Your product description is often the first thing a potential user reads after landing on your page. If it does not immediately answer "why should I care?", they will leave.
Most descriptions default to listing features. Features tell people what a product does. What converts is telling them what changes for them when they use it.
Lead With the Outcome
Compare these two openings:
- "A task manager with labels, due dates, and team assignments."
- "Stop losing track of what needs doing. Your team's work, in one place."
The first describes a product. The second describes a situation the reader recognises and wants to escape.
Start by naming the problem or the desired state. The features can come after.
Be Specific
Vague descriptions feel like they could apply to anything. Specificity builds trust.
Instead of "powerful analytics," write "see exactly which pages users drop off on, down to the session." Instead of "fast and reliable," write "deploys in under 30 seconds with 99.9% uptime."
If you cannot be specific, it usually means you do not know your user well enough yet.
The Three Things to Cover
A good product description answers three questions in order:
- Who is this for? Name your target user explicitly if the audience is narrow.
- What does it do? One sentence on the core capability.
- Why does it matter? The outcome or relief the user gets.
You do not need a paragraph for each. Two or three sentences that cover all three is better than a long paragraph that covers none of them.
Edit Ruthlessly
After drafting, go back and remove every word that does not add meaning. Adverbs, filler phrases ("in order to," "the ability to"), and hedging language ("can help you," "may be useful for") all weaken the copy.
A shorter description that is confident and clear will always outperform a longer one that hedges.
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