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Create a concise elevator pitch in under 30 seconds

Turn your idea, role, or product brief into share-ready elevator pitches. Pick an audience, choose a length and tone, and get editable variants with suggested openers and follow-ups.

Quick clarity

Why use an elevator pitch generator?

Short oral introductions require a strict structure — a clear problem, a compact solution, and one concrete outcome. This generator focuses on that structure so you can stop rewriting and start testing different tones and audiences.

  • Save time by generating multiple concise variants in seconds
  • Avoid vague or jargon-heavy language with template-driven prompts
  • Tailor one core message for investors, customers, hiring managers, or events

Purpose-built prompts

Prompt clusters (what you can generate)

Choose a prompt cluster aligned to your audience and outcome. Each cluster includes length and tone presets and produces editable copy plus suggested openers and follow-ups.

Short investor intro (30s)

Problem → solution → one early indicator of validation. Tone: confident; Length: ~30s.

  • Example prompt: “In 30 seconds, describe Acme — the problem it solves, the solution, and one early sign of traction.”

Customer benefits pitch (15s)

One-sentence customer-focused value proposition. Tone: benefit-focused; Length: ~15s.

  • Example prompt: “In one sentence for a potential customer, state the problem, how the product fixes it, and the primary benefit.”

Technical founder pitch (45s)

Architecture, defensibility, and a concrete use case for engineers or technical investors.

  • Example prompt: “Explain the unique technical approach and why it’s defensible.”

Recruiter / personal intro (20s)

Role, top expertise, and the candidate’s immediate value to a team.

  • Example prompt: “Summarize [Name]’s role, core skills, and the value they bring in one 20-second intro.”

Networking opener (10–15s)

One-liner that sparks conversation at events with a curiosity hook.

  • Example prompt: “Create a friendly 12-second opener: who you are, what you do, and a hook.”

Cold email subject + opener

Subject line plus a ~30s read opener that frames the problem and a one-line value proposition.

  • Useful for outreach sequences and SDR templates.

Demo kickoff (60s)

An instructional opening for demos that sets expectations and what the demo will prove.

  • Helps frame early minutes of product walkthroughs.

Metric-led pitch (30s)

Integrate one measurable outcome or KPI into a results-oriented 30s pitch.

  • Prompt includes how to state metric responsibly and in context.

Variant generator

Produce three voice variants (formal, casual, disruptive) for A/B testing.

  • Quickly compare tone and cadence for outreach or events.

Localization

Translate and adapt pitches to another language with cultural tone adjustments.

  • Keep intent and impact while adjusting idioms and formality.

Sample pitches

Examples: ready-to-use outputs

Templates below show the structure the generator produces. Replace bracketed fields and edit to match your voice.

  • Investor (30s, confident): “We help SMB retailers reduce checkout abandonment by 25% via a checkout widget that auto-appends trusted payment options — already live in pilot with three regional chains and driving repeat purchases. We’re raising to expand integrations and sales.”
  • Customer (15s, benefit-focused): “Our tool automates weekly invoices so you get paid faster and spend 80% less time on billing.”
  • Networking (12s, friendly): “I build a marketplace that connects indie brands with campus ambassadors — we’re seeing high student engagement and word-of-mouth growth.”
  • Recruiter intro (20s, professional): “I’m a product manager specializing in SaaS onboarding — I reduce time-to-value for new users by simplifying first-run flows and cross-functional rollout.”

Audience

Who this helps

Designed for anyone who must explain value quickly and convincingly — founders, SDRs, product leaders, recruiters, and marketers.

  • Founders prepping investor opens or demo-day intros
  • Sales reps needing tight cold-call or meeting openers
  • Product teams refining product-market messaging
  • Job-seekers crafting recruiter or interview intros
  • Marketers creating LinkedIn or event networking copy

Getting started

How to use the generator — quick start

Follow these steps to produce high-quality pitches and practical follow-ups.

  • 1) Select the audience and length preset (e.g., 30s investor).
  • 2) Provide a one-sentence problem and a one-sentence solution; include one result or validation if available.
  • 3) Pick a tone (confident, empathetic, technical) and request variants for A/B testing.
  • 4) Edit the output for specificity (names, numbers, product names), then copy suggested openers and follow-ups for immediate use.

Presentation advice

Practical tips for delivery

A clean pitch helps, but delivery matters. Use these proven techniques when practicing live.

  • Start with a strong opener that names the audience’s pain.
  • Keep one measurable or specific outcome in the pitch to anchor claims.
  • Practice to a time limit — record yourself and trim until it’s natural at that length.
  • Have a 10–15 second hook ready to follow up if the listener shows interest.

How to prompt for best results

Prompt engineering examples

Clear inputs produce better outputs. Use these example prompts directly or as templates.

  • Investor 30s: “Describe [Company] in 30 seconds: the customer problem, our solution, and one early validation metric. Tone: confident.”
  • Customer 15s: “One sentence for customers: the pain, how [Product] solves it, and the main benefit. Tone: benefit-focused.”
  • Variant request: “Give me 3 voice variants (formal, casual, disruptive) of the base pitch for A/B testing.”
  • Localization: “Translate this pitch to [language], keep intent, and adjust idioms for [country].”

FAQ

How do I craft a 30-second pitch that captures attention?

Structure it in three parts: 1) a one-line problem statement tailored to your listener, 2) a concise description of your solution highlighting how it addresses the problem, and 3) one concrete outcome or signal of validation. Practice within the time limit and trim any ambiguous language.

What’s different when pitching investors vs customers vs recruiters?

Investors look for market size, defensibility, and validation; customers want immediate benefits and how life improves; recruiters want role fit, impact, and top skills. Use the generator’s audience presets to emphasize the right elements.

What should I include and what should I omit in a short pitch?

Include the problem, solution, and one concrete outcome. Omit long backstory, exhaustive features, and speculative future promises. Keep language specific and verifiable.

How can I incorporate metrics or traction without overstating?

State measurable outcomes that you can substantiate (e.g., ‘reduced onboarding time by X’ or ‘pilot with Y customers’). If exact numbers aren’t public, use qualitative signals like ‘early pilots’ or ‘repeat customers’ and be ready to provide details when asked.

What are best practices for practicing and delivering a live pitch?

Time your delivery, record and listen for filler words, and practice with different cadences. Aim to keep one clear sentence that opens, one that describes value, and a closing that invites a next step or question.

Can I generate multiple tone variants for A/B testing?

Yes — the variant generator produces distinct voice options (formal, casual, disruptive) so you can test which resonates best in outreach or events.

How is my text used and stored?

Avoid pasting highly sensitive personal data into any public generator. For specifics about data processing and retention, consult the platform’s privacy policy. If you have confidentiality concerns, redact or generalize sensitive details before generating.

Can the generator handle other languages or localization?

Yes — use the localization prompt to translate and adapt tone, idioms, and formality for a target language and region. Always review translations with a native speaker where cultural nuance matters.

Related pages

  • PricingSee subscription plans and features.
  • AboutLearn more about the team behind the tools.
  • BlogGuides on pitching, storytelling, and messaging.
  • ComparisonCompare this generator to other messaging tools.
  • IndustriesFind pitch templates tailored to specific sectors.