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.
- Friendly invite
Hey [Name]! We just launched a new website with cool study tools. Take a quick look: [link] - Curiosity hook
Want a quick secret to make homework faster? Tap here to see: [link] - Benefit highlight
New site live! Find step-by-step guides and fun quizzes to help your grades. Try it now: [link] - Reminder with urgency
Only 48 hours left to get a free practice quiz on our new site. Don’t miss it — go now: [link] - 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
- Keep it short. Short messages are easier to read and act on. Aim for one or two short sentences.
- Use the student’s name. Personalization makes messages feel friendly and shows it’s for them.
- Have one clear CTA. Tell them exactly what to do: "Click the link," "Try the quiz," or "Visit now."
- Be positive and simple. Use friendly words and explain one benefit (fun quiz, faster homework, step-by-step help).
- Pick a good time. Send notifications when the student is likely free, like late afternoon or early evening—avoid bedtime and school hours.
- Try small A/B tests. Send two different messages to small groups to see which one gets more clicks (curiosity vs. benefit works often).
- 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.