Most founders don't fail because of bad ideas.
They fail because nobody ever feels their idea.
I kept seeing the same pattern over and over:
great product
weak landing page
unclear message
zero conversions
And honestly… I've been there too.
So I built something for that exact moment when you have something real, but no time (or clarity) to turn it into a proper launch.
It helps you go from idea → clean, structured landing page in a fraction of the time it usually takes.
No overthinking. No designer paralysis.” Just something you can actually ship and test.
Because validation doesn't happen when your product is perfect.
It happens when it’s in front of people.
Curious what other founders think:
What's the hardest part for you when launching something new — the idea, the build, or the landing page?
To answer your question — for me the landing page is easily the hardest part, and I think it's because it forces you to answer a question most founders avoid: "what do I actually want someone to feel in the first 5 seconds?"
Building the product is comfortable because it's concrete — you know what to do next. But writing a landing page means making hard choices about positioning, and that means saying no to all the other things your product could be. Most founders (myself included) try to cram every feature onto the page instead of picking one clear promise.
What helped us was obsessively testing the first line visitors see. We went through probably 15 variations before landing on something that actually converted. The version that worked wasn't the cleverest copy — it was the one that described the outcome in the most specific way possible. Vague benefits like "save time" never worked. Concrete ones like "get ad creatives for 13 platforms in 30 seconds" did. Specificity builds trust before someone even scrolls.
Cool that you're building tooling around this problem — there's definitely a gap between "I have an idea" and "I have a page I'm not embarrassed to share."