Built for
how you actually work.
Four steps. No friction. Replace the steps below with the real flow of your tool.
Input your content
Describe what the user pastes, types, or uploads in this first step. What format does the tool accept? What is the minimum or maximum they can provide?
Add a second paragraph if this step has nuance — file types accepted, character limits, tips for better results.
Configure your settings
What options does the user have? Tone, format, language, style, output type — describe any settings that exist in your specific tool.
If this tool has no configuration step, remove this row entirely and go straight from input to process.
Let the tool do the work
What happens when the user presses generate, convert, or run? Is this AI-powered, algorithmic, or rule-based? How fast does it happen?
Be honest here — if it takes a few seconds, say so. If it’s instant, highlight that. Users trust specifics.
Export and use it
How does the user get their output? Copy to clipboard, download as file, ZIP archive, share link? List the exact export formats available.
What can they do with it after? Where does this output typically go in a real workflow?
Feature one title
Short reason this specific tool was designed or built a certain way. Keep it factual — what does the user benefit from?
Feature two title
Another concrete benefit or design decision. Privacy, speed, accuracy, compatibility — pick what’s most relevant.
Feature three title
Third benefit. Could be about the output quality, the no-signup model, the export flexibility — whatever your tool does best.
You’ve read it.
Now try it.
No setup required. Open the tool and start on step one right now.