A pricing page copy prompt builder helps you write the single highest-stakes page on most websites. Visitors who reach pricing are already interested; the copy either converts that interest or loses it to confusion and unanswered objections. This tool captures your real tiers, prices, audience, and the doubts buyers actually voice, then generates a prompt that makes an LLM write tier names, benefit-led feature bullets, and an objection-handling FAQ — the three elements that move a pricing page from a price list to a sales asset.
How it works
You enter your tier names and pricing so the model writes around your real structure, describe your target audience so the framing matches who is buying, and list the top objections prospects raise. The builder assembles these into a prompt that asks the model to write a short positioning line per tier, three to five benefit-led bullets (not raw features), a recommended “most popular” tier, and an FAQ that directly defuses each objection you listed. Everything is generated locally — your pricing details never leave the browser until you choose to run the prompt.
Why bullets and FAQs matter most
Pricing pages fail when they list features instead of outcomes. “Unlimited projects” means nothing until it becomes “never hit a wall as your team grows.” The prompt instructs the model to translate every feature into a benefit tied to your audience. The FAQ does the quieter work: it answers the silent objections that otherwise become closed tabs. Pre-empting “is there a contract?” or “what if it does not work for us?” in plain language removes the last hesitation before someone clicks buy.
Tips and examples
Mark your intended “most popular” tier in the prices so the model can build the anchoring and visual emphasis around it — the middle tier usually wins when framed well. Keep objections specific to your market; a developer tool and a wellness app hide very different doubts. After generating, sanity-check that no feature bullet over-promises beyond what you offer, then test the FAQ answers against questions your sales or support team actually receives. Re-run the prompt whenever you change pricing so the copy and the numbers never drift apart.