Coming Soon Page Copy Generator

Pre-launch page copy to build anticipation

Generate coming-soon landing page copy with a headline, a value-proposition teaser, and an email-capture call to action. Pick a product type such as app, SaaS, store, or event and reroll until the wording fits your launch. It runs free in your browser on Gera Tools, with nothing uploaded.

Last updated Source: Gera Tools

What should a coming soon page include?

A strong coming-soon page has a clear headline that names the benefit, one or two lines teasing the value, and a single call to action — usually an email field to capture interested visitors. Keep it short and avoid asking for more than an email before launch.

A coming-soon page is a single landing page you publish before a product is ready, designed to capture interest and build an email list ahead of launch. Its job is narrow: communicate the benefit, create a little anticipation, and collect an email address. This tool generates that copy — a headline, a teaser line, and an email-capture call to action — tailored to the type of product you are launching.

How it works

The generator keeps phrase banks segmented by product type — app, SaaS, store, newsletter, and event. When you click Generate it:

  1. Reads the product type you chose.
  2. Selects one headline, one teaser, and one call-to-action line at random from that type’s bank.
  3. Combines them into a ready-to-paste coming-soon block.

Each part is chosen independently, so the number of unique combinations is the product of the three bank sizes per category, giving plenty of variety on reroll.

The anatomy of a high-converting coming-soon page

Getting people to leave their email before your product exists is harder than it sounds. Three structural decisions determine whether a coming-soon page converts:

1. The headline must name the outcome, not the product. “The fastest way to track freelance invoices” outperforms “InvoiceTrack is coming.” Visitors want to know what life looks like after they sign up, not what your app is called.

2. The teaser should create specific curiosity. A line like “We’re building the thing you’ve been doing in spreadsheets” implies the reader already has the problem, which is far more compelling than a feature list. The generator produces this kind of implication rather than product descriptions.

3. The call to action should reduce the ask to its minimum. “Be first to know” or “Get early access” commits the visitor to almost nothing — just an email address. Compare that to “Sign up, tell us your industry, and describe your workflow” which loses most people at the first question.

Worked example

For a SaaS product, a generated block might read:

  • Headline: The tool your team has been waiting for
  • Teaser: We built it because we kept looking for it and it didn’t exist.
  • CTA: Join the waitlist — early access opens soon.

Take that, replace “your team” with your actual audience (“your dev team”, “your design studio”), and the page is ready to go live in minutes.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Asking for more than an email address. Name, job title, company size — all of these reduce sign-up rates. Add those fields after you have their email.
  • Forgetting to follow up. An email collected before launch is nearly worthless if you send nothing until the launch day. A brief update a week before the launch date reactivates cold leads.
  • No launch date. Even a vague “launching this summer” anchors the wait and reduces bounce from people who assume the page is abandoned.
  • Using the copy verbatim without personalizing. Every generated line contains placeholder benefit words — replace them with specifics before publishing.

All generation runs locally in your browser. Reroll as often as you need.