What Makes a Good Tagline — and How to Write One
Most taglines are forgettable because they describe the company rather than speaking to the customer. Here is what separates the ones that stick from the ones that vanish.
A tagline is not a mission statement, a value proposition, or a description of what your company does. It is a short phrase — usually three to seven words — that creates an instant emotional or intellectual connection with the right audience. The best ones are memorable because they are specific, because they carry an implicit promise, and because they feel true the moment you read them.
The reason most taglines fail is simpler than people think: they are written for the company, not the customer. "Innovating for a better tomorrow." "Your trusted partner in growth." "Excellence in every interaction." These phrases describe how the company sees itself. They say nothing about what the customer gets, feels, or experiences. A tagline written from the company's perspective is a missed opportunity at the moment of first contact.
The best taglines make the customer think "that is exactly what I want" — not "that is what this company does." The frame shifts from the seller to the buyer, and everything changes.
The four qualities of a tagline that works
Specific enough to be believed. "We help businesses grow" is too broad to mean anything. "Ship faster, break less" (a hypothetical for a deployment tool) is specific enough to create a clear mental image. Specificity signals credibility — vague taglines feel like they are hiding something.
Short enough to be remembered. Seven words is a practical ceiling. Beyond that, people will not repeat it, and a tagline that is not repeatable has no virality. The shorter the better, as long as the meaning is not lost. "Just do it" is three words. "Think different" is two. Neither sacrifices clarity for brevity.
True to the product. A tagline that overpromises creates the wrong customers — people who expect something the product does not deliver. The best taglines are aspirational but honest. They describe what you are at your best, not what you wish you were.
Owned by you, not the category. If your tagline could belong to any of your ten nearest competitors, it is not a tagline — it is a category description. The test: can you put any competitor's name in front of it and have it still make sense? If yes, it is not differentiated enough.
Before and after: four weak taglines rewritten
The process: how to actually write one
Start by writing down the single most important thing your best customers say they get from your product. Not what you think they get — what they actually say. This is the raw material. Then apply pressure to it: can you make it shorter? More specific? More surprising? Does it name the outcome rather than the activity?
Generate at least twenty candidates before evaluating any of them. The first five will be obvious. The next five will be better. The ones from fifteen to twenty — when you have exhausted the easy options and have to push further — are usually where the real taglines live. Creativity under constraint is the mechanism; giving yourself permission to stop at five options is why most taglines are mediocre.
Read the tagline to five people in your target audience. Do not explain it. Do not tell them what your company does first. Just ask: "What do you think this company does, and who is it for?" If the majority give consistent, accurate answers, the tagline is working. If they are confused or give wildly different answers, it is either too abstract or too clever. Clarity always wins over cleverness — a tagline that requires explanation has already failed.
A tagline is not a value proposition. A value proposition is a full sentence or paragraph that explains what you do, for whom, and why it is better than the alternative — it belongs on your homepage hero section and in your sales pitch. A tagline is a three-to-seven word phrase that travels with your brand name across every context — business cards, social bios, email footers, signage. They work together, but they are different tools with different jobs. Trying to make one phrase do both usually produces something that does neither well.
Writing a tagline is a collaborative creative process — it typically involves generating dozens of candidates, getting feedback from teammates and customers, and iterating over days or weeks. In FabricLoop, teams run brand and copy projects like any other work: a card on the board with the brief, a note containing all the candidates, comments from team members, and a clear status showing where the decision stands. When creative work is managed alongside operational work rather than in a separate thread, it actually gets finished.
