Landing Page Copy Builder

Write headline, subheadline, benefit bullets, and CTA for any landing page

Generates full landing page copy including a hero headline, subheadline, three to five benefit sections with headers, a social proof placeholder, an FAQ section, and call-to-action text — built around your product and audience.

What makes a high-converting landing page headline?

The best headlines state the single clearest outcome the visitor gets, not the product's features. Lead with the result your audience wants, keep it under about ten words, and let the subheadline add the supporting detail.

Full page copy from a short description

A landing page lives or dies on its copy. Visitors decide in seconds whether to read on, and they convert only when the page answers, clearly and quickly, what they get and why they should act now. This builder turns a short product description into a complete set of landing-page sections: a benefit-led hero, supporting subheadline, three to five benefit blocks, a social-proof slot, an objection-handling FAQ, and call-to-action text.

How it works

The tool maps your inputs onto a proven conversion layout:

  • Hero — a headline built from your main outcome plus a clarifying subheadline.
  • Benefit blocks — each feature you list is reframed as a benefit with its own header.
  • Social proof — a placeholder for your testimonial, customer count, or logos.
  • FAQ — prompts for the four objections that most often block a purchase.
  • Call to action — your CTA text, repeated where it converts best.

The copy is assembled entirely in your browser; nothing is uploaded.

Tips for copy that converts

Write to one person, not a crowd — “you” beats “users.” Lead every benefit with the result, then mention the feature that delivers it, never the reverse. Make your call to action a specific verb phrase (“Start your free trial”) rather than a vague “Submit.” Use the FAQ to defuse the real reasons people hesitate: cost, effort, risk, and whether it fits their situation. Then edit ruthlessly — the strongest landing pages say less, but say it sharper.