ph-tagline-writer

📁 yoanbernabeu/producthunt-skills 📅 Jan 24, 2026
10
总安装量
5
周安装量
#29033
全站排名
安装命令
npx skills add https://github.com/yoanbernabeu/producthunt-skills --skill ph-tagline-writer

Agent 安装分布

claude-code 4
opencode 3
gemini-cli 3
codex 3
kimi-cli 3

Skill 文档

Product Hunt Tagline Writer

This skill helps you craft perfect taglines for Product Hunt – the single most important piece of copy that determines whether users click on your product.

When to Use This Skill

  • Writing your Product Hunt tagline
  • Testing multiple tagline variations
  • Refining existing taglines for clarity
  • Adapting taglines for different audiences
  • Checking tagline against best practices

The Golden Rules

Rule 1: Under 60 Characters

  • Product Hunt truncates longer taglines
  • Optimal length: 40-55 characters
  • Every character must earn its place

Rule 2: Instant Clarity

  • Reader should understand what product does in 3 seconds
  • No jargon, no buzzwords, no fluff
  • Assume zero context

Rule 3: Value First

  • Lead with the benefit, not the feature
  • Answer “Why should I care?”
  • Focus on the outcome

Proven Tagline Formulas

Formula 1: “X for Y”

Compare to known product for instant understanding.

Structure: [Known Product] for [Target Audience/Use Case]

Examples:

  • “Notion for personal finance”
  • “Figma for video editing”
  • “Stripe for marketplace payments”

When to Use: When your product is similar to something well-known


Formula 2: Action + Outcome

State what user does and what they get.

Structure: [Action] [Object] [Positive Outcome]

Examples:

  • “Turn feedback into product improvements”
  • “Write emails that get replies”
  • “Build apps without code”

When to Use: When the action-result relationship is clear


Formula 3: Problem Killer

Directly address the pain point.

Structure: [Eliminate/Stop/End] [Pain Point] [How]

Examples:

  • “Never lose a customer email again”
  • “Stop wasting time on manual reports”
  • “End meeting chaos forever”

When to Use: When your audience has a clear, urgent pain


Formula 4: Speed/Ease Promise

Emphasize how fast or easy something becomes.

Structure: [Action] in [Timeframe/Ease]

Examples:

  • “Create landing pages in 60 seconds”
  • “Deploy APIs without configuration”
  • “Design logos with one click”

When to Use: When speed or simplicity is your key differentiator


Formula 5: Transformation

Show the before/after state.

Structure: Turn [Current State] into [Desired State]

Examples:

  • “Turn ideas into shipped products”
  • “Turn strangers into loyal customers”
  • “Turn chaos into organized workflows”

When to Use: When the transformation is dramatic and desirable


Formula 6: The “But Better”

Position against existing behavior.

Structure: [What they already do], but [improvement]

Examples:

  • “Spreadsheets, but for product teams”
  • “Email, but without the noise”
  • “Notes, but with AI superpowers”

When to Use: When improving on something people already use


Formula 7: Specific Number

Add credibility with specifics.

Structure: [Number]x [Improvement] for [Activity]

Examples:

  • “10x faster database queries”
  • “3x more replies from cold emails”
  • “50% less time on code reviews”

When to Use: When you have impressive metrics to share

Tagline Testing Checklist

Clarity Test

  • Can someone outside your industry understand it?
  • Does it pass the “explain to mom” test?
  • Would a 10-year-old get the gist?

Specificity Test

  • Could this tagline only describe YOUR product?
  • Is it different from competitors’ messaging?
  • Does it avoid generic terms?

Value Test

  • Is the benefit immediately clear?
  • Does it answer “What’s in it for me?”
  • Would you click based on this tagline alone?

Character Count Test

  • Under 60 characters? (Required)
  • Under 50 characters? (Better)
  • Every word necessary? (Best)

What to AVOID

Red Flags

  • ❌ “World’s first…” (Unprovable, distracting)
  • ❌ “Revolutionary…” (Empty buzzword)
  • ❌ “AI-powered…” (Overused, meaningless alone)
  • ❌ “All-in-one…” (Vague, unfocused)
  • ❌ “Best…” (Subjective, unbelievable)
  • ❌ “Next-gen…” (Meaningless)

Common Mistakes

  • ❌ Being clever over being clear
  • ❌ Using internal jargon
  • ❌ Focusing on features over benefits
  • ❌ Trying to say too much
  • ❌ Being vague to sound inclusive

Tagline Workshop Process

Step 1: Brain Dump (5 min)

Write 10+ tagline variations without judgment

Step 2: Categorize (3 min)

Group by formula type (X for Y, Problem Killer, etc.)

Step 3: Test Clarity (5 min)

Share top 5 with someone unfamiliar with your product

Step 4: Character Count (2 min)

Trim all options to under 60 characters

Step 5: Final Selection (5 min)

Pick top 3, sleep on it, choose winner

Examples from Top Launches

Product Tagline Characters Formula
Notion “All-in-one workspace” 21 Category
Linear “The issue tracker you’ll enjoy using” 38 Experience
Raycast “Supercharged productivity” 26 Benefit
Loom “Video messaging for work” 26 X for Y
Figma “Design, prototype, collaborate” 30 Actions

Output Format

When generating taglines, provide:

TAGLINE OPTIONS FOR: [Product Name]

TOP RECOMMENDATION:
"[Tagline]" (X characters)
- Formula: [Formula type]
- Why it works: [Brief explanation]

ALTERNATIVES:
1. "[Tagline]" (X chars) - [Formula]
2. "[Tagline]" (X chars) - [Formula]
3. "[Tagline]" (X chars) - [Formula]

TESTING SUGGESTION:
Share these 3 with [target audience] and ask:
"Based only on this tagline, what do you think this product does?"