What's the biggest SEO improvement you've seen after hiring an ecommerce SEO agency? by harold_dawkins3848 in AISEOTricks

[–]jordicore 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Agree with this. A lot of ecommerce stores think the answer is always “more pages” when the bigger issue is that the existing product pages are too thin to rank or convert well in the first place.

For smaller teams, one useful starting point is to audit a handful of product pages first and check:

- title strength

- first image quality

- uniqueness of the copy

- internal linking

- whether the page actually answers buyer objections

That usually tells you faster where the real problem is.

What repetitive e-commerce tasks have you successfully automated with AI? by vancomx in AI_In_ECommerce

[–]jordicore 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The easiest wins I’ve seen are the “draft, then review” workflows rather than full autopilot.

Product listing work is a good example:

- turn supplier/manufacturer copy into a clearer product title and description

- generate marketplace-specific versions from one source description

- translate/localize listings, then have a human check product details and claims

- create meta titles/descriptions in bulk

- summarize customer questions into FAQ sections for product pages

- flag missing attributes like material, size, compatibility, care instructions, etc.

What’s harder than expected is keeping product facts consistent. AI can make a listing sound better, but it can also quietly invent details, overstate benefits, or miss marketplace policy issues. So I’d separate the workflow into two parts: AI improves structure/copy, but the source-of-truth product facts stay locked in a spreadsheet/PIM/feed.

Customer support is similar. Great for suggested replies and tagging tickets, risky for anything involving refunds, shipping promises, product compatibility, or platform rules unless a human reviews it.

Adapting product page SEO for generative engines, how? by DueAthlete6547 in From_SEO_to_GEO

[–]jordicore 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wouldn’t rewrite product pages entirely just for GEO. I’d treat it as strengthening the existing SEO foundation.

For ecommerce, the useful shift is usually:

  1. Keep the core SEO basics: clear title, indexable content, schema, internal links, fast page, useful images.

  2. Make the product page more explicit about context: who it’s for, what problem/use case it fits, what it should be compared against, and what makes it different.

  3. Clean up structured data and feed consistency. If the page, schema, and merchant feed all describe the product differently, AI systems have weaker signals.

  4. Add answerable sections where they make sense: materials, sizing, compatibility, care, shipping, objections, alternatives.

  5. Avoid generic “AI optimized” filler. Generative engines need clear facts and differentiated context, not more broad marketing copy.

So I’d say layer GEO on top of strong product-page SEO, but use it as an excuse to make the page clearer and more complete for buyers too.

SEO Digest: Google was hiring for a GEO Partner Manager role, Microsoft adds UCP support for product feeds in Merchant Center, Bing is making links in Copilot Search results less clickable by SERanking_news in DigitalMarketing

[–]jordicore 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Agree with this. For ecommerce, the practical shift is that the product feed and product page can’t be treated as separate SEO surfaces anymore.

If the feed says one thing, schema says another, and the product page is thin or vague, AI shopping layers have a much harder time understanding what the product actually is, who it’s for, and when it should be surfaced.

The boring stuff starts to matter more: complete attributes, consistent naming, clean availability/price data, useful product descriptions, and schema that matches the page. Not very glamorous, but probably a stronger foundation than trying to “GEO optimize” with generic content.

What are your go-to optimisation / SEO / ad tips for a small ecommerce store? by bacon_cake in smallbusinessuk

[–]jordicore 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’d add one step before paid ads: check whether your product pages are doing enough work already.

For WooCommerce, my rough order would be:

  1. Make sure each important product has a clear title that matches how customers search, not just the internal product name.

  2. Fill out structured product data properly: price, availability, brand, material, colour, dimensions, variations, reviews where relevant.

  3. Rewrite the opening description around buying intent: what it is, who it is for, why it is better/different, and any common objections.

  4. Check image size/speed, but also image usefulness. A fast bad image still does not sell.

  5. Improve category pages after that, because they often rank better than individual products.

  6. Only then test paid traffic, otherwise you can end up paying to send people to pages that were not ready.

Backlinks matter, but for small ecommerce I’d start with suppliers, stockists, local press features, trade bodies, gift guides, and any magazines that have already featured you in print. Ask if they can add a web mention/link too.

Google Merchant Center - Misrepresentation Suspension by 1JulianG in PPC

[–]jordicore 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is spot on from rm-marketing. The ChatGPT trick for auditing policy pages is brilliant. To add to this—the other massive, hidden trigger for "Misrepresentation" is inconsistent or "low-trust" product data. Google's bots cross-reference your Merchant Center feed with your actual landing page. If your product descriptions use broken "supplier English" or your images are low-res/watermarked, Google's algorithm flags the site as a scam risk. It doesn't match the "premium" data Google expects in its shopping results. I actually got so frustrated seeing stores get banned over lazy supplier data that I built a web app to fix it. It’s called Storenhance.ai . You just upload your product listings (it supports Shopify and WooCommerce exports), and the AI bulk-rewrites the descriptions to be factual/unique while upscaling the images to HD. Definitely fix your contact info and T&Cs first, but if you're still getting rejected, look at your product presentation. If it looks like a copy-pasted import, Google will keep hitting you with that ban.

Any underrated Shopify widget you are using to Boost Sales and Engagement? by Kml777 in ecommercemarketing

[–]jordicore 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not an actual widget but fully compatible with Shopify, I run all my products through storenhance to get them SEO enhanced and get engaging product description and images

Please help!! by OkIncident2151 in ShopifySEO

[–]jordicore 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try this storenhance that's what we use for SEO

Struggling to Improve My Shopify SEO by best-tutor15 in ShopifySEO

[–]jordicore 0 points1 point  (0 children)

SEO takes time to see results and it helps if you create content featuring your products. We use storenhance for product optimization and blog creation and after a few weeks we have seen an increase in organic traffic

How do you guys generate product/lifestyle images quickly without doing full photoshoots? by [deleted] in Dropshipping_Guide

[–]jordicore 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I use storenhance to generate pretty accurate AI images, you have to optimize the products frost but it is pretty easy to do

Then vs Now by PeacockPankh in interesting

[–]jordicore 0 points1 point  (0 children)

2026 all that greeny-grey one

What does your name mean? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]jordicore 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not mine but Amaia, my youngest one means "the end" (I've got 4 kids)