The Ultimate Guide to Writing Product Descriptions That Sell
📅 Published: May 9, 2026 | ✍️ By Sarah Jenkins | ⏱️ 8 min read | 📊 8,500+ reads
A great product can fail because of bad copy. And an average product can become a bestseller with the right words. Your product description is often the last thing a customer reads before clicking “buy” — or clicking away.
In this guide, I’ll share 7 proven formulas for product descriptions that convert, real examples from successful brands, and how to use our free tools to write better copy faster.
What Makes a Product Description Sell?
Before we dive into formulas, understand the psychology: people don’t buy products — they buy solutions to problems and better versions of themselves. Your description should answer:
- What problem does this solve?
- How will my life be better after buying?
- Why should I trust you?
7 Product Description Formulas That Work
Formula #1: Feature → Benefit → Feeling
Example: “Memory foam padding means you’ll wake up without back pain, so you feel energized all day.”
Formula #2: Problem → Agitation → Solution
Example: “Tired of tangled headphones? Our magnetic earbuds snap together instantly.”
Formula #3: The Spec + The Story
Example: “500-thread count cotton (that means hotel-quality softness you’ll look forward to every night.)”
Formula #4: Social Proof Shortcut
Example: “Join 50,000+ runners who’ve stopped chafing with our anti-friction balm.”
Before vs After: Real Examples
Quick Product Description Template
Use this template for every product:
- Opening hook: Address the problem or desire (1 sentence)
- Key benefit: What’s the #1 reason to buy? (1 sentence)
- Features + translations: 2-3 specs with real-world meaning
- Social proof: Reviews, ratings, or usage stats
- Closing CTA: “Add to cart,” “Order now,” “Get yours”
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Listing specs without benefits: “10 ounces” means nothing. “Light enough to carry all day” means something.
- Using jargon: “Ergonomically designed” is vague. “Fits your hand perfectly” is clear.
- Forgetting the customer: Write to “you” not “the user.”
- Copying the manufacturer: Be unique. Tell your brand’s story.