Rewrite weak product titles
Weak titles hurt search visibility and make products harder to understand at a glance.
We audited 100 of your 219 products. Your catalog scores 60/100 — top e-commerce brands hit 95. That gap is worth $191/month in unrealized sales.
“This catalog significantly underperforms compared to top e-commerce sites, particularly in content quality and presentation. Critical deficiencies in product descriptions and image consistency indicate a substantial need for immediate strategic improvements to meet industry standards.”
Monthly revenue estimated from 219 products, $212 avg price, ~5K monthly visits scaled by catalog size, 2% conversion rate.
Formula: Sampled 100 of 219 products (×2.2 extrapolation). Losses combined multiplicatively: 1-(1-r₁)(1-r₂)(1-r₃)(1-r₄) to avoid double-counting.
Before we look at what's broken, we need to understand who reads your product pages and what they came for.
She's 70-80% of revenue of your revenue — and your product pages aren't answering her questions.
Is this store legitimate and trustworthy? The messy product descriptions make it look unprofessional and cheap.
Can I really trust the quality of this jewelry/hair extensions without clear, detailed images and consistent product information?
Am I getting a good deal, or is this just a cheap imitation? The confusing and inconsistent titles make it hard to tell.
To look elegant and feel confident for social events or daily wear without a significant financial outlay.
To find a beautiful and meaningful piece of jewelry that symbolizes love or achievement, without the prohibitive expense of natural diamonds.
To easily discover and compare products that offer maximum visual appeal and perceived value for money, allowing for an informed purchase decision.
Celebrating a personal milestone or special occasion (e.g., engagement, anniversary, birthday) and wanting a beautiful, symbolic gift.
Desire to enhance personal style and appearance with sparkling, elegant accessories or voluminous hair, but needs to stay within a budget.
Finding an 'affordable luxury' item that offers the look and feel of high-end products (e.g., diamonds) at a fraction of the cost.
Sophia is looking for affordable luxury, but the catalog's critical issues directly contradict this. Raw HTML in descriptions, inconsistent titles, and insufficient imagery make the store appear unprofessional and untrustworthy. She cannot confidently assess the quality or aesthetic appeal of a Moissanite ring or hair extensions if the product page itself is messy and unclear, making it difficult for her to perceive value or make an informed decision. The catalog fails to provide the professional presentation and detailed visual evidence needed to convert a 'savvy sparkle seeker' who is already making a trade-off for affordability.




Issues ordered by cost. Expand any row for the evidence.
Numerous product descriptions display visible HTML tags, CMS shortcodes, and platform-specific elements (e.g., kse:widget, detailmodule_html). This severely degrades readability, professional appearance, and negatively impacts user experience and search engine optimization.
criticalProduct titles frequently lack consistency, contain internal IDs, outdated information, or use confusing terminology (e.g., 'Diamond' vs. 'Moissanite'). Many are also generic, keyword-stuffed, or omit key descriptive elements, hindering discoverability and user clarity.
criticalA substantial number of product listings, especially within the jewelry category, feature only 1-6 images. This limited visual context fails to adequately showcase products, negatively impacting conversion rates and customer confidence.
criticalAt least one product (ID 177259) is entirely devoid of a title, description, and images. Such severe content gaps render products undiscoverable and unsellable, highlighting a fundamental flaw in content management and quality control.
criticalMany descriptions exhibit poor structural integrity, including irrelevant HTML head elements or excessive reliance on image tags with minimal actual descriptive text. This hinders readability, text-based SEO, and comprehensive product understanding for users.
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One ranked roadmap, three views. Phase 1 alone recovers the majority inside 2 weeks.
Weak titles hurt search visibility and make products harder to understand at a glance.
Weak image coverage reduces trust and makes products harder to evaluate.
Incomplete SEO fields limit how much organic traffic your existing catalog can capture.
Thin or missing descriptions force shoppers to guess why the product is worth buying.
Clearer product names that are easier to scan, search, and compare.
More complete PDPs that explain value, answer objections, and support conversion.
Richer PDPs with stronger visual confidence and fewer abandoned product views.
A more discoverable catalog with cleaner metadata and stronger search intent.
Enriched product descriptions increase PDP conversion rate
Keep 20% of products unchanged as a control group. Compare conversion rate, bounce rate, and revenue per session between optimized and control products after 30 days.
13 products to fix. Dondo runs it in 1 minutes.