Free tool · instant

Nail your one-liner

If you can't say what you do in one sentence, nobody will repeat it. Fill the four blanks, get six positioning angles — copy the one that clicks.

A sharp one-liner gets you the click. Chad keeps them coming back.

Slap Post is your AI X coach — Chad shows what's working, rewrites weak hooks, and Slap Magic schedules the winners into your best slots, hands-free.

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What is the Value Proposition Generator?

The Value Proposition Generator is a free one-liner generator for startups and founders. Give it your product name, who it's for, the pain you remove and the outcome you deliver, and it writes six sharp value prop examples in seconds. Use it to fix a fuzzy positioning statement, rewrite your X bio, or land on a landing-page headline people actually repeat.

How to use it

  1. Type your product name and who it's for (your target audience).
  2. Add the pain you remove and the outcome you deliver.
  3. Hit "Generate one-liners" and tap any of the six value prop examples to copy it.

Frequently asked questions

What is a value proposition generator?

A value proposition generator turns four inputs — your product, who it's for, the pain you remove and the outcome you deliver — into ready-to-use one-liners. It gives you several value prop examples so you can pick the angle that lands and paste it into your bio or landing page.

Is this value prop generator free?

Yes. This one-liner generator for startups is completely free with no login. Fill the four blanks and copy any of the six positioning angles instantly.

What makes a good startup one-liner?

A strong one-liner names who it's for, the pain it removes and the outcome in a single repeatable sentence. If a stranger can repeat it after reading once, it works. The generator gives you six angles so you can test which is clearest.

Where should I use my value proposition?

Drop it in your X bio, the hero of your landing page, your Product Hunt tagline, cold outreach and your pitch. A sharp value prop is the first thing people read, so reuse the same one-liner everywhere for consistency.