Listing Broadcaster
List once, sell everywhere — Shopify to Amazon to eBay in one pass
Create or update a product listing from one master catalog, then adapt it for the channels you actually sell on. Useful when the same product needs different titles, attributes, and compliance checks on each marketplace.
INGREDIENTS
PROMPT
Set up multi-channel product listing for my store. My master catalog is on [Shopify/WooCommerce/spreadsheet]. I want to list products on [Amazon, eBay, Walmart, Etsy — list your channels]. For each product: (1) pull the master data from my primary source, (2) transform the title, description, images, and attributes to match each marketplace's requirements, (3) map to the correct category on each platform, and (4) flag any missing required fields before pushing via API. Handle ongoing syncs only after the mappings are verified. Alert me if any listing gets suppressed, rejected, or falls out of compliance.
How It Works
You maintain your master catalog in one place — usually Shopify,
WooCommerce, or a spreadsheet. When you add or update a product, your
Claw transforms the listing data for each target marketplace and prepares
or pushes updates through their APIs.
What You Get
- One-to-many listing workflow from a designated source catalog
- Title and description adaptation for channel-specific limits
- Category mapping across marketplace taxonomies
- Image and attribute compliance checks
- Missing-field detection so you know what needs manual input
- Listing health monitoring for rejected or suppressed listings
Setup Steps
- Designate your master catalog source (Shopify, WooCommerce, or a spreadsheet)
- Connect the marketplace APIs you actually use
- Build category and attribute mappings for your product lines
- Run a test batch of 5–10 products
- Turn on ongoing sync only after you trust the mappings
Tips
- Start with your cleanest product line, not your messiest catalog corner
- Category and attribute mapping quality matters more than copy generation
- Keep a review queue for listings with missing compliance fields
- Marketplace schemas change, so treat this as a maintained workflow, not a one-time setup
- Suppression alerts are useful only if you also keep the source catalog clean