Writing
Value Proposition Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A value proposition generator saves you from the blank-page problem that stalls most product launches and redesigns. Marketers, founders, and freelancers use it to produce benefit-driven statements that tell visitors exactly what they get, who the product is for, and why it beats the alternatives — in seconds rather than hours of workshopping. Pick your product type (SaaS, coaching program, e-commerce, nonprofit, and more), choose an output format — one-liner, three-part statement, hero headline plus subheadline, or before-and-after — and set how many options you want. Compare angles side by side, then take the strongest structure into your copy. The best final version usually blends a generated structure with real words from customer reviews or sales calls.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Select your product or service type from the dropdown — SaaS, app, coaching, freelance service, or physical product.
- Choose the output format that matches your use case: three-part statement for landing pages, one-liner for ads or LinkedIn.
- Set the number of options to three or more so you have multiple angles to compare.
- Click Generate and read each result, noting which one most clearly names the customer outcome.
- Copy your preferred statement and refine it by swapping any generic phrases with language from real customer feedback.
Use Cases
- •Writing the above-the-fold hero headline and subheadline for a SaaS landing page A/B test
- •Crafting the opening slide positioning statement for a seed-stage investor pitch deck
- •Setting a LinkedIn headline for a freelance consultant repositioning away from generalist work
- •Generating before-and-after copy for a Facebook or Google ad campaign promoting a coaching program
- •Drafting the App Store description headline for a new mobile app launch
Tips
- →Generate at least five options before choosing — the first result is rarely the strongest framing for your specific audience.
- →Pair the three-part format with the one-liner format in the same session to get both a full hero statement and a short headline version.
- →If your product has a niche audience, include that specificity when prompted — 'project management for architecture firms' will outperform 'project management software' in conversion.
- →Avoid using any generated statement that could describe a direct competitor without changing a word — that's a sign the differentiator isn't specific enough.
- →Test outcome-focused variants against pain-focused variants in ads before committing to either; different audiences respond to gain versus relief framing very differently.
- →Save all generated options even if you only use one now — unused framings often become useful for email subject lines, ad copy, or objection-handling scripts later.
FAQ
what's the difference between a value proposition and a tagline
A tagline is built for memorability — Nike's 'Just Do It' doesn't explain what Nike sells. A value proposition is functional: it names the customer, the problem, and the outcome. Taglines belong on merchandise; value propositions anchor your homepage and pitch deck where the goal is conversion, not brand recall.
how do I test which value proposition actually converts better
Generate three to five variants with different angles — outcome-focused, pain-focused, differentiator-focused — then run them as A/B tests on your landing page hero or paid search ads. Measure sign-up or click-through rate, not impressions. Even a 10% lift from better framing compounds significantly over a campaign.
can I use this for a freelance service or personal brand not just a product
Yes. Select 'freelance service' or 'personal brand' as the product type and the output shifts away from feature-driven SaaS language toward outcome-based positioning for individual expertise. This works well for consultants, coaches, and designers who need to articulate what makes them worth hiring over a cheaper generalist.