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Case Study Title Generator

A case study can be powerful proof — but a flat title like "Customer X Case Study" buries the result and gets ignored. A strong title leads with the outcome: the growth, the time saved, the revenue gained. This tool generates titles built around concrete metrics, outcome types, and company categories in the proven formats that make case studies earn attention. The only input is how many titles you want — up to twenty. Each combines a metric (3x, 40%, double, six-figure), an outcome (growth, cost reduction, faster delivery), and a company type (a SaaS startup, a marketing agency) in one of four result-first templates. Generate a batch, pick the angle that best reflects your actual success story, and swap in your real numbers and client. The generated metrics are placeholders — your real data always outperforms a generic figure.

Read the complete guide — 4 min read

How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Choose how many title options you want.
  2. Click Generate to produce case study titles.
  3. Pick the angle that fits your success story.
  4. Swap in your real metrics and client name.

Use Cases

  • Titling a customer success story or case study
  • B2B marketing and sales enablement content
  • Portfolio and results pages
  • Email and landing-page case-study promotion
  • Making social proof earn attention

Tips

  • Lead with the result, not the client name.
  • Use a specific metric — real numbers build credibility.
  • Frame it as a transformation: from problem to outcome.
  • Keep the title honest; the study must deliver on it.

FAQ

What does the generator actually produce?

Each title combines a metric (e.g. "3x", "40%"), an outcome (e.g. "growth", "time savings"), and a company type in four template structures: How [who] achieved [result], From struggle to [result], [Result] in 90 days, and The strategy behind [result].

Should a case study title include numbers?

Yes, whenever you have them. A specific metric like "40% faster" or "double the revenue" makes a title concrete and credible. Numbers signal a real, measurable result, which is exactly what makes a case study persuasive to a prospect in a similar situation.

Should the title name the client or the industry?

Name whichever your reader will identify with. A recognisable brand lends credibility, but for most readers the company type ("a remote team", "an e-commerce brand") helps them see themselves in the story. The result still leads either way.

How long should a case study title be?

Roughly six to twelve words, leading with the outcome or metric rather than the client name. If the title runs past one line in your content listing, tighten it. The generated templates are already in that result-first, punchy register.

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