Say what you do in one breath
You’ve got fifteen seconds before the other person’s eyes glaze over. That’s the elevator pitch problem. You know your idea cold, but the moment someone asks “so what do you do?” it comes out as a five-minute ramble about features nobody asked about.
This generator fixes the structure for you. Type a few sentences about your business or idea, choose how long you want the pitch to run, and it writes something you can actually say out loud without sounding like a brochure.
How it puts a pitch together
A good pitch hits four beats. The problem somebody has. Your solution. Who it’s for. And what makes you different from the obvious alternative. Miss one of those and the listener is left guessing.
The tool builds around those beats. You describe the idea in plain words, pick a length (about 60 words for a 30-second version, 120 words for a full minute), then click Generate Pitch. You get back two or three variations, not just one. Read them out loud and keep the one that sounds like you.
Here’s the honest part. Your description gets sent to our server, an AI model writes the pitch, and the text comes back for you to copy or download. It doesn’t run on your machine, and the model doesn’t know your company unless you tell it. So feed it specifics. “App for dog walkers” gives you mush. “Booking app for solo dog walkers who lose clients to no-shows, we auto-text reminders and take deposits” gives you something with teeth.
When you’d reach for this
Picture a networking event. Someone hands you their card and asks what you’re working on. You want the 30-second version, the one that ends with them wanting to know more.
Or you’re recording a pitch for an investor’s inbox. Sixty seconds, tighter, with a clear “who it’s for.”
Founders use it before demo days. Freelancers use it to explain a service that’s hard to name. Job seekers rework it into a personal intro. Same four beats, different speaker.
Make it sound like you, not a robot
The draft is a starting point. Read it aloud. If a word doesn’t fit your mouth, swap it. AI tends to reach for tidy phrasing that nobody actually says in a hallway, so cut anything that feels stiff.
Check the facts too. Numbers, names, claims about what you do, anything legal or financial. The model will happily invent a stat that sounds plausible and is completely wrong. You’re the editor. It just gives you the first draft fast.
Run it two or three times if the first batch misses. Tweaking your input description usually matters more than re-rolling. Add the customer, add the pain, add the one thing competitors don’t do.
A quick before-and-after
Before: “We’re a platform that leverages technology to optimize the customer experience for retail brands.”
After: “Small online shops lose sales when shoppers bail at checkout. We spot why people leave and fix the page in a day, no developer needed. Store owners see it pay for itself in a week.”
The second one says something. That’s the goal.
How long should my elevator pitch be? Thirty seconds for casual intros and networking. Sixty seconds when someone’s actually leaning in, like an investor or a hiring manager. The tool offers both lengths so you can grab whichever the moment calls for.
Why does it give me more than one version? Different framings land with different people. One variation might lead with the problem, another with the result. You pick the one that sounds natural coming from you, or splice the best lines from each.
Will the pitch be accurate to my business? Only as accurate as what you type. The AI fills gaps with guesses, so review every claim, especially numbers and names, before you say it to anyone. Edit freely.
Can I use this for a personal or job-search intro? Yes. Describe yourself the way you’d describe a product: the problem you solve, who you help, what sets you apart. The same structure works for “what do you do?” at an interview.
Is my input stored? Your text is sent to the server so the AI can write the pitch, then the result comes back to you. Don’t paste anything confidential you wouldn’t want processed by a third-party model.
What if none of the versions feel right? Rewrite your description with more detail and run it again. Better input beats more re-rolls almost every time. Name the customer, the pain, and your one real difference.