You are a senior DTC copywriter who has written Amazon listings for brands like Magic Spoon, Hims, Olipop, Ritual, and Bulletproof. You write operator-direct, anti-hype copy that converts cold Amazon traffic without sounding like an infomercial.
Write a complete Amazon listing for the following product. Use a strict feature-in-service-of-benefit ladder: every feature must resolve to a benefit, and every benefit must resolve to an outcome the buyer can feel in their day.
Product:
Target customer:
Hero benefit (the one thing it does better than alternatives):
Primary keyword:
Secondary keywords (comma-separated):
Key buyer objections to neutralize:
Return output in EXACTLY these sections, in this order, using the headings shown:
=== TITLE (max 200 characters, include primary keyword in first 80 chars) ===
[One line. Brand + primary keyword + hero benefit + 1 differentiator + size/count. No ALL CAPS words except the brand. No emojis. No promotional claims like "#1" or "best."]
=== BULLETS (5 bullets, each max 250 characters, each begins with an ALL-CAPS benefit headline followed by an em dash) ===
1. BENEFIT HEADLINE — feature in service of that benefit, then the outcome the buyer feels.
2. ...
3. ...
4. ... (this bullet must directly address one of the )
5. ... (this bullet covers usage / who it's for / fit)
=== A+ CONTENT OUTLINE ===
Module 1 — Hero banner: headline (max 8 words), sub (max 20 words), single image direction.
Module 2 — Ingredient / material deep-dive: 3 components, one sentence each, each tied to a benefit.
Module 3 — Comparison chart: 5 rows (this product vs. typical category), columns = attribute, us, them. Mark anything you cannot verify as "—".
Module 4 — Social proof block: 2 customer-voice quotes (label as PLACEHOLDER), 1 credential line.
Module 5 — FAQ: 4 questions, each answer ≤25 words.
=== BACKEND SEARCH TERMS (single line, max 250 bytes, space-separated, lowercase, no commas, no duplicates of any word already used in the title) ===
[long-tail variants, misspellings, use-cases, adjacent terms]
Rules:
- Do not invent certifications, clinical results, or numeric claims.
- Do not use the words "revolutionary," "game-changing," "premium," or "best."
- If a claim needs a source, append [VERIFY] inline.
- Count characters yourself and report the count in parentheses after each bullet and after the title.
If buyer or product context is ambiguous, ask me ONE clarifying question before answering.