Troubleshooting
Use these notes to fix the most common blockers before spending more credits.
What belongs in Prohibited claims?
Prohibited claims block risky promises, unverifiable superlatives, and language your store should not publish.
This field protects the draft from saying things that are legally risky, misleading, or simply not supportable. Common examples are guaranteed outcomes, medical-style claims without evidence, or "best in the world" language.
It is especially useful in regulated, high-trust, or review-sensitive categories where tone and credibility matter as much as persuasion.
How to use prohibited claims
- List risky phrases or claim patterns one per line.
- Focus on statements your business cannot safely or honestly support.
- Use this field to prevent avoidable compliance and trust issues.
Best for: Stores with compliance constraints or strict brand-safety rules.
In app: Settings
Why does the draft still feel generic even after I filled many fields?
Generic output usually means the parameters are broad, repetitive, or not pulling in the same direction.
More fields does not always mean better output. If Topic, Primary keyword, Target audience, Business goal, CTA, and Merchant notes all point in different directions, the model spends effort reconciling conflicts instead of producing a sharp article.
Generic drafts also happen when inputs are too broad, such as a vague topic, weak keyword, generic tone, or proof points that sound like empty marketing language.
How to sharpen the brief
- Check whether your main parameters support one coherent article idea.
- Replace generic phrases with concrete reader, product, and goal information.
- Remove redundant instructions that do not add real guidance.
Best for: Merchants debugging weak drafts before spending more credits.
In app: Create Post