Generate a claims-bounded FAQ block for your Amazon A+ Content — questions mined from how real buyers talk in your reviews, answers traced to your actual listing. Structured so Rufus, ChatGPT & Perplexity can lift them verbatim.
We pull your listing and reviews automatically — no keys, no setup on your side. Nothing about you is stored.
⚠ Automatic listing scan unavailable — paste your title + bullets instead and we'll continue.
⚠ Automatic review pull unavailable — paste 5–15 reviews instead and we'll continue.
Chemical Guys Butter Wet Wax — questions pulled from real Amazon Q&A and buyer reviews, answers traced to the actual listing. Note the durability question: the most-repeated review complaint, answered instead of hidden.
Highlighted = phrases matching real Amazonomics search terms — category searches · branded searches. Ranks hidden — see rank data at Amazonomics.com.
Butter Wet Wax is a 100% natural carnauba wax built for a deep wet shine and easy application rather than long-term durability. Buyers who want maximum gloss reapply regularly; if months-long protection is the priority, a synthetic sealant or ceramic car wax is the better tool for that job.
⚑ listing states no duration — verify reapplication guidance before publishingIt's a wipe-on, wipe-off liquid car wax made with natural carnauba: apply a thin coat, buff off, and you get a deep wet shine with a wax barrier against impurities, UV protection, and water-beading hydrophobic properties — in minutes, not an afternoon.
Yes — the formula is 100% carnauba-based with no harsh chemicals or solvents, and it's designed to shine and protect any color of painted surface — including black cars — from daily drivers to show cars.
Start with a clean surface and shake the bottle well. Apply a thin, even coat with a microfiber or foam wax applicator pad, let it haze, then buff off any residue with a clean microfiber towel for a streak-free finish.
Both work. The listing calls for an applicator pad by hand; buyers also use a dual-action car buffer on a low speed for larger vehicles. Either way, thin coats buff off easiest.
Buyers consistently report the best results on a clean, cool surface. If the panel is hot to the touch, work in the shade or let it cool first — thin coats stay easy to buff off.
⚑ sunlight guidance comes from buyer reports, not the listing — confirm brand guidance before publishingSources: the product's Amazon Q&A, buyer reviews and forums, and the official listing copy. Run the generator above with your own keys for review-mined questions specific to your ASIN.
Buyers ask in their own words — "does the sprayer leak," not "evaluate nozzle integrity." We mine your reviews so the questions mirror real buyer language.
We scan your actual title, bullets, and specs. Every answer traces to them — nothing invented, restricted claims excluded, unverifiable points flagged.
If reviews repeat a complaint, an AI assistant will surface it when asked about downsides. A FAQ that addresses it head-on is the answer that gets quoted instead.
Give it an ASIN and it scans your live listing, pulls your buyer reviews, and generates an FAQ block for your Amazon A+ Content — questions in real buyer language, answers bounded to what your listing actually claims, formatted so AI shopping assistants can quote them.
Yes. Bring an ASIN and an email — the scan, the review mining, the FAQ block, the A+ copy export, and the FAQPage structured-data download are all free.
Amazon's shopping assistant Rufus reads your full A+ Content — module text and image alt text — to answer shopper questions and make recommendations. A Q&A block written in buyer language gives it exact answers to lift. And when reviews repeat a complaint, a FAQ that addresses it head-on is what gets quoted instead of the one-star review.
Yes — every run also exports FAQPage structured data (JSON-LD) for your own website. That's the copy external AI crawlers and search engines can read first-hand, since most can't crawl Amazon directly.
No. Every answer traces to your listing's title, bullets, and specs. Health claims, endorsements, and comparative numbers are excluded automatically, and anything valuable but unverifiable comes back as a flag for you to confirm — never as an assertion.