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Amazon A+ Content AI Prompts by Module Type

A module-based prompt library for Amazon A+ Content teams that need copy to fit hero images, feature tiles, comparison charts, proof modules, FAQs, and brand story sections.

April 14, 2026About 5 min read

Amazon A+ Content AI Prompts by Module Type

Amazon A+ Content prompts need a defined module, buyer question, verified product facts, copy limit, and review rule. A hero prompt should produce one readable idea. A comparison prompt should help a buyer choose. A proof prompt should refuse claims that the supplied evidence cannot support.

This page provides copy-ready prompts for hero images, feature tiles, comparison charts, proof modules, FAQs, and Brand Story sections. For the full process, use How to Use Amazon A+ Content AI. For tool selection, use Best Amazon A+ Content AI Tool.

Quick Answer

The best Amazon A+ Content AI prompts include product facts, buyer objection, module type, image constraint, claim limit, tone, and review rule. Ask for shorter copy than you think you need. A+ prompts should produce text that can fit inside artwork and survive mobile review.

Amazon A plus content prompt workflow organized by hero, feature, comparison, proof, FAQ, and Brand Story modules
Prompt by module type. A+ copy becomes weaker when one generic prompt tries to create every section.

Base Prompt Formula

Use this structure before any module-specific prompt:

Product facts: [SKU, material, dimensions, compatibility, ingredients, use case, bundle contents]

Buyer question: [the question or doubt this module must answer]

Module type: [hero / feature tile / comparison chart / proof module / FAQ / brand story]

Image constraint: [available space, product image, icon count, mobile readability limit]

Rules:

  • use only verified specs and claims
  • keep copy short enough for image placement
  • use concrete product language
  • avoid repeating the title and bullet points
  • flag missing proof clearly

This formula keeps AI from writing broad sales copy when the module needs a specific job.

Before using the output, compare every number, compatibility statement, material, ingredient, bundle item, and performance claim with the product record. Then place the copy in the actual module artwork and check it at phone width. A grammatically clean answer can still be unusable if it is too long, repeats another module, or makes the visual carry an unsupported claim.

Prompt inputWhy it mattersReject the output when
verified product factslimits inventiona fact cannot be traced to the product record
one buyer questiongives the module a jobthe answer covers several unrelated benefits
module and copy limitskeeps text placeablethe copy needs shrinking to fit
available visual proofconnects claim and imagethe image cannot demonstrate the claim
review ruledefines human QAthe draft treats missing proof as permission to guess

Hero Module Prompt

Use a hero module when the buyer needs one clear reason to keep reading. Ask for one strong reason; five loosely related benefits usually dilute the module.

Write copy for an Amazon A+ hero image module.

Product facts: [paste product facts]

Buyer situation: [when or why the shopper uses the product]

Goal: Create one headline under 8 words and one support line under 16 words.

Rules:

  • focus on one primary buyer outcome
  • use only claims that are visible or proven
  • avoid generic phrases like premium quality or best choice
  • make the copy easy to read on mobile

Use this for visual-first products, bundles, and products where the first A+ module needs to orient the shopper quickly.

Feature Tile Prompt

Feature tiles work when each tile owns a different proof point. They fail when every tile says the same benefit in different words.

Create three Amazon A+ feature tiles for this product.

Product facts: [paste facts]

Buyer objections: [list three objections]

Output: For each tile, provide:

  • title under 5 words
  • support line under 14 words
  • matching visual cue
  • proof source from the product facts

Rules:

  • one idea per tile
  • no repeated claims
  • no invented performance language

This prompt is useful for home, electronics, beauty, and tools where the buyer needs quick reasons to believe.

Comparison Chart Prompt

Comparison charts should reduce choice anxiety. They should not become a feature dump.

Build an Amazon A+ comparison chart for these products or variants.

Products: [paste product or variant facts]

Buyer decision: [what the shopper is trying to choose]

Output:

  • 4 to 6 rows shoppers actually compare
  • short row labels
  • plain-language values
  • one recommendation note for each variant

Rules:

  • compare only features that affect the buyer decision
  • use only verified product differences
  • keep each cell short

Use this when shoppers compare sizes, bundles, compatibility, formulas, colors, or use cases.

Proof Module Prompt

Some products need proof before persuasion. This is common for ingredients, materials, compatibility, suction power, capacity, battery life, and setup claims.

Write an Amazon A+ proof module for this product claim.

Claim: [paste the claim]

Available proof: [paste specs, materials, test notes, certification, ingredient facts, or visible product evidence]

Output:

  • headline under 7 words
  • support copy under 30 words
  • 3 proof bullets under 8 words each
  • note any claim that needs stronger evidence

Rules:

  • keep the claim proportional to the available proof
  • separate fact from benefit
  • avoid medical, legal, or unsupported performance claims

This prompt helps prevent AI from making the module sound stronger than the product evidence.

FAQ Module Prompt

FAQ modules should answer buying friction. They should not repeat the bullet section.

Create five Amazon A+ FAQ questions for this product.

Product facts: [paste facts]

Known buyer concerns: [paste reviews, support tickets, community questions, or sales team notes]

Output:

  • question in buyer language
  • answer under 35 words
  • missing proof warning if needed

Rules:

  • answer objections before soft marketing points
  • use only verified policy, warranty, compatibility, and safety details
  • keep answers specific to this SKU

This is useful when buyers ask about size, compatibility, cleaning, setup, material, bundle contents, color, fit, or use limits.

Brand Story Prompt

Brand story modules are often over-written. Keep them short and connected to the product promise.

Write an Amazon A+ brand story module.

Brand facts: [paste real brand facts]

Product connection: [why this product reflects the brand]

Output:

  • one short headline
  • 2 short paragraphs under 35 words each
  • one trust signal

Rules:

  • use specific brand facts
  • keep feature-tile claims out of the brand story
  • avoid claims that could apply to any brand

Use this only when the brand story adds trust. If the product is simple and price-driven, a clearer comparison or proof module may be more useful.

Turn A+ Prompts Into Visual Modules With LoomaDesign

LoomaDesign helps turn prompt output into usable A+ modules. Use Amazon A+ Content AI to structure module copy, Amazon A+ Content Dimensions Category Mobile Checklist to check fit, and AI Product Image Generator when modules need cleaner product visuals.

FAQ

What should an Amazon A+ Content AI prompt include? Include product facts, buyer question, module type, image constraint, claim rules, and output length. The module type is what keeps the answer usable.

Why do A+ prompts produce generic copy? The prompt is usually too broad. Ask for a specific module with a specific buyer objection and strict length limits.

Can I use the same prompt for every A+ module? No. Hero images, feature tiles, comparison charts, proof modules, FAQ sections, and brand stories need different output shapes.

Should A+ prompts include Reddit or review questions? They can, but only as buyer language. The final copy still needs product facts, compliance review, and image placement review.

Sources and Data Points

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