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Here are 5 simple, friendly notification messages you can use to direct a 13-year-old student to a new website. Each message is short, clear, and includes a call-to-action (CTA). Replace [Name] and [link] with the student name and the real URL.

  1. Friendly invite
    Hey [Name]! We just launched a new website with cool study tools. Take a quick look: [link]
  2. Curiosity hook
    Want a quick secret to make homework faster? Tap here to see: [link]
  3. Benefit highlight
    New site live! Find step-by-step guides and fun quizzes to help your grades. Try it now: [link]
  4. Reminder with urgency
    Only 48 hours left to get a free practice quiz on our new site. Don’t miss it — go now: [link]
  5. Social invite
    Join 200 students already using our new site! Bring a friend and start a study challenge: [link]

Step-by-step tips for using these messages

  1. Keep it short. Short messages are easier to read and act on. Aim for one or two short sentences.
  2. Use the student’s name. Personalization makes messages feel friendly and shows it’s for them.
  3. Have one clear CTA. Tell them exactly what to do: "Click the link," "Try the quiz," or "Visit now."
  4. Be positive and simple. Use friendly words and explain one benefit (fun quiz, faster homework, step-by-step help).
  5. Pick a good time. Send notifications when the student is likely free, like late afternoon or early evening—avoid bedtime and school hours.
  6. Try small A/B tests. Send two different messages to small groups to see which one gets more clicks (curiosity vs. benefit works often).
  7. Keep links safe and visible. Use a short, clear URL or a button so they know where they’re going.

Quick extra examples

  • Email subject line idea: "Check out our new study site, [Name]!"
  • Push button text: "Visit the new site" or "Try the free quiz"
  • Text/SMS version: "Hey [Name], quick! Free practice quiz on our new site for the next 48 hrs: [link]"

If you want, tell me what kind of site it is (study tools, games, club page) and I can make these messages even more specific for your audience.


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