Paste your homepage copy below. We’ll tell you if it actually explains itself.
Message clarity is structural, not subjective.
This tool evaluates whether a page clearly states the information readers look for in the
first few seconds. It does not judge writing quality, tone, brand voice, or creativity.
The score is based on whether key ideas are stated explicitly, not implied. Clear messages score higher than clever or abstract ones.
Who is this page for?
We look for explicit audience identifiers such as businesses, companies, teams, owners,
agencies, or phrases like “for X” or “designed for X.”
If a reader must guess whether the page applies to them, clarity is reduced.
What problem does this page address?
We scan for concrete pain and failure language such as slow, broken, confusing,
frustrating, expensive, struggle, or problem.
Pages that only describe features without naming a problem score lower.
What result does the reader get?
We look for clear outcome language such as faster, easier, better, reliable, secure,
or clear. Outcomes must be stated directly, not assumed.
What should the reader do next?
We look for explicit action verbs such as request, contact, start, get, book,
schedule, or talk. If no clear next step is stated, this section scores zero.
A lower score does not mean your copy is bad. It means the page relies on implication instead of explicit clarity.