AI prompts for resellers didn’t exist in any useful form when I started looking for them, so I built my own. I’ve been reselling on eBay, Poshmark, and Mercari for a while now. Clothing, shoes, vintage finds — the usual. And for most of that time, writing listings was the part I dreaded most.
Not because I didn’t know what to say. I know my items. I know what buyers care about. The problem was saying it 30 times a week, for 30 different items, in a way that didn’t sound like I was falling asleep at the keyboard.
So I started using AI to help. Not to replace my judgment — I still decide what to list, how to price it, and what’s worth buying. But for the writing? AI handles a first draft in about 30 seconds, and I clean it up from there.
It works well enough that I built a system out of it. And then I packaged that system into a product you can buy for $9.
Here’s exactly how it works.
The Problem With Writing Resale Listings
Writing a good listing isn’t hard. Writing a good listing for the 15th item of the day, after you’ve already photographed everything and looked up comps and argued with a buyer about a $3 offer — that’s where it falls apart.
Most sellers either rush the copy (and leave money on the table) or skip listings entirely and wonder why things aren’t selling. The writing is the bottleneck.
AI removes the bottleneck.
What I Actually Built
The pack is called AI Prompts for Resellers. It’s 50 copy-paste prompts across 6 categories:
- Listing descriptions — eBay titles, Poshmark captions, Mercari descriptions, shoe listings, vintage items, bundles
- Pricing and research — comp research strategy, fee math, markdown timing, seasonal pricing
- Buyer communication — offers, counteroffers, complaints, returns, negative feedback responses
- Cross-listing strategy — which platform for which item, inventory prioritization, watcher offers
- Sourcing and evaluation — thrift store evaluation, brand research, authentication red flags
- Shop growth — metrics recovery, social promotion, quarterly business review
Each prompt has brackets where you fill in your item details, a tip explaining when and why to use it, and works with any major AI tool — ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, all of them.
A Real Example
I have a 1997 KISS denim jacket sitting in my inventory. Black heavyweight denim, official catalog patches, excellent vintage condition. Good item. I already had a draft listing written.
Here’s what I ran through the pack — Prompt #8, the “Rewrite a Weak Listing” prompt:
The prompt:
“Here is my current listing description: [PASTE YOUR EXISTING DESCRIPTION]. Rewrite it to be more compelling, more specific, and better optimized for search. Keep the facts accurate. Improve the opening sentence, sharpen the bullet points, and add a stronger closing line. Platform: eBay.”
I pasted my draft. Thirty seconds later, here’s what came back:
Title: KISS Denim Jacket XL Vintage 1997 Official Band Patches Black Heavyweight Rock
Description:
This is a 1997 KISS denim jacket — official catalog piece, not a reproduction. Black heavyweight denim with a large graphic back patch and front logo patch. If you know KISS merch, you know how hard authentic vintage pieces from this era are to find in this condition.
Details:
- Size: XL
- Color: Black
- Era: 1997 / 1990s
- Construction: Heavyweight denim
- Patches: Large graphic back patch + front logo patch
Condition: Excellent vintage. Light age-appropriate wear. No rips, tears, or heavy staining. Minor sticker residue on one sleeve — likely removable.
Measurements:
- Pit to pit: 25″
- Length: 26.5″
- Sleeve: 24″
A genuine piece for KISS collectors or anyone who wants a statement jacket that isn’t mass-produced mall merch. These don’t show up often in this condition.
My original draft wasn’t bad. But the rewrite leads with authenticity — which is exactly what a collector cares about — and the closing line creates mild urgency without sounding like a used car ad. That’s the difference between a listing that sits and one that sells.
I edited it slightly for my voice and posted it. Two minutes total.
Who Are The AI Prompts for Resellers For?
If you resell casually and write maybe 5 listings a week, this will save you time but probably won’t change your life.
If you’re listing 20, 30, 50+ items a month — across multiple platforms, in multiple categories, while also answering buyer messages and managing shipping and sourcing — this is the kind of tool that actually moves the needle.
It’s also useful if you’re newer to reselling and not sure how to write listings that convert. The AI prompts for resellers show you what information matters and how to frame it. That’s worth more than $9 in most cases.
What It’s Not
The AI prompts for resellers package is not a magic button. You still have to fill in the brackets, review the output, and edit it to sound like you. AI writes a strong draft; you finish it.
It’s also not a course, a community, a coaching program, or any of the other things people charge $97 for. It’s a PDF with 50 prompts. Simple.
Get It Here
Instant download. Works with ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini. No subscription, no upsell.
If you try it and it doesn’t save you time on your next 5 listings, I’d genuinely be surprised.
More honest side hustle content at TiredButHustling.com. No fluff, no hype — just what actually works.
Seems like a solid list of prompts. Do they cover different types of items or focus mainly on electronics?
Good question — the prompts are written for general resale categories: clothing, shoes, vintage items, bundles, and mixed lots. No electronics-specific prompts in this version, though most of the listing and pricing prompts adapt pretty easily to any category. If electronics is your main niche I’d say about 60-70% of the pack still applies directly