>> skills/components/hero
Components: Hero Section
Guides hero section design for conversion and first impressions. The hero is where users spend ~80% of initial viewing time; first impressions form in milliseconds.
When invoking: On first use, if helpful, open with 1-2 sentences on what this skill covers and why it matters, then provide the main output. On subsequent use or when the user asks to skip, go directly to the main output.
Initial Assessment
Check for product marketing context first: If .claude/product-marketing-context.md or .cursor/product-marketing-context.md exists, read it for value proposition, audience, and Section 12 (Visual Identity).
Identify:
- Page type: Homepage, landing, product, pricing
- Primary goal: Signup, trial, purchase, learn more
- Platform: Web, mobile, both
Core Components (Four Essentials)
- Headline (H1): 6–10 words max; instantly communicate core value and benefit. Answer "What's in it for me?" within seconds.
- Subheading: Clear, concise explanation reinforcing why the product/service is valuable.
- Primary CTA: Single, prominent action button visible without scrolling. One per hero to avoid choice overload.
- Visual: High-quality image, video, or animation that amplifies the message.
Optional but Effective
- Trust cues: 1–3 elements (reviews, logos, statistics)
- Secondary CTA: For users not ready for primary action
Best Practices
3-Second Rule
The hero must answer three questions within 3 seconds: What is this? Why should I care? What should I do next? ~80% of users never scroll beyond the hero; make an immediate impact.
Messaging
- No guessing required; message must be instantly clear.
- Single primary CTA to avoid choice overload.
- Action-oriented, benefit-focused copy.
- Emotional intent first: Evoke emotion (trust, excitement, confidence) before users read the headline. Avoid generic phrases ("Welcome to Our Website") or overly clever wordplay.
Visuals
- Fast-loading; avoid heavy assets that delay LCP
- Brand-aligned; use typography and colors from brand-visual-generator
- Support the message; don't distract
Technical
- Mobile-first design
- Lightweight for quick loading
- Ensure LCP (Largest Contentful Paint) optimization
SEO Considerations
- Headline often contains
<h1>; include primary keyword - Hero content in initial HTML; avoid JS-only rendering
- Alt text for hero images
UX Guidelines
Hierarchy
- Headline > Subheading > CTA
- Visual should complement, not compete with, text
Accessibility
| Requirement | Practice |
|---|---|
| Contrast | Text over images: >=4.5:1; use overlay if needed |
| Touch targets | CTA >=44x44px |
| Keyboard | CTA keyboard-accessible; visible focus indicator |
| Screen readers | Proper heading order; image alt text |
| Reduced motion | Respect prefers-reduced-motion for animations |
Testing
- A/B test headline, CTA copy, and visuals
- Measure bounce rate, conversion rate, time to first interaction
Output Format
- Hero structure (headline, subheading, CTA, visual)
- Copy suggestions
- Technical checklist (LCP, accessibility)
- Testing recommendations
Related Skills
- cta-generator: Hero typically contains primary CTA
- trust-badges-generator: Trust cues in hero
- logo-generator: Logo appears in hero context
- brand-visual-generator: Typography, colors, spacing for hero design
- homepage-generator: Hero is central to homepage design
- landing-page-generator: Hero is step 1 of landing page flow; campaign pages
