| name | landing-page-generator |
| description | Generate landing pages with PAS, AIDA, or StoryBrand — marketing copy from a product brief, or a scannable landing-page rewrite of an existing README. The one skill for landing-page work. Not for blog posts, UX audits, or HTML builds. |
| license | MIT |
| effort | high |
| metadata | {"version":"1.2.0","author":"Luong NGUYEN <luongnv89@gmail.com>"} |
Landing Page Generator
Generate landing pages using proven copywriting frameworks (PAS, AIDA, StoryBrand). One skill,
two modes: write conversion-focused marketing copy from a product brief, or transform an existing
project README into a scannable, visual landing page.
Two Modes
Pick the mode that matches the input and deliverable:
| Mode | Use when | Input | Output | Where |
|---|
| A — Landing copy | You need marketing copy for a sales/landing page | Product/service brief | Conversion-focused copy (hero → CTA) + A/B notes, in chat | This file, below |
| B — README landing page | You have an existing project README.md to make persuasive and scannable | Repo README.md + project files | Rewritten README.md (mermaid, tables, collapsed details) + README.backup.md | references/readme-mode.md |
If the user asks to "turn my README into a landing page", "make my GitHub page sell the project",
or similar, follow Mode B in references/readme-mode.md. Otherwise use Mode A below. When
unsure which applies, ask.
Anti-Slop Rules
AI-generated marketing copy has predictable tells that kill credibility. See references/anti-slop-rules.md for banned phrases and structural patterns to avoid.
Quick test: read each sentence and ask "does this give the reader information they didn't already have?" If not, cut it.
Prerequisites
Before writing, confirm the user supplied enough detail to make specific claims:
- Product/service name and target audience
- Problem solved and primary desired action
- Proof points, metrics, testimonials, or named differentiators
- Pricing/trial/guarantee details if a pricing section is requested
If proof is missing, write placeholders clearly labeled [proof needed]; never invent customers,
metrics, guarantees, scarcity, or compliance claims.
Workflow (Mode A — Landing copy)
Mode B (README landing page) has its own self-contained workflow in references/readme-mode.md.
Step 1: Gather Product/Service Information
Collect before writing:
| Input | Purpose |
|---|
| Product/service name | Anchor all copy |
| Target audience | Tone, pain points, vocabulary |
| Problem solved | Core value prop |
| Competitive advantage | Differentiation |
| Desired visitor action | Primary CTA |
| Social proof | Testimonials, metrics, logos |
If any core input is missing—product/service name, target audience, problem solved, or primary
CTA—ask before proceeding. For missing proof, pricing, or guarantee details, proceed with [proof needed]
placeholders per Prerequisites and guardrails.
Step 2: Choose Copywriting Framework
| Framework | Best for | Structure |
|---|
| PAS | Pain-driven B2B, productivity tools | Problem → Agitate → Solution |
| AIDA | Consumer apps, broad audiences | Attention → Interest → Desire → Action |
| StoryBrand | Narrative brands, coaching, services | Hero → Guide → Plan → CTA → Success/Failure |
Tell the user which framework you picked. Let them override.
Step 3: Generate Landing Page Sections
Populate every section in the framework-specific template from references/section-templates.md
that matches the framework chosen in Step 2. Use that template's section names and order exactly—do not
substitute a generic Hero/Problem/Solution layout when another framework applies.
Content quality (all frameworks):
- Headlines: 10 words or fewer, value-led, specific to the audience
- Subheadlines: 1–2 sentences that expand the headline without repeating it
- Body copy: active voice, benefit-led; address pain points with concrete scenarios where the template calls for them
- Features: 3–5 items described as outcomes, not feature lists
- How It Works: 3–4 simple steps; icon concept + description per step; CTA at the end
- Social proof: quote + name + role + company, or
[proof needed] when proof is unavailable
- Pricing (if applicable): feature comparison, recommended plan callout, guarantee copy or
[proof needed]
- FAQ: 5–7 common objections with clear, confident answers
- CTAs: follow CTA Button Rules; place primary and secondary CTAs where the template specifies
- Final CTA: risk reversal (guarantee, trial); urgency or scarcity only when genuine; button text reinforces value
Step 4: Format Output
Use the template matching the chosen framework in references/section-templates.md (PAS, AIDA, or
StoryBrand). Keep large reusable structures in references to protect the agent's context budget; read
only the reference needed for the requested output. End with optimization notes: A/B test ideas and
conversion tips.
Step 5: Copywriting Best Practices
- Active voice, present tense
- Benefits over features
- Specific numbers and data where available
- Address objections directly
- Urgency without pressure tactics
- Short, scannable sentences
- "You" language (customer-focused)
- Multiple CTAs throughout the page
CTA Button Rules
- Start with an action verb
- Be specific about the outcome
- First person when appropriate ("Start My Free Trial")
- Genuine urgency ("Get Instant Access")
- Never generic ("Submit", "Click Here")
Example Triggers
- "Write landing page copy for a B2B SaaS tool"
- "Create sales page content using PAS framework"
- "Generate hero section copy for my product"
- "Write conversion-optimized CTAs"
- "Help me with landing page headlines"
Expected Output Example
Example input:
Generate a landing page for AcmeDesk, a helpdesk for solo founders. Audience: indie SaaS founders.
Primary CTA: Start free trial. Differentiator: setup in 10 minutes, shared inbox + AI drafts.
Expected output:
LANDING PAGE COPY
Product/Service: AcmeDesk
Framework: PAS
HERO SECTION
Headline: Answer Every Customer Without Hiring Support
Subheadline: AcmeDesk gives solo founders a shared inbox and AI draft replies that are ready in 10 minutes, not weeks.
CTA Button: "Start My Free Trial"
Trust Bar: [proof needed — add user count, testimonial, or response-time metric]
...
OPTIMIZATION NOTES
A/B Test Ideas: test speed-focused vs founder-control headlines.
Safety & Guardrails
- Confirm missing inputs before generating a full page; if the user wants speed, proceed with clearly
marked assumptions.
- Treat unsupported claims as an error: add
[proof needed] instead of fabricating metrics, logos,
testimonials, awards, guarantees, medical/legal/financial outcomes, or fake urgency.
- Validate every CTA against the CTA Button Rules before delivery.
- Warn when the requested copy depends on regulated claims, competitor comparisons, or scarcity that
requires legal or factual review.
Edge Cases
- If the user asks for only one section, generate that section and a short note on how it fits the page.
- If the product is vague, ask 2–4 targeted questions rather than writing generic copy.
- If the user requests HTML, design, wireframes, SEO strategy, or UX critique, explain that this skill
only generates landing-page copy and offer a copy-only structure.
- If social proof is unavailable, write a proof slot rather than a fake testimonial.
Acceptance Criteria
Verify before delivering:
- Output follows the framework-specific template in
references/section-templates.md or a user-specified
subset.
- Chosen framework is named and consistently applied.
- Hero headline is 10 words or fewer, specific, and value-led.
- Every CTA starts with an action verb and states the outcome.
- Unsupported proof is labeled
[proof needed]; no fake claims are present.
- Copy passes
references/anti-slop-rules.md.
- Final response includes A/B test ideas and conversion tips unless the user asked for a single section.