Airbook receipt cost-comparison value prop

Airbook receipt cost-comparison value prop, dark-mode, minimal, dark

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Dark value-prop section using scattered paper-receipt graphics to itemize the cost of traditional data stacks against a Don't break the bank headline.

Summary

A dark value-proposition section that frames the cost of traditional data tooling as scattered paper receipts, each itemizing a category and a monthly total, under a "Don't break the bank" headline.

Visual description

On a near-black background, a large white headline ("Don't break the bank") sits top-left with a one-line muted subhead about traditional stacks costing millions. Below, three white skeuomorphic receipt cards with zig-zag torn bottom edges are scattered at slight angles. Each receipt is set in monospace type with a category title (INGESTION, BI TOOLS, MORE TOOLS), faint line items (for example "Manual ETL Pipelines", "No-Code BI Tools"), placeholder "XXXX USD++" prices, and a dashed-box "Total" line (USD 5000+ / month, USD 2000+ / month, USD 3000+ / month). A fourth receipt peeks in from the bottom edge.

Key takeaway

Turning a dry cost comparison into physical receipts makes the "this is expensive" point visceral and memorable. Monospace type and torn edges sell the receipt metaphor; placeholder XXXX prices keep focus on the totals.

Reuse notes

Strong for a product positioned as a cheaper alternative to a fragmented legacy stack. The receipt metaphor is distinctive, so it works best when cost is the core argument. Scattered angled cards imply the page may animate them, but no motion is shown.

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