Writing
Call to Action Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A call to action generator saves you from staring at a blank button wondering whether 'Submit' is really good enough. Paste in your product or service, pick a conversion goal — sign up, buy now, book a call, start a free trial, and more — choose a tone, and get up to ten ready-to-use CTA phrases in seconds. The four tone options map directly to funnel stage: low-friction for cold audiences, benefit-led for warm ones, urgent or bold for bottom-of-funnel moments. Small wording shifts routinely move click-through rates by double digits, so generating a batch and testing the top three is worth the two minutes it takes.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Select your conversion goal from the dropdown — sign up, purchase, download, book a demo, or another action.
- Type your product or service name into the text field, being as specific as possible about what you're offering.
- Choose a tone that matches your funnel stage: benefit-led, urgent, low-friction, or bold declarative.
- Set the count to six or higher to get enough variants for a meaningful A/B test, then click Generate.
- Copy your three strongest CTAs into your landing page, email, or ad creative and test them against each other.
Use Cases
- •Writing A/B test variants for a SaaS free-trial hero button in Unbounce or Webflow
- •Generating urgency-driven CTAs for a flash-sale email sequence in Klaviyo or Mailchimp
- •Creating low-friction subscribe prompts for a Substack or newsletter popup exit intent
- •Drafting benefit-led button copy for a lead-magnet landing page before a Figma handoff
- •Building a swipe file of bold CTAs for a LinkedIn ad campaign across multiple offer types
Tips
- →Generate the same goal in all four tones back-to-back — comparing them side-by-side reveals which angle fits your brand voice fastest.
- →Paste a generated CTA into your page builder's button, then read the surrounding copy aloud — mismatched register between headline and CTA kills conversions.
- →For email subject lines, low-friction CTAs in the preview text ('No credit card needed') reduce unsubscribes even when the body CTA is more assertive.
- →Avoid starting CTAs with 'Click' or 'Submit' — they describe the mechanism, not the outcome. Start with the verb that names the reward instead.
- →If your product name is long or technical, use a benefit phrase in the product field instead — 'unlimited cloud storage' generates stronger copy than 'Dropbox Business Plus'.
- →Save every batch you generate and tag them by goal and tone — a growing swipe file means you spend less time writing from scratch on future campaigns.
FAQ
what makes a CTA button actually convert better
High-converting CTAs are action-first, specific, and answer 'what do I get?' in the fewest words possible. 'Start My Free 14-Day Trial' outperforms 'Submit' because it names the benefit and removes cost anxiety in one phrase. First-person phrasing ('Get My Guide' vs 'Get Your Guide') also tends to lift clicks in split tests.
which tone should I pick for my call to action
Match tone to where the visitor sits in your funnel. Low-friction works best at the top of funnel where trust is still being built; benefit-led performs mid-funnel when the reader already understands the offer. Urgent and bold tones are most effective near pricing pages, checkout flows, or deadline-driven campaigns.
how do I A/B test the CTAs I generate here
Generate six or more variants, isolate the button text as your only variable, and run the test until each variant has at least 1,000 clicks — most email platforms and landing page builders have built-in split testing. Change one element at a time so you can attribute any difference in conversion rate to the copy itself.