Boilerplate Generator

Create a professional, ready-to-use "About [Company]" boilerplate for your press releases in seconds.

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We only access your name, email, and profile picture.

3 Simple Steps

1

Enter Company Details

Fill in your company name, what it does, who it serves, location, and website — takes under 60 seconds.

2

Choose Your Style

Select Concise (1-2 sentences), Standard (2-3 sentences), or Expanded (3-4 sentences) based on your use case.

3

Copy and Use Everywhere

One click to copy your professional boilerplate. Use it in every press release, pitch, and media kit.

How This Helps Your PR

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Professional in Seconds

The "About [Company]" boilerplate is one of the most reused sections in PR — but most companies write it poorly or skip it entirely. Our generator creates a clean, structured boilerplate from just a few inputs.

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Three Style Options

Choose concise (1–2 sentences for wire services), standard (2–3 sentences for regular press releases), or expanded (3–4 sentences for feature-length releases). One tool, all use cases.

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Write Once, Use Everywhere

A good boilerplate gets pasted into every press release you ever send. Getting it right once saves you from rewriting it every time — and ensures journalists always see a consistent, professional description of your company.

Built for PR Professionals

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Startups
Create a professional boilerplate for your first press releases.
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PR Agencies
Generate client boilerplates quickly and consistently.
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Founders
Write once, use in every press release forever.
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PR Students
Learn correct boilerplate structure with a real example.

Every press release ends with a boilerplate. Make yours count.

Generate a professional company boilerplate for free — in under 60 seconds.

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Common Questions

A boilerplate (also called the "About" section) is a short, standardised paragraph at the end of every press release that describes your company. It gives journalists quick background context about who you are, what you do, and where to find more information.
Always at the end, after the main body and any quotes, but before the media contact information. It is usually introduced with the heading "About [Company Name]".
50–100 words is the sweet spot. Long enough to give useful context, short enough that journalists don't skip it. Wire services like PR Newswire allow up to 150 words, but shorter is almost always better.
Yes. The whole point of a boilerplate is consistency. Write one strong version and use it in every press release, pitch email, and media kit. Update it only when something significant changes (new location, major milestone, rebrand).
The company name, what it does (product or service), who it serves (audience), and where to find more information (website). Optional extras include founding year, HQ location, notable clients or stats, and a brief tagline.

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