How to get the most out of the ad copy generator
This tool writes faster when you give it specifics, not abstractions.
Write the product field like a customer would search for it
Use plain language, not internal product names. If you sell 'CloudSync Enterprise 3.0', write 'cloud file sync for teams'. The tool pulls better angles when it understands what the product actually does.
Include the category if the product name is vague. 'Momentum' tells the tool nothing, but 'Momentum project management app' gives it enough to write benefit-driven copy.
Be specific about the audience, not demographic
Instead of 'millennials' or 'age 25 to 40', write 'freelancers who invoice clients monthly' or 'parents shopping for kids' winter gear'. The tool writes to a mindset, not an age bracket.
If you leave audience blank, the copy stays generic. If you are running different campaigns to different segments, generate separate sets with distinct audience inputs.
Use the benefit field to control the message hierarchy
The benefit you enter becomes the primary claim in most headlines. If your product has three strong benefits, run the tool three times with a different benefit each time, then compare which angle performs.
Write the benefit as a customer outcome, not a feature. 'Automates invoice reminders' is weaker than 'get paid faster'. The tool mirrors your framing.
Match tone to the platform and buying stage
LinkedIn and Google Search ads usually perform better with professional or formal tone. Facebook and Instagram skew casual or engaging. X depends on your brand, but bold often cuts through.
If you are retargeting warm traffic, try playful or casual. Cold prospecting on search often needs professional or bold to establish credibility fast. Run both and test.