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Placeholder Onboarding Copy Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A placeholder onboarding copy generator saves designers from the lorem ipsum trap that kills momentum in design reviews. Real onboarding screens live or die by copy length, tone, and CTA weight — none of which you can judge with gibberish text. This tool generates structured headline-and-body copy for each screen, tuned to five app categories: productivity, fitness, finance, social, and general. Set the number of screens (one splash screen or a full multi-step flow) and the app type, and you get domain-specific language that fits naturally into Figma or Sketch without heavy editing. Stakeholders can actually evaluate pacing and voice, not just layout.

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How to use

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

Detailed instructions

  1. Set the 'Number of Screens' input to match the onboarding flow length you are designing — three is recommended for most apps.
  2. Select the 'App Type' that closest matches your product category to get domain-appropriate vocabulary and benefit framing.
  3. Click the generate button and review the labeled output blocks, each containing a headline and body text for one screen.
  4. Copy individual screen blocks or the full set and paste directly into your Figma, Sketch, or prototype tool text layers.
  5. Use the output as a first draft — replace app-generic references with your actual feature names before client or developer handoff.

Use Cases

  • Dropping realistic copy into Figma onboarding frames before a client design review
  • Building a 3-screen fitness app prototype in Sketch with goal-focused benefit language
  • Populating investor pitch deck slides showing a finance app's onboarding sequence
  • Preparing developer handoff files where copy length affects component sizing and layout
  • Creating a UX writing brief for a contractor using generated copy as the structural scaffold

Tips

  • Generate the same screen count twice with different app types and compare — hybrid products like a finance-fitness tracker benefit from blended vocabulary.
  • Paste the generated copy into your prototype before your design review, not after — stakeholders give more actionable feedback when screens look finished.
  • For a five-screen flow, generate a three-screen set and a two-screen set separately, then combine the strongest screens from each output.
  • If your brand voice is warmer or more technical than the output, use the generated structure (headline length, sentence count) but rewrite the words — the architecture is the hard part.
  • Compare headline character counts across generated screens to catch layout inconsistencies before a developer receives the handoff file.
  • Run a quick usability test with the placeholder copy in place — users often respond to tone and clarity even when they know the text is temporary.

FAQ

why shouldn't I just use lorem ipsum for onboarding screen mockups

Onboarding screens are unusually copy-dependent — the headline length, benefit phrasing, and CTA all affect how balanced the layout feels. Lorem ipsum makes it impossible for stakeholders to judge whether a value prop lands or a button label fits. Realistic placeholder copy lets you evaluate messaging and design in the same review.

how many onboarding screens should a mobile app have

Three screens is the widely cited sweet spot: one to establish value, one to build trust, one to prompt action. More than four screens risks drop-off before the user reaches the main interface. Use this generator's default of three, then increase or decrease based on how many distinct features need introducing.

can I ship the generated onboarding copy directly in my app

The output is a solid structural first draft with correctly framed headlines, benefit statements, and CTAs — but it's not production-ready as-is. Before shipping, replace generic references with your actual feature names, adjust tone to match your brand voice, and have a copywriter do a final pass. It cuts briefing time significantly.