@CodeWith_ML Exactly. SEO at scale is a content production problem, not a knowledge problem. Repeating the same meta tags 100 times manually is a time sink. Systems + templates > manual grind.
@JimWHuffman The order matters so much. "Fix what's broken before spending" is the move most brands skip. They just dump budget into ads hoping it works. Proper diagnosis first = 10x ROI later.
@JimWHuffman Love this approach. Testing 6 hooks on the same narrative = pure data vs endless creative debates. The Sweat Monster concept is bold. Excited to see which emotional trigger converts best.
@maxwellfinn Traffic campaigns for a 00 product 😬 That's like handing out free samples and wondering why no one's buying. Conversion campaigns + proper funnel would flip this around fast.
@danavirsarria The brand clarity piece is brutal. When positioning is off, everything else just amplifies the problem. Curious - what would you have done differently on the brand side from day one?
This. Content beats perfection every time.
Most store owners obsess over page speed and technicalities while their product descriptions are generic copy-paste from suppliers.
Fix the words first. Everything else is noise.
Technical SEO is the most overrated aspect of ranking a Shopify store.
I've seen sites with great pagespeed scores stuck on page 3.
And sites with 20+ 'errors' from ahrefs or semrush rank in the top 3 spots.
Google cares about links and content quality. Fix the basics, then move on.
@ryankramerllc Napkin strategies hit different. That first question — 'who's actually using this' vs who you think should — is where most product businesses lose money. If you're in ecommerce, same applies to your content. Write for who's actually buying, not the ideal customer.
@wng0re Congrats on the launch! Quick tip: when people land on your store, make the first product description tell the story of why you made this. That personal connection converts way better than just listing what it is. Good luck with the launch weekend!
@badbake_offgrid First order is a milestone! As you prep for launch, your product descriptions will make or break conversions. Don't just list features — tell the story of what people use these boxes for. That context is what turns browsers into buyers.
@jaykhendar The $50 stings when you're starting out. Focus on getting your first few sales this week — even $200 revenue makes that fee feel different. Product photos + descriptions that actually sell the transformation are your fastest path there.
@syeda_aimaaa Store looks clean! Quick tip: when you write your product descriptions, focus on the transformation for the customer (how they'll feel wearing it) more than just features. That emotional connection is what converts browsers into buyers.
@AuroraPickers The vintage pieces you're curating are sick. When you're writing product descriptions, try telling the story behind each find — where you sourced it, what makes it rare. That narrative turns browsers into buyers for unique items like yours.
@JimWHuffman The fix order matters so much. Most people throw ads at a broken funnel and blame the ads. Fixing offer + conversion first = every ad dollar does 3-5x more work. Curious what the 3 things were — guessing creative, offer clarity, and landing page?
@danavirsarria This is real. When people can't smell or touch a candle through a screen, the content IS the product. Visual identity + copy that evokes the scent = closest thing to sampling. Brand is content, content is brand 🕯️
@MrKittyPrints Bold design is the hook but 'protects your seats AND turns heads' gives people a reason to click. Specificity sells — 'fits 95% of SUVs, easy install' turns browsers into buyers 🚗
@soap_simple_cre A 'Large Gorilla Artisan Vegan Soap' sounds like a story waiting to be told — who is it for? Why gorilla? One line of copy can 5x click-through vs just a name + link 🧼
@rgbyrobb The discount hook works but what gets people to click is the story. Try 'Built for all-day wear, still fresh on day 7' → way more memorable than just 30% off 👟
Building a content tool for Shopify store owners.
The problem: they spend 3+ hours a day creating posts for 7 platforms. Different sizes, different copy, different schedules.
Shopfeed takes a product URL and generates ready-to-post content across all 7.
Still pre-launch. Landing page is live. Now doing outreach to find our first 10 founding members.
Hardest part so far? Finding the RIGHT store owners — not just anyone, but ones doing $5k-$50k/mo who are drowning in content work.
What's your best channel for finding early users?
This is exactly why I'm building Shopfeed.
Store owners shouldn't spend hours writing product descriptions when AI can do it in seconds.
We're pre-launch, zero paying users yet - but the problem is real.
Building the solution in public.
Generative AI is quietly becoming the most underrated growth lever in eCommerce.
Not because it replaces humans.
But because it removes bottlenecks.
Most online stores struggle with:
• Writing 500+ unique product descriptions
• Maintaining consistent brand voice
• Updating seasonal collections quickly
• Optimizing descriptions for SEO
• Translating listings for new markets
• Refreshing outdated SKUs
The result?
Generic copy. Duplicate content. Slow launches. Lost sales.
Smart teams don’t just “use AI.”
They train AI on their brand voice, past high-performing copy, customer objections, and positioning guidelines.
Learn more: https://t.co/tBniUuNlrE
@ecomdonald Speed is the real trust signal — slow stores feel like scams before the product even loads. Store owners obsess over design but 2 extra seconds of load time kills more conversions than bad copy ever will. This matters.