FitSleeps native image rank report
Active Trendtrack Meta ads grouped by duplicate primary copy. Within each copy bucket, images/thumbnails are sorted by Trendtrack ad rank, so the left/top entries are the strongest rank and the red-highlighted entries are the weakest rank for that exact same copy.
173active FitSleeps ads pulled
30duplicate-copy buckets with 2+ images
167ads inside duplicate-copy buckets
#1best Trendtrack rank pulled
What high-rank images tend to do
- Look native, not like polished ecommerce product shots.
- Show a human/sleep context immediately: bed, alarm, tired face, morning room, partner disturbance.
- Use simple compositions that make the story copy feel personal and believable.
- When the visual is video, the thumbnail often reads as a real moment, not a rendered gadget demo.
What low-rank images tend to do
- Generic product renders, sterile product-only shots, or images that do not add a human story.
- Busy/unclear frames where the viewer cannot instantly tell what problem is being dramatized.
- Creative that feels disconnected from the long-form copy, especially offer/warehouse copy paired with weak context.
- Repeated assets with only tiny changes tend to separate hard by rank, suggesting the image can swing performance even when copy is controlled.
Duplicate-copy buckets
Copy bucket c5cd69a3c143 (8 ads, 8 images)
Best rank: #27Worst rank: #418Rank spread: 391Media: {'image': 8}
Experience the next level of wake-up technology with the FitSleeps Pro. Now with stronger vibration, improved battery life, and a 100% wake-up guarantee.
Here’s why the Pro is your new Must-Have:
1️⃣ Advanced Vibration Technology – More powerful, designed for the heaviest sleepers.
2️⃣ Maximized Comfort – The Pro features a premium band that’s designed for ultimate comfort.
3️⃣ Double the Battery Life – Enjoy up to 25 days of battery life.
4️⃣ 750-Day Guarantee – Feel secure with our industry-leading guarantee – …
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Copy bucket f376342cefbc (3 ads, 3 images)
Best rank: #10Worst rank: #386Rank spread: 376Media: {'video': 3}
If you set more than 5 alarms every night this is made for you.
Fitness watches. Sunrise lamp. Alarm clock across the room.
My body slept through all of it.
Turns out your brain is literally built to tune out repetitive sounds during sleep. That's not laziness. That's biology.
But it can't tune out vibration against your skin.
That's the difference. That's why nothing else worked.
First morning with FitSleeps I woke up before my phone alarm even went off.
$49. 100-day money back guarantee.
https://try.fitsl…
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Copy bucket 978b77fb46b8 (11 ads, 11 images)
Best rank: #1Worst rank: #356Rank spread: 355Media: {'image': 11}
Some jobs don’t allow a second alarm.
Whether you start at 3:45AM or rotate 12-hour shifts, oversleeping isn’t an option — and neither is waking your partner.
FitSleeps uses escalating wrist vibration to wake you up silently and reliably.
✔ Built for shift workers
✔ Wakes you — not the whole house
✔ 100-day risk-free trial
Strongest controlled finding: warm bedside/nightstand product + urgent offer ranked best (#1/#30). Weaker versions are darker, more cluttered, more conceptual, or hide the product behind sleeping-person lifestyle imagery. Product visibility + clear use case + high-contrast offer seem to matter more than generic sleep atmosphere.
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Copy bucket 367dde6845c2 (22 ads, 22 images)
Best rank: #5Worst rank: #330Rank spread: 325Media: {'video': 17, 'image': 5}
Stop oversleeping and finally wake up on time. The FitSleeps wristband is built for people who miss alarms, snooze unconsciously, or sleep through anything.
It’s a powerful, non disruptive vibration alarm that helps even the heaviest sleepers get up on time. Here’s how it works:
1️⃣ Set your wake up time
2️⃣ Clip the device to your wrist before bed
3️⃣ Wake up to steady vibration instead of loud, stressful noise
4️⃣ Your body reacts faster to vibrations which reduces the urge to snooze
No more chaos, no more pan…
Best ranks cluster around meme-native clown/POV visuals with short readable captions. Worst ranks lean generic UGC, dark bedroom shots, dense paragraph overlays, abstract brain science, or heavy depression framing. For this copy, humor + one obvious focal point beats serious explanation.
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Copy bucket 3324654f5203 (5 ads, 5 images)
Best rank: #42Worst rank: #360Rank spread: 318Media: {'video': 5}
I want to be completely real with you.
We produced more FitSleeps bands than expected.
And instead of letting them sit in a warehouse,
I’d rather see them help people who struggle waking up every day.
Because this isn’t about discipline.
If you’ve ever:
– Set 10+ alarms and still missed them
– Needed someone else to wake you
– Felt stressed before going to sleep
You know how frustrating this is.
FitSleeps was designed with sleep specialists to solve exactly that.
Not with louder sound — but with powerful vib…
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Copy bucket c91880d2f28a (10 ads, 10 images)
Best rank: #5Worst rank: #175Rank spread: 170Media: {'video': 10}
You don’t plan to hit snooze 6 times.
It just… happens.
You wake up already frustrated.
Already behind.
Already feeling like you failed before the day even started.
You don’t need more motivation.
And you don’t need louder alarms.
You need something that makes snoozing impossible — so you can finally wake up on the first alarm and start your day calm.
FitSleeps physically gets you out of bed and removes the snooze cycle.
✔ No more automatic snoozing
✔ Start your morning with momentum
✔ 100-day risk-free trial
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Copy bucket 07a5886e7c84 (4 ads, 4 images)
Best rank: #1Worst rank: #71Rank spread: 70Media: {'image': 4}
My manager called me at 9:47 AM on a Tuesday.
I was still in bed.
The flight to Chicago had left at 8:15.
I had a client presentation at noon. Three weeks of prep. Two other people from my team were already there. Waiting.
I told him the train was delayed. Something about traffic on the way to the station.
He didn't say anything for a long time.
"Get on the next flight," he said. "This cannot happen again."
I was 26. I'd had the job eight months.
I almost lost it that morning.
Not because I didn't care. I …
The #1 image is a simple phone-on-bed/alarm-list photo: intimate, sleep-specific, and instantly tied to the problem. The lower-ranked office images are generic, dark, and only indirectly related to sleep/work consequences. For long-form story copy, semantic relevance in the image seems crucial.
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Copy bucket c4a26a1d4152 (6 ads, 6 images)
Best rank: #9Worst rank: #68Rank spread: 59Media: {'image': 6}
For three years I woke up late, hated myself for four minutes, and figured out what to say. I thought that loop was just who I was.
My manager texted me at 8:47 on a Tuesday morning. Just three words: "You coming in?"
I was still in bed.
My alarm had gone off at 7:00. And 7:05. And 7:10.
I had dismissed all three of them in my sleep and had no memory of any of it.
That was the third time in six weeks.
I didn't text back for eleven minutes because I spent those eleven minutes lying there trying to figure out w…
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Copy bucket 4efc9a497645 (5 ads, 5 images)
Best rank: #8Worst rank: #64Rank spread: 56Media: {'image': 5}
The morning I almost got fired, I woke up at 9:17.
Not 7:30, when my first alarm was set.
Not 7:35. Not 7:40. Not 7:45, 7:50, or 7:55, when the next five were set after that.
9:17.
The light in my room was completely wrong. That flat, settled daylight that means the morning has already happened without you. I looked at my phone and just held it for a second.
Twelve missed calls. My manager. A colleague. My manager again. A text from my best friend that just said "everything ok???"
I knew before I checked the …
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Copy bucket a96b78e48f64 (5 ads, 5 images)
Best rank: #12Worst rank: #67Rank spread: 55Media: {'image': 5}
For two and a half years I paid $327 a month for a service called Rise &
Shine Concierge that called my phone every morning at 4:45 AM, played a
recorded "motivational message," and then connected me to a live human being in
the Philippines who would stay on the line until I confirmed I was standing
up.
I am not making any part of that up. I have the bank statements.
The service had three tiers. The basic tier was a recorded call for $89 a
month. The middle tier added the live operator for $189. The top tier — wh…
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Copy bucket eeb88ddb2474 (5 ads, 5 images)
Best rank: #11Worst rank: #62Rank spread: 51Media: {'image': 5}
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At our 4-month checkup, the pediatrician asked me how often the baby was eating
overnight.
I said "every three hours, like the schedule."
She paused. She looked at the chart. Then she looked at me.
"Hannah," she said, "his weight isn't where I want it to be. Has he been
getting his 2 AM and 5 AM feeds consistently?"
I started to say yes.
I knew the answer was no.
I'm 33. First baby. He was born in October. I had him at 41, almost 42 weeks
pregnant — they were about to induce me when my water finally b…
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Copy bucket 61eb1290e692 (5 ads, 5 images)
Best rank: #21Worst rank: #63Rank spread: 42Media: {'image': 5}
For four years I paid the overnight cashier at the Waffle House across the
street from my apartment $50 a week to bang on my window at 6:45 AM on her way
home from her shift.
Her name was Renita. She was 58 years old and lived two blocks down from me.
She got off work at 7:00, and on her walk home she'd cut across the alley
behind my building, stop at my bedroom window which was on the ground floor,
and knock on it as hard as she could until I sat up and waved at her. Then
she'd keep walking.
This was the arrange…
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Copy bucket 0be41373046e (5 ads, 5 images)
Best rank: #5Worst rank: #45Rank spread: 40Media: {'image': 5}
For three years I kept my phone in a shallow bowl of water on my nightstand. Not to damage it. To make it impossible to dismiss in my sleep.
It worked, mostly. The water made the screen slippery enough that I couldn't swipe cleanly in the dark. I'd have to sit up, dry my hand on the sheet, and actually look at what I was doing before I could turn it off. By then I was awake enough to stay that way.
I lost three phones to this system. The first two I dropped. One into the bowl itself, one onto the floor after a pa…
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Copy bucket d289904dac23 (5 ads, 5 images)
Best rank: #10Worst rank: #46Rank spread: 36Media: {'image': 5}
The dean of students told me in a one-page letter that one more late absence
would put my full scholarship under review.
Not the merit one. The big one. The one that pays my tuition, my dorm, and my
meal plan. The one that's the only reason I'm at this school.
Without it I go home. I move back into my mother's apartment in Paterson. I
finish my degree at a community college if I'm lucky.
I read the letter four times in the dining hall and then I went outside and
sat on a bench and called nobody.
I'm 22. Senior.…
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Copy bucket 7b263c99d185 (6 ads, 6 images)
Best rank: #23Worst rank: #58Rank spread: 35Media: {'image': 6}
For two semesters I paid my roommate Jake $40 a month to wake me up at 6:45 every schoolday.
Jake was my roommate sophomore and junior year at Ohio State. He was nineteen when this started. He's now twenty-three and working in Columbus, and last spring he texted me to say he was moving in with his girlfriend and couldn't do it anymore. He said sorry. I told him not to worry about it. I paid him the last $40 and put my phone down.
Then I sat on the edge of my bed and thought about how I was going to finish my degr…
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Copy bucket e4cf5120220e (6 ads, 6 images)
Best rank: #27Worst rank: #59Rank spread: 32Media: {'image': 6}
For one year I gave Ryan the concierge a foot massage once a month just so he'd call and wake me up at 6:45 every schoolday.
Ryan was the concierge at my student residence at Ohio State. He was sixty-two when this started, spent ten hours a day on his feet behind that desk, and had the worst plantar fasciitis I've ever seen. Once a month, on the last Friday of the month, I'd pull up a chair in the back office and spend twenty minutes on his feet. That was the deal. He calls me every morning. I fix his heels once a…
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Copy bucket 56b7a4689201 (5 ads, 5 images)
Best rank: #9Worst rank: #39Rank spread: 30Media: {'image': 5}
5AM. Dashboard glowing red in the dark. Coffee in my hand, still too hot to drink.
This is what fourteen years of construction looks like from the inside.
Nobody sees this part. They see the building going up. The finished pour. The crew in the photos after a job wraps. They don't see the part where you're in the car before the sun exists, driving through streets that belong to nobody yet, trying to remember if you said goodbye to your wife or just left.
Most mornings I just left.
Not because I didn't care. Bec…
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Copy bucket 5772fff7c593 (5 ads, 5 images)
Best rank: #1Worst rank: #29Rank spread: 28Media: {'image': 5}
For six years I paid a kid named Devon $20 a week to call me at 5:15 every morning.
Devon is my neighbor's son. He was fifteen when this started. He's now twenty-one and in college in Pittsburgh, and last fall he called me to tell me he couldn't do it anymore because of his class schedule. He apologized. I told him to focus on school. I paid him the last $20 and hung up.
Then I sat in my truck in the driveway and thought about how I was going to tell my wife we might have to close the business.
I'm 43. I own a t…
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Generated from Trendtrack API /v1/ads search=FitSleeps status=active sort=ad-order. Trendtrack rank uses rank.currentRank; lower rank number is treated as stronger placement. Raw CSVs are included in the downloadable project folder.