The single biggest leak in paid search is the gap between the words in the ad and the words on the page. Bellhop closes it: the headline a visitor lands on mirrors the keyword and ad group they clicked, so the page reads like the obvious answer to what they just typed.
Use cases
One page, tuned to the search that brought them
Every paid click carries a clue about what the visitor wants. These are the moments where matching the page to that clue moves the most — and what Bellhop actually does in each.
When the search signals someone is already shopping to leave another tool, a generic value prop wastes the click. Bellhop leads with the proof that matters to a switcher — migration support, import, the reasons teams move — drawn from your own pages and cited, never invented.
High-intent searches don’t need persuading — they need the next step, fast. For demo, pricing and buy-now intent, Bellhop foregrounds the matching call to action and the proof that removes the last objection, instead of making a ready buyer scroll for it.
Brand clicks already know who you are; cold prospecting terms have never heard of you. The same page can’t serve both well. Bellhop tells them apart from the campaign signal and adjusts — reassurance and depth for warm brand traffic, a clear category-defining promise for cold clicks.
“Welcome back — here’s what’s new since you last looked.”
“A faster way to run paid-search landing pages.”
Bellhop can recognize the company behind a paid visit and lean the page’s framing and proof toward their world — the industry language, the relevant case for their segment. The company name itself stays in your team’s view for follow-up and pipeline; it isn’t splashed across the visitor’s hero.
Which of these is your paid search?
Most teams recognize two or three of these instantly. Tell us yours and we’ll show you the rewrite on your own page.