Package

You built the thing. Now make people care.

Code ships fast.
Communication doesn't.

AI lets you build an app in a weekend. But nobody uses what nobody understands. The bottleneck isn't the product anymore — it's the sentence that makes someone try it.

How it works

Three steps. No forms. No questionnaires.

1

Describe what you built

A few sentences about your project. Or paste a GitHub URL and Package reads it for you.

2

Pick an angle

AI generates 3 positioning angles — problem, insight, outcome. Different framings for different audiences. Pick the one that feels right.

3

Get the package

One-liner, landing page, README, 3 tweets, Product Hunt copy, 30-second pitch, share description. Copy, download, deploy.

The repo writes
the copy.

No “who is your target audience.” Package reads what you built and does the positioning work for you.

What you get

8 pieces. Every one ready to use.

One-liner

Under 12 words. Billboard test. The sentence that makes someone stop scrolling.

Landing page

Full HTML. Hero, features, CTA. Preview it, download it, deploy it.

README.md

The README that makes someone star the repo. What, why, how, get started.

3 tweet angles

Problem/solution. Before/after. The non-obvious insight. Each under 280 characters.

Product Hunt

Tagline and description. Ready to paste into the listing.

30-second pitch

Written to be said, not read. Starts with the problem, ends with what it does.

Share description

Under 160 characters. What shows up when someone shares the link.

Matched VV visuals

3 visuals from the Visualize Value archive, matched to your product with captions.

Powered by jackbutcher.md

Package doesn't generate generic marketing copy. It writes in a voice distilled from 50,000 tweets — filtered to the 14,000 top performers — and codified into jackbutcher.md, a portable writing profile. The same voice engine behind vvriter.

50k

tweets analyzed

14k

top performers

1

voice deployed

Short sentences. No hedging. No jargon. Contrast over explanation. If it sounds like marketing, it gets rewritten.

Before & after

What you say vs. what Package writes.

Before

"It's a tool that helps developers streamline their workflow by leveraging AI-powered automation to enhance productivity."

After

Ship in a weekend. Explain it in a sentence.

Before

"We're excited to announce the launch of our revolutionary platform that empowers creators to..."

After

Your repo. Three angles. Seven pieces of copy. Done.

Before

"A comprehensive solution designed to optimize and facilitate the process of..."

After

Paste the link. Pick the framing. Launch.

Sample output

Generated by Package for itself.

One-liner

Stop building in silence.

Tweet angles
You can build an app in a weekend with AI. You'll spend a month trying to explain what it does. Package reads your repo and writes everything you need to launch. [link]
Before: "It's like a tool that helps you, um, kind of streamline your..." After: One-liner, landing page, README, tweets, pitch. Paste your repo. Pick an angle. Ship the words. [link]
The non-obvious thing about launching: the code is the easy part. The hard part is the sentence that makes someone click. Package generates that sentence — and everything around it — from your repo. [link]
30-second pitch

You know how you can build an app in a weekend now but then spend two weeks trying to explain it to people? Package connects to your GitHub, reads your code and README, and generates all the copy you need to launch — landing page, tweets, pitch, the works. You just pick which angle sounds right.

Who it's for

Anyone who builds but doesn't ship the words.

Vibe coders

Built an app with AI in a weekend. Can't explain it to their mom.

Solo founders

Shipping fast. Marketing slow. Need copy that sounds like a person, not a pitch deck.

Open source devs

Great code, no README. No landing page. No one knows it exists.

Ship the words.

Paste a repo. Pick an angle. Get everything you need to launch.

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