Start simple. Imagine youâre talking to a very smart assistant. Instead of asking âWrite a product description,â say âWrite a 300-character Amazon bullet point for a baby blanket, with warm and cozy tone, focused on gifting.â The more context you give, the better the result.
Good prompts are specific and structured. Mention the product, its key features, target buyer, tone of voice, and platform. For example: âWrite a title for a luxury face serum targeting women over 30, emphasizing anti-aging, for Amazon.â
AI prompts help sellers develop consistent brand voice, mission statements, packaging copy, and even ad slogans. Instead of reinventing tone for each channel, sellers use prompts to maintain messaging and tone from listing to email to social. Explore: https://www.sellerprompts.com/category/brand-positioning
Include a tone instruction like: âUse a playful and Gen Z toneâ or âWrite in a minimalist, premium style like Apple.â You can also give examples: âUse a voice similar to how Glossier describes skincare products.â
AI can classify messages by urgency or topic, draft replies, summarize threads, and even escalate high-risk messages. Sellers save hours while keeping response quality high. Inbox chaos becomes manageable. Start here: https://www.sellerprompts.com/category/inbox-management
Absolutely. You can prompt in German, French, Spanish, or ask for translations. For example: âTranslate this Amazon listing to fluent German, preserving the persuasive tone and using local keywords.â
Refine your prompt. Add âLimit to 200 characters,â âAvoid repeating features,â or âFocus on benefits, not technical specs.â Think of prompts as instructions for a creative assistantânot a mind reader.
Just change the format: âWrite a customer message template apologizing for a delayed delivery of a custom mugâ or âSummarize these reviews into a product feedback report.â
Yes, few-shot prompting works great. Say: âHereâs an example of a good Amazon bullet: âKeeps drinks hot for 8 hours â Enjoy your favorite brew all day long.â Now write 3 bullets in the same format for a water bottle.â
If the output feels clear, relevant, and matches your brand toneâitâs working. If not, tweak one thing at a time: tone, length, structure. Over time, youâll build a library of prompts that work reliably across your business.
Use a series of prompts where each output feeds the next. For example:
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Start with: âWrite a short product description for a reusable lunchbox.â
Then use: âTurn this description into five Amazon bullet points.â
Finally: âNow write a customer Q&A based on these bullets.â
This method is called prompt chaining, and it mimics how a copywriter would think through a listing.
âWrite [type of content] for a [product type] that solves [problem], targeting [audience], with a [tone] style, for [marketplace].â
You can store and reuse these templates across categoriesâjust swap in product-specific details. Itâs like having your own AI SOP.
Prompt like this: âCompare Product A (features: leakproof, 24 oz, eco-plastic) with Product B (features: glass, 20 oz, sleek design) for a buyer choosing a reusable water bottle.â
AI will generate pros/cons, feature highlights, and positioning insights you can use for ads, A+ Content, or internal decisions.
Use tone switching prompts:
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âRewrite this bullet point in a luxury tone.â
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âNow make it playful and Gen Z-friendly.â
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âNow make it serious and data-driven.â
This helps with A/B testing across audiences or platforms like TikTok, Etsy, and Amazon.
Yes. Input reviews, return reasons, or support messages and prompt:
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âSummarize the main pain points customers mention in these reviews.â
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Or: âIdentify trends in why customers are returning this product.â
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It helps you make product or listing improvements based on actual voice-of-customer data.
Prompt like this:
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âCreate a Midjourney prompt for a high-converting ecommerce photo of a bamboo cutting board in a modern kitchen, overhead view, warm light, neutral background.â
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AI will generate usable photo prompt scripts you can paste into image generators.
Ask: âWrite 3 ad headline variations for a magnesium supplement targeting men over 40, focused on sleep and recovery, for Amazon Ads.â
Then ask for A/B tests:
âWhich headline is most emotional?â
âWhich one uses power words?â
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Itâs a fast way to generate, test, and refine creatives.
Yes. Prompt:
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âWrite a cold email to a wellness influencer with 50k followers on Instagram, asking them to test our new vegan protein powder. Use a casual, respectful tone.â
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Or: âCreate a follow-up message if they didnât reply in 4 days.â
Paste a few product pages, ad scripts, or emails youâve written, then prompt:
âAnalyze my style and write a product description for a new dog leash using this tone.â
Youâll get personalized content that still feels like your brand.
If your workflow involves multiple steps, tone control, repurposing, and smart formattingâitâs working. Over time, youâll spot patterns and start automating 80% of content tasks using your own playbook of prompts.
Be specific. The more details you give (product type, target audience, tone, platform), the better the output. Instead of âWrite bullet points for my listing,â say: âWrite 5 Amazon bullet points for a 40 oz insulated water bottle for hikers, focused on durability and ease of cleaning.â
Yes. Always tell the AI where the content is going. Amazon listings require different formatting than Instagram captions or Walmart titles. Try: âCreate an Etsy product title for a handmade scented candle with a cozy, rustic tone.â
Definitely. AI responds well to structured inputs.
Example:
âWrite 3 benefit-focused Amazon bullets for a yoga mat:Eco-friendlyNon-slipExtra thickâ
This structure makes it faster and more accurate.
That depends on your brand. Use instructions like:
âWrite in a premium, minimalist toneâ or âUse a fun and casual Gen Z voice.â
If your tone is unique, give an example and say: âMimic this style.â
Thereâs no rule, but clarity > brevity. A great prompt might be 1â3 sentences. Too short, and the AI guesses. Too long, and it might miss the point. Balance is key.
Use the same prompt 3 times. If all results are solid and consistentâyouâve nailed the prompt. If not, refine it: break it down, add clarity, or define the format you want (title, bullets, email, etc).
Yes. AI supports multilingual input and output. You can say: âTranslate this Amazon listing into fluent French using keywords from Amazon.frâ or âWrite German bullet points for a dog collar, using casual tone and local phrasing.â
Use buyer personas. Prompt like this:
"Write product bullets for a protein bar for:
- Gym rats
- Busy moms
- Vegans"
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Each version will match the buyer's motivation and tone.
Yes, especially for platforms with limits. Say:
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"Write a 200-character Amazon titleâ
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or âKeep this Etsy listing under 140 characters.â
This prevents cutoffs and helps stay compliant.
Repurpose!
From one product, you can ask:
- Write titleWrite bullets
- Write A+ Content
- Write ad copy
- Write email campaign
- Write social caption
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Itâs all about reusing the core prompt in new formats.
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