleprompter if you have one, or record line by line. We handle all the editing. The scripts provided on this page can be knocked out in a single afternoon.
I've tried ads and they didn't work.
That usually means the ads were running without a system behind them. Our ad strategy starts by using AI to analyse which ads are generating the most revenue in your industry right now. From there, we build many variations that run simultaneously. Not every ad will be a winner. It's a game of maths and probability, and by running enough variations, the winners surface fast. The other piece is that the ads are only the top of the funnel. Every viewer who clicks gets sent to a page built to nurture them through the rest of the system: the VSL sells, a form qualifies, and email follows up. The ads work because everything behind them is designed to convert.