Hero section copy formulas
Five formulas that take a hero from "what does this do?" to "I want this."
A hero is the first 200 milliseconds of your offer. Get it right and the visitor reads the rest of the page. Get it wrong and nothing else matters. Here are five formulas that take a hero from "what does this do?" to "I want this," with the conditions under which each one wins.
Formula one: the problem-solution lead
Pattern: name the painful problem in the headline, name the solution in the subhead. Best for audiences who feel the pain acutely and don't yet have a name for the category that solves it.
Headline: "Your campaign launches die in design review." Subhead: "Spin up landing pages, forms, and giveaways from a prompt — ship the same day, no designer required." This works because it earns the reader's attention by naming a frustration they recognize, then immediately resolves the tension. The risk is leading with too much pain — three sentences of doom in the hero is depressing, not motivating. Name the problem in one line and pivot.
Formula two: the outcome-led promise
Pattern: lead with the result the visitor wants. Best for audiences already shopping and comparing — they don't need to be sold on the problem, they need to be told you'll get them out the other side.
Headline: "Ship a landing page in fifteen minutes." Subhead: "Describe what you need. Your landing page builder writes the copy, builds the layout, and connects the form. You publish."
The trap: outcome promises that aren't believable read as marketing fluff. "Triple your conversions" is wallpaper. "Ship a landing page in fifteen minutes" is a claim a reader can verify in fifteen minutes, which is exactly what makes it work. Headline formulas covers more variations of this pattern.
Formula three: the category-naming claim
Pattern: declare what the product is in plain language. Best for genuinely new categories, or for products fighting their way out of an overcrowded one.
- "The prompt-to-page builder." — declares a new category in five words.
- "The campaign tool that ships in a day, not a sprint." — repositions inside an existing category.
- "Landing pages, forms, and giveaways. One tool. One prompt." — names the bundle.
The risk is naming a category nobody recognizes. If the visitor's mental model has no slot for "prompt-to-page builder," the headline does work but the subhead has to land the analogy fast. The subhead becomes the bridge: "Like a landing page builder, but it writes itself."
Formula four: the user-named hero
Pattern: name the audience in the headline. Best when your offer fits one specific user well and feels generic to everyone else, and when paid traffic can be segmented to match.
Headline: "Built for marketing teams that ship every week." Subhead: "Your campaign tool, your landing pages, your forms — all in one place, all from a prompt."
The user-named hero punches above its weight on cold traffic because the visitor self-identifies inside the first second. The downside: it cannibalizes adjacent audiences. If a B2B agency lead lands on a page headlined "Built for ecommerce founders," they bounce. The fix is matching landing pages to ad audiences — see landing page best practices on message match.
Formula five: the curiosity gap
Pattern: tease the mechanism without giving it away. Best when the offer is genuinely novel and the visitor benefits from being pulled into the body of the page.
Headline: "The fastest way to ship a landing page isn't a template." Subhead: "It's describing what you need and watching it build itself."
Curiosity gaps are the riskiest of the five formulas. When they work, they pull readers deep into the page. When they fail, they read as clickbait — and the bounce happens before the visitor reaches the subhead. Two rules: the gap has to be honest (the body of the page has to actually deliver the answer), and the subhead has to do meaningful payoff work, not just rephrase the headline.
Picking the right formula
Most teams default to outcome-led because it feels safe. It's not always wrong, but it's rarely the strongest choice. A working test:
- Is the visitor in pain right now? Use problem-solution.
- Are they comparing options? Use outcome-led.
- Is the product genuinely new? Use category-naming.
- Is the audience narrow and reachable? Use user-named.
- Is the mechanism the interesting part? Use curiosity.
And no matter which formula you pick: every word in the hero earns its place. If you can cut a word and the meaning survives, cut it. The hero isn't the place for filler. Above-the-fold design priorities walks through what else belongs in those 600 pixels, and the CTA next to the hero deserves its own discipline.