Random Marketing Copy Generator
Create deterministic marketing copy for various contexts: headlines, slogans, taglines, subtitles, captions, and calls-to-action. Customize the topic and generate multiple variations.
Also known as: marketing generator · copy generator · headline writer
seeded · synthetic data
Presets
Output
About this tool, tips & examples
What it does
The Random Marketing Copy Generator produces copy variations around your product or topic: headlines, slogans, taglines, subtitles, captions, and calls-to-action. Type the topic, pick a copy type, and generate up to 100 template-driven variations per run — seeded, so a promising batch can be regenerated.
Common use cases
- Campaign brainstorming — thirty headline candidates beat a blank page; the misses sharpen your sense of what the hit should say.
- A/B test inventory — CTA and headline variants to seed testing queues (presets for headlines, slogans, and CTAs).
- Landing page drafts — placeholder copy in the right register while design and message settle.
- Copy exercises — raw material for editing practice: take five generated slogans and make one good.
Settings
- Copy Type — headline, slogan, tagline, subtitle, caption, or call-to-action.
- Topic/Product — your subject, woven into the templates.
- How many — 1 to 100 variations, exportable as text or JSON.
- Seed — the same seed, type, and topic regenerate the identical batch.
Privacy note
Copy is generated locally in your browser and never uploaded — your product ideas and topics stay on your machine. Output is synthetic template text: a starting point for a human, not finished advertising.
FAQ
Is this good enough to publish as-is? Treat it as a brainstorm partner: generated copy is grammatical and on-topic but generic by construction. The value is volume and angles — the polish is yours.
Any claims I should watch for? Yes — templates can produce superlatives (“the best…”). Advertising rules about substantiating claims apply to whatever you publish, so edit accordingly.
How do I get more variety? Change the seed for a fresh batch, vary the topic phrasing, and try different copy types against the same product — CTAs and taglines pull very different levers.