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Tagline Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A tagline generator is the fastest way to move from a blank page to a shortlist of brand phrases worth editing. Most founders and marketers know what their product does — the hard part is compressing that into five words that feel inevitable. This tool takes three inputs: your brand name, a plain-language description of what it does, and a vibe setting. The five vibe options (Inspiring, Bold, Friendly, Minimal, Witty) pull the output in genuinely different directions, so a fintech app and a kids' learning platform don't end up with the same language. Generate a batch, treat the results as raw angles, and refine from there.

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How to use

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

Detailed instructions

  1. Type your brand or product name into the Brand Name field, replacing the default placeholder.
  2. Write a plain-language description of what the brand does in the 'What does it do?' field — focus on the outcome, not the category.
  3. Select a Brand Vibe that matches your target audience's expectations, not just your personal preference.
  4. Set the count to at least 5, then click Generate to produce your first batch of taglines.
  5. Copy the options that have the right shape, adjust any wording that's close but not quite right, and run another batch with a different vibe to compare angles.

Use Cases

  • Writing the hero headline for a SaaS product's launch page before A/B testing copy variants
  • Positioning a freelance consultant's LinkedIn profile headline for a new target market
  • Generating Bold-vibe slogan options to test in a paid social campaign before committing to one
  • Drafting tagline angles for a pitch deck's opening slide ahead of a seed-round presentation
  • Refreshing a brand's Substack or newsletter header after pivoting to a new audience

Tips

  • Run the same brand description through two or three different vibes back-to-back — the contrast reveals which emotional angle fits best.
  • If your first batch feels generic, make the 'what it does' description more specific: name the user, the problem, and the measurable result.
  • Strong taglines often emerge when you cut a generated phrase by two or three words — look for the core idea buried inside the longer output.
  • Avoid taglines that only make sense internally; test candidates on someone unfamiliar with your brand and ask what they think you sell.
  • For campaign slogans, use the Witty or Bold vibe and generate higher counts — those styles produce more variation and unexpected angles.
  • Paste your shortlist into your website's hero section mockup before committing — a tagline that reads well in isolation may look wrong at display size.

FAQ

how specific should the 'what it does' field be for better taglines

The more concrete, the better. 'Helps people focus' produces generic output; 'helps remote workers finish deep work in shorter sessions' gives the generator something real to compress. Describe the actual outcome or mechanism, not just the product category.

can I trademark a tagline generated with this tool

Potentially yes — trademark eligibility depends on distinctiveness and whether the phrase is already in use in your industry. Before using any tagline commercially, search the USPTO database and run a broad web search. For anything tied to real investment, get a trademark attorney to verify clearance.

what's the difference between a tagline and a slogan

A tagline is a long-term brand identifier meant to hold up for years, like 'Just Do It.' A slogan is typically tied to a specific campaign and can change seasonally. Both should be short and emotionally resonant, but a tagline needs to work without any campaign context around it.