Good copywriting on product pages can be taken for granted or overlooked. But when copy is bad, it's impossible to miss. Think of all the pages you’ve seen where retailers have just plonked the manufacturer’s description on the site, the same one that many other sites use.
This is a missed opportunity to use copy to stand out from competitors, sell the benefits of products, and to answer any questions customers might have. It can help your page rank above competitors, and persuade more people to purchase.
Good copy works well with the product and brand, appeals to the target audience and improves conversion.
Before hitting the publish button on your copy, ask yourself a few questions:
The sites selected here all have some great, unique copy which fits the brand and products.
Firebox is a great example of brand tone of voice in product copy. It’s a fun site with some pretty silly products, and the copy reflects this.
It also manages to sell the benefits of the products, and picks out key features clearly in bullet points.
Ugmonk sells its own designs, some of which are relatively expensive, so the copy has a job to do in conveying the uniqueness of the products, as well as the quality and durability.
The provenance of the product is key here, and the copy describes the design process, emphasising the work that has gone into the product and the quality of materials used.
Loaf doesn’t go too heavy on the text, but uses short sentences along with images to get its points across.
It’s fun and informal, and doesn’t sell too hard.
The brand tone of voice is there, but it also does the hard work of selling the benefits of the product and conveying key information on delivery and removal.
Restrained product copy from Modcloth here, which sells a vision of the dress at a reunion, rather than lingering on the details.
Modcloth lets its customers do the talking, and essentially gets them to write some of the product copy.
It’s a great plan if the products merit the praise, and great use of social proof to convince new customers to take the plunge.
Hotel site Mr & Mrs Smith works hard not just to sell the room, but the experience.
It’s quite different to some of the cut and paste copy you often see on hotel sites, it sounds like the copywriter has actually spent some time there, and has more authenticity as a result.
For expensive luxury items, in this case £90 for a small bottle, copy needs to be persuasive and this is what Jo Malone does.
It reads like tasting notes for expensive wine, and sells the experience.
If you can pull it off, a little humor always helps. Palace has some of the funniest product page copy out there.
There’s no need to sell a lifestyle or brand here, so the product copy is functional, and describes the product’s features clearly.
It’s also about the way copy is laid out so shoppers can scan the page and pick out key product specifications easily.
Patagonia sells serious outdoor gear so it needs to really sell the features and uses of its products.
The copy gets technical, talking about the materials and their durability, as well as possible uses like carrying fly boxes or cameras.
Patagonia also emphasises its environmental credentials, and its support of fair trade, so it talks about its suppliers in detail. The overall effect from the copy is to portray the brand and ethical and knowledgeable.
The overall effect from the copy is to portray the brand as ethical and knowledgeable.
Nice fun copy from on this Fab product page, and a lot of good practice here.
Alongside the description, key measurements and shipping information is laid out clearly. This makes it an easy product page for shoppers to view and digest.
As befits a page selling a pair of jeans for £230, Hiut Denim’s copy works hard to emphasise the history and craftsmanship behind the product.
There’s plenty of talk about the brand’s history and the manufacturing process to convey this.
I also like the copy around finding the perfect fit, it’s well presented and very useful to help customers find the best fit and minimise returns.