About Value Proposition Generator
Value Proposition Generator crafts a one-sentence statement that explains what you do, who it is for, and why it is better than the alternative. Use it for your homepage hero, pitch deck slide, sales email opener, or any moment when you have one line to earn the next interaction.
Who this tool is for
- Founders writing the homepage hero line for a new product or website
- Product marketers documenting the value prop for a launch or repositioning
- Sales teams crafting one-liners for cold outreach and demo openings
- Brand strategists running positioning workshops with leadership teams
- Investors and operators helping portfolio companies sharpen their pitch
Real use cases
- Write the homepage hero line for a B2B SaaS company launching its public site
- Draft a value prop for a pitch deck investor slide that explains why customers buy
- Create three positioning alternatives (technical, business-outcome, emotional) to test with customers
- Refresh a tired value prop after a product expansion or audience shift
- Build a value prop matrix for different personas of the same product
How to use Value Proposition Generator
- Identify the target customer specifically — title, company size, situation
- Describe the problem they have today in their words
- State your solution in one phrase — what you do, not how
- List the most measurable result or differentiator (a number is best)
- Explain why this is different from the alternative they would otherwise use
Tips for better results
- Specific beats clever — "cut payroll close time from 5 days to 5 hours" beats "modernize payroll"
- Test value props with 10–20 target customers — A/B test on the homepage and measure click-through and signup rates
- A value prop is one sentence; positioning is a paragraph; messaging is a doc — pick the right level for the work
- Update the value prop when the product, the audience, or the competition meaningfully changes
Frequently asked questions
How long should a value proposition be?
One sentence, ideally under 20 words. If you cannot say it in one sentence, you have not finished thinking about it. The supporting paragraph below it can add detail.
What is the difference between a value prop and a tagline?
A value prop explains what you do and why it matters. A tagline is a memorable line, often emotional, that sits with the brand. Value prop is rational; tagline is brand identity.
How do I know if our value prop is working?
Measure homepage scroll depth, demo sign-up rates, and reply rates on cold email opening lines. A value prop that does not lift these numbers needs rewriting, not defending.
Should we have different value props for different customer segments?
For two or more very different audiences, yes — run dedicated landing pages with segment-specific value props. The company-level value prop stays one, but page-level can vary.