Landing Page Copy Prompt Builder

Build AI prompts for hero copy, benefits, and CTA sections

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A landing page copy prompt builder gives an LLM the structure it needs to write a page that actually converts, not just a wall of marketing words. The best landing pages follow a deliberate order — a sharp promise, the benefits behind it, the objections that block a sale, proof that it works, and a final ask. This tool captures your product, audience, single biggest benefit, and the action you want visitors to take, then generates a prompt that asks the model to write each of those sections in sequence.

How it works

You enter the product name, your target audience, the headline benefit (the one promise the page is built around), and the CTA goal — the single action you want visitors to take. The builder writes a prompt instructing the model to produce a hero block (headline, supporting subhead, and primary CTA), a benefits section that turns features into outcomes, an objection-handling block, a social-proof placeholder framed for your audience, and a closing CTA. Everything is assembled locally; your inputs stay in the browser until you run the prompt yourself.

Why structure beats clever wording

Conversion comes from sequence as much as phrasing. A visitor scans the hero, decides whether to keep reading, then looks for proof and reasons to hesitate before acting. A page that answers those questions in the order people ask them outperforms one with prettier sentences but no flow. By forcing one headline benefit and one CTA goal, the prompt keeps every section pulling in the same direction instead of competing for attention — the most common reason landing pages underperform.

Tips and examples

Make the headline benefit a concrete outcome, not a category — “ship your first AI feature this week” beats “AI tools for developers.” Keep one CTA goal per page; if you need a signup and a demo, build two pages and run the prompt twice. After generating, replace the social-proof placeholder with a real testimonial or metric, since fabricated proof is both ineffective and risky. Re-run the prompt with different headline benefits to A/B test which promise your audience responds to before committing to a final hero.

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