Turn product facts into listing-ready copy for Amazon, Shopify, eBay, Etsy, social ads, and your site—entirely in your browser. No signup required for this template-based generator.
Sample output (Amazon-style)
Title: Aurora Brew Thermal Mug — professional-grade Home & Garden for busy commuters
• Triple-wall vacuum insulation. Supports busy commuters with balanced quality…
Description: Designed for Aurora Brew Thermal Mug—a professional-grade home & garden pick…
Select platforms, set tone, and generate 3–5 variations per platform using rotating frameworks (AIDA, PAS, FAB, BAB). Character limits for Amazon titles, bullets, and social body are enforced in the templates.
Use Highlight keywords to visualize SEO terms drawn from your inputs—helpful when tightening listings.
Max 100 characters.
Enter 3–7 features, one per line.
Favorites (0)
Save variations with the heart button—they are stored in this browser only.
Product descriptions sit at the intersection of persuasion, search intent, and operational scale. Research across e-commerce and conversion optimization consistently shows that clear, benefit-led copy can materially lift add-to-cart rates—teams often cite uplifts on the order of tens of percent when weak manufacturer blurbs are replaced with structured, customer-aware messaging. Even a mid-sized catalog with a few hundred SKUs multiplies that impact: every vague sentence becomes thousands of lost impressions, weaker click-through from marketplaces, and higher return rates when expectations drift from reality.
The hardest part is not writing one great description; it is writing hundreds that still feel human, accurate, and differentiated while respecting platform rules. Amazon enforces title and bullet conventions; Shopify themes expect short meta blurbs plus richer body HTML; Etsy shoppers expect story and materials; social ads compress everything into a hook and a CTA. SynthQuery’s free Product Description Generator helps you draft platform-aware variations without sending your product facts to a remote model for this step—templates, copywriting frameworks, and tone controls run locally in your browser so you can iterate quickly before you paste into listings or hand off to an editor.
Use it when you are launching a new SKU, refreshing stale PDP copy, or building a content calendar for paid social. The tool rotates classic frameworks—AIDA (Attention, Interest, Desire, Action), PAS (Problem, Agitate, Solution), FAB (Feature, Advantage, Benefit), and BAB (Before, After, Bridge)—so you are not locked into a single rhetorical shape. Tone presets nudge vocabulary toward professional, casual, luxurious, technical, enthusiastic, or minimalist delivery, while price-point language nudges positioning from value to premium. Keyword highlighting surfaces terms extracted from your inputs, a lightweight aid when you want to sanity-check coverage before you publish.
What this tool does
Multi-platform output is the core differentiator. Rather than one generic paragraph, the tool shapes fields to the scaffolding each destination expects—marketplace bullets versus narrative Etsy storytelling versus ad microcopy. Framework rotation keeps messaging from feeling repetitive when you generate several cards in a row: AIDA front-loads attention and ends with action; PAS names friction explicitly before presenting relief; FAB forces explicit translation from capability to payoff; BAB contrasts the old state with the promised new state, then explains how the product closes the gap.
Tone and price-point modifiers adjust adjectives, openings, and closings so the same feature set can sound enterprise-credible, playful, or restrained. SEO keyword highlighting does not compute rankings; it simply mirrors meaningful tokens from your name, category, feature lines, and USP text so you can see whether important nouns appear where you expect. Platform-specific guardrails trim or extend copy toward typical limits—Amazon title and bullet caps, Instagram-friendly body length for the social template, and heading-friendly long form for Shopify-style exports.
Operational conveniences matter for working teams. Each variation shows word and character counts at both the block level and as an aggregate for the card, which helps when you are juggling strict form fields or ad previews. Copy-all buttons grab the entire variation as plain text; favorites let you build a shortlist before you export. CSV export flattens every block into rows with counts, which is ideal when a content manager wants to route sections into a PIM or DAM workflow. Everything executes client-side for this generator, aligning with privacy-conscious merchants who prefer not to transmit catalog details during early drafting.
Technical details
Generation is deterministic template logic with hashed seeds derived from your product name and category, which keeps variation counts stable for the same inputs while still rotating frameworks across cards. Amazon bullets and titles pass through character caps with word-boundary truncation where possible to avoid mid-word cuts. Shopify “medium” descriptions target roughly three hundred words by appending contextual sentences until the threshold is reached; long descriptions aim past five hundred words and include lightweight Markdown-style headings you can adapt to your theme.
Keyword extraction lowercases tokens, strips short stop words, deduplicates, and caps the highlight list for performance. FAB and related paragraphs stitch audience clauses, price-position language, and your feature list positions into readable prose; if a list is shorter than five items, Amazon mode pads with category-aware placeholders so the bullet scaffold stays complete—replace those lines with real specs before publishing. CSV escaping follows RFC-style quoting for fields that contain commas or line breaks. Favorites serialize block arrays to JSON in localStorage; clearing browser storage removes them. This page does not call SynthQuery’s FastAPI stack for copy generation, so throughput depends only on your device.
Use cases
E-commerce operators refreshing hundreds of PDPs can generate first-pass copy per platform, then hand results to human editors for compliance and brand QA. Amazon FBA sellers benefit from bullet scaffolding that mirrors common high-converting patterns—feature-led lines paired with audience and value clauses—while still leaving room to insert metrics, warranties, and legal disclaimers you add manually.
Etsy makers and small-batch brands can start from the story-driven template, then weave in studio photos, sizing charts, and turnaround times that only a human seller knows. Dropshippers juggling multiple suppliers often need fast differentiation; running several tone and framework combinations surfaces distinct angles you can A/B test in ad accounts or listing experiments. Social media advertisers can harvest hooks and short bodies aligned to character limits, then pair them with creative from your design team.
Product marketers writing launch briefs use exports as starting blocks for one-pagers and sales enablement. Catalog and syndication teams drop CSV rows into spreadsheets for translation pipelines or regional customization. Agencies can project the tool in workshops so clients pick favorites live, then download a batch for legal review. Educators teaching digital merchandising can demonstrate how the same SKU changes shape by platform without touching a paid API.
How SynthQuery compares
Paid AI writing suites such as Copy.ai, Jasper’s product description workflows, and Writesonic often bundle generators with brand voices, team seats, and model pickers. Those platforms can be powerful when you want open-ended rewriting across channels, but they typically require accounts, may meter tokens, and send prompts to remote models—trade-offs that not every catalog owner wants for early ideation.
SynthQuery’s Product Description Generator is free for this page, does not require signup for the client-side pass described here, and emphasizes structured, platform-specific outputs with explicit framework tags and export formats. It is template-first rather than open-ended generation: you trade some creative surprise for predictable fields, caps, and repeatable CSV rows. Use professional suites when you need deep brand training; use this tool when you want fast, private scaffolding you can edit locally before you invest tokens or team time.
Aspect
SynthQuery
Typical alternatives
Cost & access
Free page use; no account required for client-side generation on this tool.
Subscription tiers, credits, or team plans are common for full AI suites.
Privacy posture
Drafting runs in the browser for this utility; inputs are not sent to SynthQuery servers for generation here.
Cloud models process prompts on vendor infrastructure unless explicitly local.
Often flexible paragraphs with manual reformatting per marketplace.
Depth of AI
Template + rule-based assembly with tone and framework variation.
Large-language-model rewriting with broader stylistic range when configured.
How to use this tool effectively
Start with the basics: a concise product name (up to 100 characters), the category that best matches how shoppers browse, and three to seven key features—one per line. The feature list is the backbone of bullets, benefit bridges, and technical reassurance, so phrase each line as a concrete capability (“triple-wall insulation,” “USB-C fast charge”) rather than vague praise (“great quality”). Add a target audience phrase even if it feels informal (“busy parents,” “pro photographers”); the generator uses that clause to align benefits with real-life contexts.
Describe unique selling points in the dedicated field. This is where differentiation belongs: certifications, materials, warranty posture, design origin, or workflow advantages that competitors rarely match. If you leave it short, the templates still run, but richer USP text produces more specific paragraphs—especially for PAS and BAB variants that need a credible “bridge” or “solution” moment.
Select one or more platforms. Amazon mode assembles a title capped at 200 characters, five bullet slots capped at 500 characters each, a long description capped at 2,000 characters, and a backend keyword suggestion string assembled from deduplicated tokens in your inputs. Shopify mode returns a 160-character short blurb suitable for meta descriptions, a medium-length body targeting roughly 300 words, and a longer section with headings that you can paste into a rich text editor. eBay mode emphasizes item specifics, condition language, and a detailed narrative; Etsy mode leans story-first with materials and care blocks; social mode focuses on a sub–10-word hook, a body under 125 characters for tight feeds, and a CTA line; general website mode gives an H2-style headline, feature-to-benefit pairs, and a closing CTA paragraph.
Choose a tone that matches your brand voice and the channel’s expectations—luxury on Etsy may read differently than technical copy for electronics. Click Generate Descriptions to produce three to five variations per selected platform, each tagged with the active framework. Review tabs per platform, toggle keyword highlighting if you want visual emphasis on extracted terms, copy individual variations, favorite standouts, and export everything as a .txt bundle or a .csv for spreadsheets. Iterate by tweaking features or tone and regenerating; favorites persist in local storage on this device until you clear site data.
Limitations and best practices
Automated copy is a draft, not a compliance packet. You remain responsible for truthful claims, regulatory labeling (food, cosmetics, medical-adjacent goods), compatibility statements, and trademarked terms. Marketplace policies change; always verify Amazon, eBay, Etsy, and ad network rules before publishing. Replace any placeholder bullet padding with verified specifications, and add legal disclaimers where your category requires them.
Avoid duplicate content across the entire web when SEO is a priority: use generated text as a foundation, then localize and differentiate per storefront. For accessibility, ensure your final HTML uses semantic headings and readable contrast—this tool outputs plain text blocks you still need to place into accessible templates. Clear favorites periodically on shared machines, and keep canonical specs in your PIM so human editors work from a single source of truth.
Continue to SynthQuery’s broader catalog from the footer-linked directory at synthquery.com/tools.
Frequently asked questions
Lead with the shopper’s outcome, not only internal specs. Pair each feature with a benefit (“sealed lid” → “no leaks in a commuter bag”), add proof where allowed (tests, certifications, materials), and close with a clear action. Use scannable structure—bullets for marketplaces, short paragraphs for web—and keep tone consistent with your brand. Generate several framework variants here, then merge the strongest lines into one authoritative version after fact-checking.
Typically a keyword-aware title within policy limits, five feature bullets that answer objections (fit, compatibility, what is included), a narrative description for readers who scroll, and accurate backend search terms without keyword stuffing. Images and A+ content carry much of the persuasion load, but the text still frames expectations and reduces returns. Use this tool’s Amazon tab as a scaffold, then insert measurements, model numbers, and compliance phrases your legal team approves.
It depends on channel and complexity. Short meta blurbs hover around 155–160 characters for SERP snippets. Marketplace bullets stay concise; narrative sections may run a few hundred words for considered purchases. Avoid fluff length—every sentence should reduce uncertainty or increase desire. The generator’s Shopify long template aims past five hundred words for complex items, but you should trim if your audience prefers minimalism.
No single framework wins every SKU. AIDA works well for standard ecommerce funnels; PAS is strong when the shopper arrives with a known pain; FAB keeps engineering-heavy products honest about translation to user value; BAB helps upgrades where customers must visualize life after the purchase. Rotate frameworks with this tool, then pick the narrative that matches your traffic source—search intent versus impulse social versus marketplace comparison shopping.
Research the queries your buyers actually use, then place primary terms naturally in titles, headings, and body copy without stuffing. Synonyms and specific attributes (“waterproof IPX7” versus “water resistant”) can capture long-tail searches. Internal links to guides or compatible accessories help on your own site; on marketplaces, follow each platform’s indexing rules. Use keyword highlighting here as a sanity check, not as a density score—modern search rewards helpful, specific language over repetition.
Usually yes. Amazon shoppers compare bullets; Etsy browsers read maker stories; social viewers decide in one or two seconds. Repetition across channels can feel robotic and may waste unique indexing opportunities on your owned site. Maintain consistent facts everywhere—price, materials, dimensions—but adapt emphasis, tone, and structure. This generator’s per-platform tabs make that separation explicit so you are not forced into one-size-fits-all paragraphs.
Clarity beats cleverness when doubt is high: say who it is for, what problem it solves, what is in the box, and how it feels to use. Reduce risk with guarantees, return policies, or compatibility checks where appropriate. Social proof belongs near the buy button, but descriptions should tee up those elements with specific claims you can support. Test hooks and openings; the social and PAS variants from this page are useful starting points for experiments.
Match category norms and brand guidelines. Premium goods often use restrained, sensory language; gadgets may warrant crisp spec-forward tone; kids’ products might be playful but still clear on safety. If you sell internationally, avoid idioms that localize poorly. The tone buttons on this page preview directional vocabulary—you still edit for your style guide and channel policies.
Three to seven concrete features is a practical range for most SKUs—enough to differentiate, not so many that readers fatigue. Prioritize the attributes that drive purchase decisions for your audience: capacity, compatibility, materials, battery life, warranty, and included accessories. If you have more, group them into themes (“Durability,” “Connectivity”) or move secondary details to a specs table. The form enforces that range so outputs stay focused.
You can, but it is rarely optimal. Duplication may be acceptable for small catalogs when time is constrained, yet differentiated copy usually improves relevance and clarity. If you reuse text, ensure character limits still fit and adjust opening lines for each channel’s context. Start from exports here, then tailor manually rather than blind-copying mega-blocks that ignore platform norms.