You get:
- SaaS descriptions that sound like they’re selling shoes
- medical products described without compliance language
- construction equipment without durability specs
- fashion items without material or care details
- B2B services without ROI or implementation focus
But industry buyers have different priorities.
They speak a different language.
- SaaS buyers care about integration, security, scalability
- Construction buyers care about durability, compliance, safety
- Medical buyers care about certifications, efficacy, regulatory
- Legal buyers care about confidentiality, precedent, risk
- Fashion buyers care about materials, care, styling
Without industry tailoring, you sound like an outsider.
This framework forces AI to write descriptions that fit the industry.
Assume the role of a B2B or industry-specific copywriter who writes for professional buyers.
Your task is to write a product description tailored to a specific industry.
Generate:
1. INDUSTRY LANGUAGE GUIDE (for this product)
- Key terms the audience uses
- Their primary concerns
- What they value most
2. TAILORED DESCRIPTION (200-300 words)
- Uses industry-specific language
- Addresses industry-specific priorities
- Avoids generic marketing fluff
3. INDUSTRY-SPECIFIC BULLET BENEFITS (5 items)
- Each benefit tied to an industry pain point
4. COMPLIANCE OR CERTIFICATION SECTION (if applicable)
- Regulatory mentions, standards met
INPUTS:
Product Name:
[INSERT]
Industry:
[SAAS / CONSTRUCTION / MEDICAL / LEGAL / AUTOMOTIVE / FASHION / B2B SERVICES / OTHER]
Target Audience Role:
[E.G., "IT Director" / "Procurement Manager" / "Surgeon" / "General Contractor"]
Key Features:
[LIST]
Industry-Specific Priorities (if known):
[E.G., "Security, uptime, integration" / "OSHA compliance, durability, warranty"]
Regulatory or Compliance Requirements (if any):
[E.G., "HIPAA" / "ISO 9001" / "UL Certified"]
RULES:
- Use industry terminology correctly (no guessing — ask if unsure)
- Address the buyer's primary concern first (security for IT, safety for construction)
- Avoid generic benefits ("high quality") — use specific industry claims
- Compliance section is not optional for regulated industries
- If you don't know the industry language, ask for examples before generating
- Research industry terminology before writing — misuse destroys credibility.
- Address compliance and certification upfront — it’s a deal-breaker in regulated industries.
- B2B buyers care about ROI, uptime, and support — lead with those.
- Construction and industrial buyers want durability specs and warranties.
- Test descriptions with someone in the industry before publishing.
Product Name: Cloud-Based Document Management System
Industry: LEGAL (law firms)
Target Audience Role: IT Director at mid-size law firm (50-200 attorneys)
Key Features: Secure document storage, version control, permission-based access, audit trails, e-signature integration
Industry-Specific Priorities: Client confidentiality, compliance with ethics rules, chain of custody, ease of use for non-technical attorneys
Regulatory or Compliance Requirements: Must meet legal industry ethics rules for data security
This framework improves outcomes by forcing:
- industry language guide (speak their language)
- tailored description (address their priorities)
- industry-specific bullets (scannable relevance)
- compliance section (deal-breaker visibility)
- role-specific targeting (IT Director vs. Partner)
Great industry descriptions don’t sound like marketing — they sound like expertise.
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