01
Paste the generated draft
Use rendered copy, markdown, or HTML from a generated page before it goes into review.
Free tool
Paste page copy or HTML and get a browser-only score for genericness, claim risk, CTA clarity, metadata hints, and Pagewell-style quality gates.
Direct answer
The AI Landing Page QA Grader is a free browser-only checker for generated page drafts. It reviews pasted copy or HTML for generic phrases, unsupported claim risk, CTA clarity, FAQ coverage, metadata hints, and Pagewell-style QA gaps before deeper repo-level review.
How to use
This grader is intentionally opinionated around Pagewell QA: factual claims, concrete mechanics, metadata, schema hints, and conversion clarity matter more than fluent filler.
01
Use rendered copy, markdown, or HTML from a generated page before it goes into review.
02
Fix missing H1s, weak CTAs, unsupported superlatives, generic phrases, and thin proof.
03
Use Pagewell inside the repo to verify actual metadata, schema, links, claims, design, and discovery behavior.
Example output
A pass/fail score is not enough. The grader points to specific copy and QA issues the agent should resolve.
Score: 82/100
[pass] Clear top-level H1 or markdown heading detected.
[warn] Add a visible FAQ section if the page includes FAQ schema.
[warn] Replace generic phrase: streamline your workflow.
[fail] Add a concrete primary CTA. Related tools
Catch generic copy before merge
Install Pagewell and ask your agent to run QA against actual source files, PAGEWELL.md product facts, DESIGN.md visual rules, and discovery behavior.
bunx skills add ReScienceLab/pagewell --skill pagewell Then ask: Use Pagewell to QA this generated page for metadata, schema, claims, design, and genericness.
FAQ
It checks pasted page copy or HTML for a clear H1, CTA, FAQ, metadata hints, unsupported superlatives, generic SaaS phrases, proof signals, claim risk, and Pagewell-style QA gaps.
No. It is a fast browser-only first pass for generated page copy. Pagewell QA in a repo should still inspect metadata, schema, links, design consistency, claims, and discovery files against actual source files.
No. The grader runs locally in your browser and does not submit pasted text or HTML to a server.