Landing Doctor
Copy Swipe File · Clarity

30 Hero Headline Formulas That Pass the 5-Second Clarity Test

Your hero headline gets about five seconds to answer one question: what is this, and why should I care? Most fail because they describe the product instead of the outcome. Below are 30 fill-in-the-blank formulas, organized by the job the headline needs to do, so you can swap in your specifics and ship a hero a stranger actually understands.

The bar

What the 5-Second Clarity Test Actually Measures

Every formula below has one job: survive a stranger. The 5-second clarity test is simple. Show your hero to someone who has never heard of you, give them about five seconds, then ask what you do and who it is for. If they can't answer, the headline failed, no matter how clever it reads. This isn't a gimmick. It maps to a long-established usability principle: visitors decide whether a page is relevant to them within seconds of landing, and most leave when the answer isn't obvious.

A passing headline answers three things. What is it? Who is it for? What changes for me? Miss any one and the reader bounces. A project-management tool that opens with "Work, reimagined" answers none of them. "The shared to-do list for remote design teams" answers all three in eight words.

Clarity beats cleverness, every time. A witty headline that needs the subhead to explain the joke has already lost the five seconds. The subhead's job is to add specificity, not to rescue meaning the headline failed to carry. If you remove the subhead and the headline becomes nonsense, the headline isn't doing its job.

Here is where formulas help and where they hurt. A formula hands you a proven structure so you stop staring at a blank cursor. But the blanks have to be filled with YOUR specific outcome, audience, and mechanism, never generic filler like "powerful," "seamless," or "best-in-class." A formula filled with vague words is still a vague headline. The structure isn't the value; the specificity you pour into it is.

Clarity is the single most-failed item we see in audits, and the reason is structural, not a skill gap: founders are too close to the product to read their own hero as a stranger would. It's also only one of twelve things a page has to get right, which is why the scoring rubric weighs it alongside value prop, CTA, proof, and the rest.

If you want to see exactly how clarity is measured and graded, the 12-dimension methodology breaks down each dimension against a shared rubric.

Formulas 1-6

Outcome-First Formulas (Lead With the Result)

The highest-converting hero pattern states the end state the visitor wants, not the feature that delivers it. People buy the destination, not the engine. Six templates with worked examples.

1. [Achieve outcome] without [the painful tradeoff]

Example: "Ship analytics dashboards without writing SQL." Fill the outcome with the customer's actual goal; fill the tradeoff with the cost they assume they'll have to pay. It works because it removes the objection inside the promise.

2. The fastest way to [outcome]

Example: "The fastest way to turn call recordings into follow-up emails." Only use "fastest" if you can defend it. Can't prove it? Swap to "the simplest way" or "a calmer way to" and keep your honesty intact.

3. Get [specific result] in [timeframe]

Example: "Get a usable budget in one evening." The timeframe has to be honest and concrete. "In minutes" reads as hype; "in one evening" reads as a real claim someone stood behind.

4. From [bad current state] to [good end state]

Example: "From messy spreadsheets to one clean revenue view." Strong because it names the before-state the visitor instantly recognizes as their own, then shows the after they want.

5. Finally, [outcome] that [removes a recurring frustration]

Example: "Finally, invoicing that chases late payers for you." The word "finally" signals you understand a pain they've carried a long time. Use it only when the frustration is genuinely chronic.

6. Stop [recurring pain]. Start [outcome].

Example: "Stop guessing why users churn. Start seeing it." Punchy and parallel. Reserve it for pain that is genuinely frequent for your ICP, or it rings false.

Formulas 7-12

Audience-First Formulas (Name the Reader)

When your edge is fit for a specific niche, calling out the audience in the headline raises perceived relevance instantly. The reader thinks: this is for someone exactly like me. Six templates for sharpening who it's for.

7. [Outcome] built for [specific audience]

Example: "Bookkeeping built for solo Shopify sellers." The narrower the audience, the stronger the signal. "Small businesses" is weak. "Solo Shopify sellers" is a magnet for exactly the right person.

8. For [audience] who [specific struggle]

Example: "For freelancers who hate chasing invoices." Names both the person and the exact moment of pain, so the right reader feels seen in one line.

9. The [category] for [audience]

Example: "The CRM for real-estate teams of one." Borrows an instantly understood category, then claims a focused slice nobody else is serving well.

10. [Audience], meet [outcome or product role]

Example: "Course creators, meet your launch checklist." Conversational and warm. Works only when the audience term is unambiguous, so they know you mean them.

11. Made for [audience], not [the generic alternative they outgrew]

Example: "Made for indie founders, not enterprise sales teams." Positions directly against the wrong-fit incumbent and flatters the reader for having moved past it.

12. Everything [audience] needs to [outcome]

Example: "Everything a coach needs to fill next month's cohort." Use sparingly. "Everything" is a big promise that the section below the fold must actually back up, or it reads as a hollow claim.

Formulas 13-18

Pain & Problem-First Formulas (Lead With the Hurt)

When the audience is problem-aware but not yet solution-aware, naming the pain out loud earns the read. They lean in because you just described their Tuesday. Six templates for problem-led heroes.

13. Tired of [specific recurring pain]?

Example: "Tired of demos that go silent afterward?" Only open with a question when the answer is an obvious yes for your ICP. A question they can answer "no" to hands them an exit.

14. [Pain] is costing you [tangible loss]

Example: "Slow landing pages are costing you signups." Frame the loss in something the reader already values. Don't invent a dollar figure you can't defend; name the real currency instead.

15. The real reason [bad outcome keeps happening]

Example: "The real reason your trial users never come back." Promises insight, which obligates the page to actually deliver it. Empty curiosity here breaks trust fast.

16. You don't have a [surface problem]. You have a [root cause].

Example: "You don't have a traffic problem. You have a clarity problem." Reframes the buyer's own diagnosis. Genuinely powerful when it's true and the reader feels the click of recognition.

17. Why [common approach] keeps failing, and what works instead

Example: "Why generic templates keep failing, and what works instead." Sets up your mechanism as the contrast to a thing they've already tried and resented.

18. [Frequency] you [pain]. It doesn't have to be that way.

Example: "Every launch you scramble. It doesn't have to be that way." Names a repeating bad moment, then offers relief. The frequency word has to be accurate to their lived experience.

Formulas 19-24

Mechanism & Proof Formulas (Lead With Why It's Believable)

For skeptical or sophisticated audiences, the headline's job shifts to credibility. Name the unique mechanism or anchor to evidence. Use these only with real backing, because a mechanism claim you can't support is worse than no mechanism at all.

19. [Outcome], powered by [your specific mechanism]

Example: "Conversion audits, scored against a 12-dimension rubric." The mechanism must be specific and real, not "AI-powered." A named, concrete method reads as substance; a buzzword reads as a wrapper.

20. The [adjective] way to [outcome]: [one-line mechanism]

Example: "The honest way to audit a page: real data, zero fake stats." The adjective sets the promise; the mechanism after the colon proves you mean it.

21. [Number] [proof unit] of [outcome]

Example: "Lessons from hundreds of landing-page audits." Only ever use a number you can actually stand behind. For an honesty-positioned brand, a fabricated count would torch the entire premise, so use a precise figure only when it's literally true.

22. Used by [credible cohort] to [outcome]

Example: "Used by indie founders to fix their first launch." Requires genuine usage. If you can't name a real cohort honestly, drop the formula rather than stretch it.

23. Not a [thing readers are skeptical of]. [What you actually are].

Example: "Not a GPT wrapper. A proprietary scoring rubric." Disarms a specific objection right in the headline, which works when the skepticism is real and widespread in your market.

24. [Outcome] backed by [evidence type]

Example: "Recommendations backed by what actually moved conversions." Keep the evidence claim defensible. "Backed by science" is hand-waving; "backed by what moved conversions" points at something real.

Formulas 25-30

Curiosity & Contrarian Formulas (Use With Care)

Curiosity gaps can earn the read, but they tip into clickbait that fails the clarity test faster than any other pattern. Six templates plus the rule that keeps them honest. The non-negotiable: the subhead must still answer what and who.

25. The [counterintuitive claim] about [topic]

Example: "The headline mistake on almost every SaaS hero." Must be paid off immediately by the subhead and the page. A curiosity gap you don't close is just a broken promise.

26. [Common belief]? Here's what the data shows.

Example: "More features sell? Here's what the audits show." Use only if you genuinely have the data. Otherwise you've written a check the page can't cash.

27. What [respected group] does differently

Example: "What high-converting pages do differently in the first 5 seconds." Borrows authority and aspiration; the reader wants to be in the in-group.

28. Most [audience] [common mistake]. The fix takes [small effort].

Example: "Most founders bury the offer. The fix takes one line." The contrast between a common error and a tiny fix is what pulls the click.

29. [Attributed principle], [audience]. Are you one?

Example: "Most visitors decide in seconds whether a page is for them, per long-standing UX research. Is yours one they keep reading?" Cite a principle or a named public source; never invent a precise figure to fill the blank.

30. The safety net: pair any headline with a plain subhead

Whatever you pick above, write a subhead that states plainly: "[What it is] for [who] that [outcome]." A curiosity headline still has to survive the 5-second test through that subhead. If a stranger can't tell what you sell after both lines, rewrite.

From 30 to 1

How to Pick and Pressure-Test Your Headline

A formula is the starting line, not the finish. Here's the repeatable process to go from 30 candidates to one shipped headline that actually passes.

Identify your reader's awareness stage

Problem-aware reader? Use Pain-First. Solution-aware and skeptical? Use Mechanism and Proof. Outcome-driven and ready? Use Outcome-First. Pick the section that matches your reader, not the cleverest line you can write.

Fill the blanks with specifics only

Replace every generic word, "powerful," "seamless," "best-in-class," with a concrete outcome, audience, timeframe, or mechanism. The acid test: if a competitor could paste their own name into your headline and it still works, it's too generic. Rewrite it.

Write the subhead as the specificity layer

Headline is the hook; subhead is the what, who, and how in one plain sentence. Together they have to answer the three clarity questions. Treat the subhead as load-bearing, not decoration.

Run the 5-second stranger test

Show only the hero to someone outside your bubble for five seconds, then ask: what does this do, and who's it for? A wrong or blank answer is a fail, full stop. Do this with two or three real people, not your co-founder.

Strip any claim you can't defend

Numbers, "fastest," "used by," any superlative. If it isn't true and provable, cut it. A defensible plain headline beats an impressive false one, and on an honesty-positioned page a false claim is the fastest way to lose the sale.

Check it against the rest of the fold

The headline has to match the CTA copy and the primary visual. A great headline with a contradicting button still confuses the reader. Make sure your headline and CTA say the same thing, which is the discipline of message match.

Before you ship

Hero Headline Clarity Checklist

Run every headline from the swipe file through this pass/fail list before it goes live. Six checks, all of which have to clear.

The non-negotiables

  • Clarity: a stranger can state what it is and who it's for after 5 seconds of headline plus subhead.
  • Specificity: no generic adjectives; the outcome, audience, or mechanism is concrete and yours alone.
  • Honesty: every claim, number, and superlative is true and defensible if a buyer asks you to prove it.

The alignment checks

  • Relevance: the named audience or pain matches who actually lands here, including the ad or source that sent them.
  • Message match: the headline aligns with the CTA copy and the hero visual, with no contradiction between them.
  • Subhead support: the subhead adds detail and answers what, who, and how. It doesn't carry the meaning alone.
Test yours

Match the Headline to the Page, Then Pressure-Test It

A headline never works alone. It sits inside a system: the subhead, the CTA, the hero visual, and everything else that loads above the scroll. The hero is the compressed, one-line version of a positioning argument the rest of the page makes in full, so it has to agree with your value proposition. If they drift apart, the page feels off even when the reader can't name why.

These formulas all serve the clarity dimension, but clarity is one of twelve things a page has to get right. A crystal-clear headline on a page with a buried offer, weak proof, and a high-friction form still won't convert, which is why the methodology scores the whole system, not just the words at the top.

Formulas get you to a strong first draft fast. But the only test that matters is whether a stranger gets it in five seconds, and you are the worst possible judge of your own headline because you already know the answer. When you've picked a formula and rewritten your hero, paste your URL into the free 60-second audit. It scores your clarity dimension and shows you exactly where a visitor would get confused, no signup, no guessing. Run it, see what a stranger sees, and fix the line that's costing you readers.

To see how the headline interacts with the other eleven dimensions, walk through the full landing page audit framework, which scores each part of the page against a shared rubric.

Frequently asked

Questions, answered

What is the 5-second clarity test for a landing page headline?

The 5-second clarity test is a stranger check: someone unfamiliar with your product reads only the hero (headline plus subhead) for about five seconds and should be able to say what it is, who it's for, and what changes for them. It reflects the well-established UX principle that visitors judge a page's relevance within seconds of landing. Failing this test is the most common clarity issue found in landing page audits, because founders are too close to the product to read their own hero as a stranger would.

How long should a landing page headline be?

Short enough to read in one glance, long enough to be specific. Most clear hero headlines land in a single readable line, with the subhead carrying the extra detail. The real constraint isn't word count, it's whether a stranger understands what, who, and why in five seconds. Don't pad a thin headline with adjectives to make it feel substantial; add a concrete subhead instead.

Should my headline focus on benefits or features?

Lead with the outcome the reader wants (the benefit), then let the subhead or below-fold content name the feature or mechanism that delivers it. The exception: sophisticated, skeptical audiences sometimes need the mechanism up front for credibility, which is what the Mechanism and Proof formulas are for. The real test is believability plus clarity, not a rigid benefit-versus-feature rule.

Are headline formulas bad for SEO or originality?

No. Formulas are structural starting points, not copy you paste verbatim. The blanks get filled with your specific outcome, audience, and mechanism, which makes each finished headline unique. The risk isn't the formula, it's leaving the blanks generic. A specific, filled-in formula reads as original and converts better than a vague "creative" line that says nothing.

How do I know if my current hero headline is clear enough?

Run the 5-second stranger test with two or three people outside your team, check it against the clarity checklist (specificity, honesty, message match), or paste your URL into a free audit that scores the clarity dimension automatically and flags exactly where a visitor would get confused. If real strangers can't tell what you do and who it's for, the headline needs work regardless of how good it sounds to you.

Can I use more than one formula at once?

Yes, the strongest heroes often combine them: an outcome-first headline with an audience-first subhead, or a curiosity headline rescued by a plain what-who-how subhead (Formula 30). The only rule is that the combined hero still has to pass the 5-second test. Layering formulas should add precision, not fog.

See your landing page score

Run your page through the same diagnostic. The free preview takes about a minute — no signup.

Audit my page