The E-Commerce Writers Guide to Prompting AI for Conversion Copy

E-commerce copywriting and AI has developed a specific failure mode that content writing doesn’t: every piece of generic, unconvincing copy is directly adjacent to a buy button, which means the cost is measurable in real conversion rate rather than just in “quality.” As someone who has written e-commerce copy at scale and spent time figuring out where the AI default output falls apart, I learned what the prompts need to do differently than most people run them. Today I’ll share the ones that actually move conversion.

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Conversion copy isn’t about persuading people into decisions they haven’t made — it’s about removing friction from decisions they’re already close to making. Your visitor found your product page. They’re considering it. The copy’s job is to answer their questions and address their concerns. That reframe changes what you ask AI to write.

The Customer Language Prompt (Run This First)

The highest-leverage AI prompt in e-commerce isn’t a writing prompt — it’s a research prompt. Before writing anything: “Here are customer reviews / support ticket themes / common questions about [product]: [paste raw data]. Extract: the exact phrases customers use to describe the problem this product solves, the words they use to describe having it, the concerns that come up most often, and the outcomes they talk about most. Return as a vocabulary list I can use in product copy.”

Customer language converts better than any copywriter’s language because it creates immediate recognition. “I hate it when my coffee gets cold before I finish it” in your copy is more persuasive than “temperature-controlled for your perfect drinking experience” because it’s in the customer’s own words. That’s what makes this step endearing to conversion-focused writers — it’s the one that requires the least writing ability and produces the most reliable results.

The Category Page Prompt

Category pages get neglected because they feel administrative. They’re actually the highest-traffic entry point for many stores. Prompt: “Write a category page intro for [category] that: explains in one sentence what makes the right [product type] matter, tells visitors what they need to know to choose well without listing every product, and gives them a reason to trust that the products here were thoughtfully selected. Under 100 words. No superlatives.”

The Abandoned Cart Email Sequence

Email 1 (1 hour after abandonment): “Write a short abandoned cart email for [product] that: doesn’t apologize or grovel, acknowledges the person looked at [product], and addresses the single most common reason people hesitate before buying. Under 80 words. No discount offer.”

Email 2 (24 hours after): “Write a second abandoned cart email leading with a specific customer outcome or use case. Include one piece of social proof. Offer [discount if applicable]. Under 100 words.”

Friction removal first, incentive second. This sequence outperforms leading with a discount because it avoids training customers to abandon carts waiting for a coupon code.

The A/B Test Generator

For any copy you’re uncertain about: “Write three versions of this [headline / description / CTA]: [paste current version]. Version A: leads with the outcome the customer gets. Version B: leads with the problem it solves. Version C: leads with what makes this different from alternatives. All under [word count].”

The three-angle framework produces genuinely different copy rather than minor variations on the same approach, which gives you something worth actually testing.

The One Edit That Improves Everything

After generating any e-commerce copy, scan for “you’ll” and every future tense construction. “You’ll love how this fits” is weaker than “It fits.” Present tense is more confident and more immediate. Make that replacement throughout before publishing — conversion rate tends to improve, and it takes about three minutes per page.

Jason Michael

Jason Michael

Author & Expert

Jason covers aviation technology and flight systems for FlightTechTrends. With a background in aerospace engineering and over 15 years following the aviation industry, he breaks down complex avionics, fly-by-wire systems, and emerging aircraft technology for pilots and enthusiasts. Private pilot certificate holder (ASEL) based in the Pacific Northwest.

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