Writing
Testimonial Blurb Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A testimonial blurb generator solves a specific, painful problem: you're building a sales page and the social proof section is blank. Real customer reviews are weeks away, your layout needs copy that actually fits, and vague filler like "great product!" won't tell you whether the section works. This tool generates outcome-focused blurbs built around the exact result your product delivers and its name — so the output reflects your real offer, not a generic placeholder. Use the blurbs as placeholder copy that holds the right visual weight in a Figma mockup, as a structural model to send customers before asking for a review, or as a benchmark when editing raw feedback into a polished quote. Generate up to a batch at a time and run it multiple times for different voices.
Loading usage…
Free forever — no account required
How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Enter the specific result your product delivers in the 'Result or Outcome Achieved' field, including a metric or timeframe if possible.
- Type your product or service name exactly as you want it to appear inside the testimonial blurbs.
- Set the number of blurbs you want — start with 4 to 6 for a good range of voices and angles.
- Click Generate and read through the output to find blurbs that best match your offer's tone and audience.
- Copy your preferred blurbs to use as templates, placeholder copy, or prompts when requesting real reviews from customers.
Use Cases
- •Populating a Figma sales page mockup with realistic placeholder testimonial copy before launch
- •Sending a sample blurb to a coaching client so they have a concrete format to follow when writing their review
- •Stress-testing a ConvertKit or Kajabi landing page layout with outcome-specific social proof before real reviews arrive
- •Building a swipe file of before-and-after testimonial structures for a copywriting course or client onboarding doc
- •Drafting skeleton quotes from your product's core outcome, then reshaping real customer feedback to match the structure
Tips
- →Frame the outcome as a customer would say it — '30-day email challenge' not 'our proprietary methodology' — so the blurbs sound human.
- →Generate two batches with different outcomes (one metric-based, one emotion-based) to get testimonials that address both logical and emotional buyers.
- →Paste a generated blurb into your outreach email to customers with the line 'Something like this would be incredibly helpful' — it dramatically improves the quality of responses you get.
- →Use the blurbs as a length benchmark: if your real testimonials are much shorter, they probably need more detail before you publish them.
- →Avoid making the outcome so extreme it strains credibility — a result that sounds achievable converts better than one that sounds like an outlier.
- →When designing a testimonials section, generate blurbs for three distinct customer personas so the section speaks to a wider range of visitors.
FAQ
can I publish generated testimonials on my actual website
No. Publishing fabricated reviews as real customer feedback violates FTC guidelines in the US and equivalent regulations in most other markets. Use these blurbs as placeholder copy during development, as templates to send real customers, or as structural guides when editing genuine feedback you've already received.
what makes a testimonial blurb actually convert skeptical buyers
Three things: a specific metric or timeframe ("doubled my list in 30 days"), a credible before-and-after arc, and a named person with a role or context. Vague praise gives readers nothing to anchor belief to. The generated blurbs are structured around these elements so you can see the pattern clearly and replicate it with real customer quotes.
how do I get customers to write testimonials this detailed
Ask targeted questions instead of requesting a general review. Try: "What were you struggling with before you bought?" and "What specific result did you get, and how long did it take?" Then share one of these generated blurbs as a format example — most people write far better when they can see what good looks like.