TimeTuna
H—207
Stand out with your booking page
TimeTuna keeps it short: "Stand out with your booking page." Most startups stamp a generic third-party scheduler onto their site and call it done. A booking page that keeps in line with your brand is a common gap. The headline skips the mechanics and goes straight to the outcome the reader wants, which is standing out in the way that only you can. |
The subheading delivers on it by naming the benefit, a scheduling experience "that reflects your brand," and the hero backs that up. A small testimonial on the top-right of the demo places TimeTuna next to the obvious comparison ("faster and more beautiful than Calendly"), the Product Hunt badge adds social proof, and two small objection-busters (no credit card, setup under 60 seconds) lower the bar for anyone on the fence. Even the button is outcome-first: "Get your own page" instead of a typical "book a call" or “sign up” button. |
That CTA choice is the part to steal, with one caveat. For a product with a fast time-to-value, pointing the button at the result can beat introducing friction like "sign up" or "book a call." It works best for PLG tools that deliver in close to a single step. For heavier B2B software with a longer path to value, an outcome-only CTA can be jumping the gun, so match the button to how quickly the product pays off and where you want your prospects to move next in the funnel. |
Why this H1 works: |
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