How to Rewrite 1,000 Ecommerce Product Pages in an Afternoon with OpenClaw
Most ecommerce stores are sitting on the same problem: a catalog full of product pages that nobody actually (re)wrote. These descriptions usually came from the manufacturer, or from a template that says “high-quality materials” on 400 different SKUs, or worse, from a summer intern in 2019 who no longer works there.
You probably know these pages are costing you conversions. You also know that rewriting 1,000 product descriptions by hand would take weeks (and dread the thought of doing that).
That’s what this guide is for. We’re going to walk through a catalog overhaul using OpenClaw recipes (pre-built AI workflows you can run on your own product data) plus community-built skills from ClawHub that extend what the recipes can do. By the end, you’ll have rewritten descriptions, cleaned-up SEO, optimized images, and listings pushed to every channel you sell on.
Let’s get started
Step 1: Audit What’s Broken
Before you rewrite anything, figure out where the damage is. The SEO Mechanic recipe crawls your entire store — product pages, collection pages, blog posts — and flags every SEO issue it finds. It finds missing meta titles, duplicate descriptions, missing alt text, thin content pages, broken internal links, missing schema markup, and more.
After it lists the problem, this recipe then prioritizes them by impact, so you fix the pages that matter first.
Make it better with ClawHub skills:
The SEO Content Writer & Blog Optimizer skill takes this further. Where SEO Mechanic finds the gaps, this skill helps you fill them with keyword-integrated content, optimized headers, and featured snippet targeting. Use it after the audit to turn your fix list into actual copy.
If your catalog is partially in PDFs or scanned supplier docs, the PaddleOCR Document Parsing skill extracts structured text from those files so you can feed clean data into the rest of the pipeline.
Step 2: Rewrite Every Description at Once
The Product Description Factory recipe takes your product catalog (CSV, Shopify export, spreadsheet, whatever you have) and generates unique, keyword-aware descriptions for every SKU.
You give it a few examples of descriptions you like, and it uses those as a reference. It generates the description, SEO meta title (under 60 characters), meta description (under 155), and image alt text in a single pass. Output comes back as CSV rows you can re-import directly.
The trick is to start with your top 20 products. Get the voice right on a small batch, tweak the examples, then run the full catalog in groups of 25-50. Don’t try to do all 1,000 in one shot and review them later.
Make it better with ClawHub skills:
Before you write a single description, you might want to know what good looks like in your product category. The Web Scraper skill can pull competitor product pages so you can see how top sellers describe similar products. If competitors have anti-bot protections, Scrapling handles Cloudflare Turnstile and similar tools.
For sellers on TikTok Shop, the EcomSeer skill pulls trending product data, influencer analytics, and ad insights. Useful for figuring out which features to emphasize in your descriptions based on what’s actually selling.
Step 3: Edit What’s Already There
Sometimes you don’t need to rewrite from scratch. You need to change “sale” to “clearance” across 800 products, raise prices by 10% in one collection, or update meta descriptions for an entire category.
The Bulk Product Surgeon recipe handles this. Describe the change in plain English — “add free shipping to every product title in the Summer collection” — and it executes across your entire catalog. It previews the changes before applying them, so you won’t accidentally rename everything.
Make it better with ClawHub skills:
The Excel / XLSX skill is the natural companion here. If you’re working with exported spreadsheets, it handles formula creation, formatting, and data validation before you re-import.
The Data Analysis skill helps when you need to make smarter decisions about what to edit — for example, identifying which products have the worst conversion rates so you prioritize those descriptions first.
Step 4: Fix Your Product Images
Your descriptions are sharp, but your images are 4MB JPEGs on a white-ish background that Amazon keeps rejecting. The Image Factory recipe batch-processes your entire image library: removes backgrounds, replaces with pure white, resizes for each marketplace’s specs, compresses to under 200KB, converts to WebP, and generates alt text from product attributes.
Make it better with ClawHub skills:
This is where ClawHub skills add the most obvious value. The Image Cog skill goes beyond cleanup into actual image generation: product photography, style transfer, batch creation, and consistent visual identity across your catalog. Need lifestyle shots without a photographer? It handles text-to-image and image-to-image generation.
The Nano Banana Pro skill (79K+ downloads, one of the most popular on ClawHub) gives you access to Gemini’s image model for generating and editing product images at up to 4K resolution. Pair it with Image Factory: one cleans up your existing photos, the other generates the ones you’re missing.
Step 5: Push to Every Channel
Your catalog looks good on Shopify. Now you need it on Amazon, eBay, Walmart, and Etsy, each with different title formats, attribute requirements, and compliance rules. The Listing Broadcaster recipe takes your master catalog and adapts each listing for every channel you sell on.
It handles the annoying parts: character limits on Amazon titles, category-specific attributes, required bullet point formats, compliance flags. You maintain one master catalog and let the recipe handle the translation.
Make it better with ClawHub skills:
The Market Research skill helps you decide which channels are worth expanding to. It does market sizing, competitor mapping, and demand validation, so you’re not listing on Walmart only to find out nobody buys your product category there.
The Marketing Strategy PMM skill helps with positioning. Different channels attract different buyers. The way you describe a product on Etsy (handmade, artisan, story-driven) is completely different from Amazon (specs, comparison, Prime-eligible). This skill helps you articulate what makes your product different on each platform.
Step 6: Close the Loop With Reviews
You’ve rewritten the catalog, fixed the images, pushed to every channel. Now you need social proof. The Review Loop recipe automates the unglamorous work of collecting reviews: sends a request email a few days after delivery, monitors for new reviews across all your channels, and drafts responses for anything that needs human attention.
It catches negative reviews early — before they sit unanswered for two weeks and convince 50 potential buyers to go elsewhere.
Make it better with ClawHub skills:
The Marketing Psychology skill applies behavioral science to your review request emails. Small tweaks like the timing of the ask, how you frame it, whether you reference the specific product, can meaningfully improve response rates.
The Skill That Makes Everything Better Over Time
One more ClawHub skill worth mentioning, because it applies to every step above: the Self-Improving Agent. With 355K downloads and 3,000 stars, it’s the most popular skill on ClawHub for a reason.
It captures learnings, errors, and corrections across sessions. When you correct a product description’s tone, it remembers. When you reject a bad image edit, it learns. Over time, your entire catalog pipeline gets better without you re-explaining your preferences every session.
The Full Pipeline
Here’s what the complete workflow looks like:
Audit — SEO Mechanic finds everything that’s broken
Rewrite — Product Description Factory generates new copy for every SKU
Edit — Bulk Product Surgeon handles mass changes across the catalog
Images — Image Factory cleans up and optimizes every product photo
Distribute — Listing Broadcaster pushes adapted listings to every channel
Reviews — Review Loop collects social proof and monitors feedback
Each step works on its own. Together, they’re a catalog overhaul that would have taken a team weeks, finished in an afternoon.

