Writing
Op-Ed Concept Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
An op-ed concept generator gives you an arguable angle plus a structure for an opinion piece, the two things a strong op-ed needs most. Enter a topic and it proposes a thesis with an edge — challenging the consensus or reframing the question — then lays out the proven op-ed shape: a sharp hook, a one-sentence claim, concrete evidence, an honest counterargument, and a pointed close. Opinion writers, students, and advocates use it to find a fresh take, structure a persuasive piece, and avoid the weak, on-the-one-hand essay that argues nothing. A good op-ed makes one clear argument hard, takes a real position, and respects the reader enough to address the obvious objection. Use the angle as a provocation to test against your real view, then fill the structure with your specific evidence and reasoning. The strongest op-eds say one true, slightly uncomfortable thing well.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Enter your topic.
- Click Generate to get an angle and structure.
- Test the angle against your real view.
- Fill the structure with your evidence and reasoning.
Use Cases
- •Finding an arguable angle for an op-ed
- •Structuring a persuasive opinion piece
- •Avoiding the weak, argue-nothing essay
- •Prompting a column or advocacy piece
- •Teaching persuasive argument structure
Tips
- →Argue one idea hard, not several softly.
- →Open with a specific scene or fact, not a generality.
- →Answer the strongest objection honestly.
- →Close by telling readers what should change.
FAQ
what makes a strong op-ed
One clear argument made hard, a real position rather than balance for its own sake, concrete evidence, and an honest answer to the strongest objection. A pointed close tells the reader what should change. These are exactly what the structure enforces.
why include a counterargument
Addressing the best objection honestly makes your argument more persuasive and credible, not weaker. Ignoring it leaves an obvious hole; answering it shows you have thought past your own side.
how long should an op-ed be
Usually around 700 to 800 words. The discipline forces you to argue one idea well rather than several poorly, which is why op-eds that try to cover everything end up convincing no one.