Writing
One-Liner Pitch Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A one-liner pitch generator solves the hardest writing problem in business: saying exactly what you do in one sentence. Founders freeze on it. Freelancers bury it under jargon. Marketers over-polish it into nothing. This tool takes three inputs you already know — what your product is, who it's for, and the outcome it delivers — and returns up to five pitch variations you can compare side by side. The formula it follows (product type + audience + core outcome) works because it forces a clear promise over a feature list. Run a few rounds, tweak your outcome wording between them, and pull the strongest phrases from each batch.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Type exactly what your product or service is in the 'What It Is' field, being as specific as possible.
- Enter your target audience in 'Who It's For' — name a specific role, industry, or situation rather than a broad group.
- Describe the main benefit in 'Main Outcome' as a result the user experiences, not a feature you provide.
- Set the number of pitches to at least five so you have enough variations to compare meaningfully.
- Click Generate, read each result aloud, and copy the one that sounds most natural and specific for your use case.
Use Cases
- •Drafting the hero headline for a SaaS landing page before writing any other copy
- •Filling in the LinkedIn 'About' section and Twitter bio with a line that actually explains your service
- •Writing the first sentence of a cold outreach email or LinkedIn DM to a target client
- •Preparing a 20-second verbal intro for a demo day, accelerator pitch, or networking event
- •Populating the Product Hunt tagline or Indie Hackers 'what are you building' field at launch
Tips
- →Write your outcome as a before-and-after transformation ('go from ignored to booked solid') to generate more vivid pitch lines.
- →Run the generator twice with the same inputs but different outcome framings — one functional, one emotional — and combine the strongest elements from each.
- →Avoid generic audience labels like 'small businesses'; replace with a role and situation, like 'solo accountants managing tax season alone'.
- →Generated pitches work best as cold email openers when placed in the first sentence, not buried after context-setting.
- →If you serve multiple audiences, run a separate generation for each — a pitch aimed at CTOs reads very differently than one aimed at marketing managers.
- →Test your top two candidates by using each as a LinkedIn headline for one week and comparing profile view rates before committing.
FAQ
what's the best formula for a one-liner pitch
The most reliable structure is: [product type] for [target audience] that [core outcome]. For example: 'A scheduling tool for independent therapists that eliminates no-shows.' This generator follows that formula and produces multiple variations so you can find the phrasing that fits your context.
how is a one-liner pitch different from a tagline
A tagline is short and evocative — it builds brand feeling ('Just Do It'). A one-liner pitch is descriptive and informational, telling a stranger exactly what you do with zero context needed. Taglines work on billboards; one-liners work in bios, cold emails, and investor intros.
how specific should my inputs be to get a good pitch
As specific as possible. 'Freelancers' is okay; 'freelance designers hiring their first contractor' is better. The outcome field matters most — write the end state your customer cares about ('save five hours a week') rather than a feature ('organizes tasks'). Vague inputs produce generic outputs.