"Stainless steel construction" tells a shopper nothing. What it does for them is the sale. Paste your product info and get five bullets: the biggest benefit, three feature-benefit pairs, and an objection killer, each labeled, keyword-woven, and tight enough for mobile.
Five bullets · benefit-first · keyword-woven · objection killer
Sellers know their product cold, so they list what it is made of and what it does. The buyer does not care about the steel grade; they care that it will not rust, will not bend, and will survive the dishwasher for years. That translation from feature to benefit is where most bullets fall flat, and it is exactly the gap that costs the click after all that ad spend got the shopper to the page.
There is a structure that works. Bullet one carries the single biggest reason to buy. Bullets two through four pair a feature with what it does for the buyer. Bullet five kills the last objection standing between them and the button. Each one opens with a short capitalized label a thumb-scroller reads in half a second. That is what this tool builds.
Features, materials, buyer, objections, and target keywords. The more you give, the sharper the bullets.
Biggest benefit, three feature-benefit pairs, one objection killer. Labeled and keyword-woven.
Formatted the way it drops straight into Seller Central, plus which keywords went where.
Your text is sent to our server, processed once by the AI to write the bullets, and not shared with anyone. We keep your email and a short usage summary so we can send you the results. Your product info is not resold, published, or used to train anything.
The bullets apply proven benefit-first structure and keyword placement, but the tool only knows what you paste. It cannot verify a spec, a warranty, or a claim, so it flags anything it had to leave as a placeholder. Read every bullet before publishing, confirm the facts are yours, and never ship an unverifiable claim.
What the product is, its category, key features and materials, who buys it, target keywords if you have them, and the top objections buyers raise. The more detail you give, the fewer placeholders come back. The box shows the format.
The first four bullets sell the benefit and the features. The last hesitation before a buy is usually a doubt: will it fit, is it safe, what if it breaks. The fifth bullet answers the strongest objection you list, so the reader runs out of reasons to hesitate.
Strong bullets on a standard template still leave money on the table. We build product pages engineered around one number: revenue per visitor. Watch the demo and see the gap between a listing that describes and a page that closes.
Watch the Demo → A few minutes, real pages, real numbers. No call required to watch.