The Situation
A Shopify store selling artisan home goods — handmade ceramics, linen textiles, and small furniture pieces. Based in Lithuania, shipping across Europe. They had beautiful product photography and a well-designed store, but their product descriptions were the weakest part of the customer experience.
The Problem
Every description followed the same pattern:
❌ Before (Typical Description)
"Add a touch of elegance to your home with our handmade ceramic bowl. Made from high-quality materials. Perfect for serving or decoration. Durable and stylish."
No story. No specifics. No reason to prefer this bowl over the 50 others in the search results.
✅ After (Rewritten Description)
"This bowl was thrown on a wheel in a small Vilnius studio, then fired twice — once to harden the clay, once to fix the glaze. The reactive blue glaze shifts under different light: deeper at dinner tables, brighter in morning windows. 18cm wide, 8cm deep. Microwave and dishwasher safe. Slight variations are normal — that's what "handmade" means."
This tells a story. It answers questions before they're asked. It justifies the price.
The Approach
The team started by interviewing the artisans who made each product. The key insight: every piece had a story — the studio it came from, the materials used, the specific decision-making process behind the design. None of this was in the descriptions.
The team rewrote all 48 product descriptions in three rounds:
- Round 1 (Week 1-2): 20 hero products — the bestsellers and highest-traffic items
- Round 2 (Week 3): 18 mid-tier products
- Round 3 (Week 4): 10 new products being launched that month
What Changed in the Copy
Specifics Over Superlatives
Every vague claim was replaced with specifics:
- "Premium materials" → "FSC-certified oak, finished with natural linseed oil"
- "Durable construction" → "Mortise-and-tenon joinery — no screws, no brackets, no wobble after 10 years"
- "Perfect for any room" → "In the living room as a side table. In the bedroom as a nightstand. At 55cm, it hits exactly the right height for most sofas."
Objection Anticipation
The team identified the top objections for each category and addressed them directly:
- Handmade products: "Will it look exactly like the photo?" → "No two pieces are identical. The glaze reacts differently in each kiln firing. Your piece will be unique to you."
- Linen textiles: "Will it shrink?" → "Pre-washed at 60°C. Expect minimal further shrinkage (under 3%)."
- Ceramics: "Is it fragile?" → "Fired at 1280°C. This is stoneware — it's stronger than it looks."
Emotional Hook + Logical Justification
Each description opened with a sensory or emotional hook before listing specifics:
"You know that feeling when you set a table and everything just clicks? When the bowl, the plates, the glassware — it all feels intentional. This is that feeling. And it starts with one piece."
The Results
After 30 days with the rewritten descriptions (all 48 products updated):
- Add-to-cart rate: 2.8% → 4.0% (+41%)
- Average order value: +€12 (customers were buying more items per order)
- Monthly revenue: $44K → $62K (+$18K)
- Return rate: -22% (customers knew exactly what they were getting)
- Support messages about product questions: -60%
What This Means for Your Store
The products were the same. The photography was the same. The traffic was the same. The only change was the words.
If your product descriptions are generic, you're leaving money on the table — and your competitors who bother to write better copy are collecting it.
Ready to Upgrade Your Product Copy?
The team rewrite product descriptions for e-commerce stores — specific, conversion-focused, and crafted for your exact customer. Starting at $49 per description, with bulk pricing for full catalogs.
See Product Description Service →