A product card has to sell twice: to the search engine that decides whether to show it, and to the shopper who has to keep reading. Many descriptions only manage one of the two, and the problem multiplies across a catalog of hundreds of near-identical template descriptions.
What it does
Given a product name and its key features, this skill checks real search demand for the category first — the exact words and refinements shoppers add before buying — then writes complete card copy: a lead paragraph with the main benefit, a features block where every spec is framed as a benefit, and a section addressing common buyer doubts pulled from real query refinements.
What you get
The finished description is saved as a library document (with suggested title/description for the card page appended), plus a short chat digest of which queries shaped the copy, its structure, and its length. It's a fast way to launch a new category's cards without copying a competitor's structure blind, or to spot-check an existing card against what real demand data suggests it should cover.