Youanai Social for ecommerce brands
Turn products and drops into always-on campaigns
Create social campaigns from product pages, launch calendars, reviews, bundles, founder stories, and seasonal promotions.
Built for
DTC brands, Shopify stores, product marketers, and small ecommerce teams
What you are probably trying to fix
Where to start
Put customer proof beside product campaigns.
Why this is worth fixing
The gap your social content can help close
These numbers are here so you can check the reasoning yourself. The point is simple: better content should answer the question, reduce the hesitation, and point people toward the next step.
Bazaarvoice says visual UGC on product pages can increase conversion rates up to 150%; product pages need review and customer-photo campaigns.
Spiegel reports reviews can raise conversion up to 190% for lower-priced products and up to 380% for higher-priced products; first campaigns should ask for reviews and answer product objections.
Baymard's 2025 checkout dataset puts average cart abandonment around 70%; objection-handling content, review proof, shipping clarity, and abandoned-cart follow-up reduce hesitation before checkout.
What Youanai does with it
Give Youanai the context you already have. Wake up to drafts worth reviewing.
Business DNA means Youanai reads your website, public socials, colors, logo, voice, and the source material you give it. It uses that context to draft social posts, images, videos, and campaigns that still wait for your approval.
Start with the work you already did
Connect pages like product pages, collection pages, reviews, ugc, launch calendars, discount rules.. Those become the raw material for posts instead of another blank calendar.
Turn it into campaigns people can act on
A good first pass is product objection sequence: Turn reviews, FAQs, sizing, materials, ingredients, and use cases into posts that reduce purchase hesitation. Then test drop and restock calendar.
You still make the call
Youanai drafts options faster than a blank-page content day. Nothing posts until a person reviews it, approves it, and decides it sounds right for the business.
Where to aim first
Three places content can move real behavior
Put customer proof beside product campaigns.
Convert reviews, customer photos, sizing notes, and FAQs into objection-handling posts.
Make review generation part of the launch plan.
Build post-purchase review asks and reuse winning reviews across product, email, and social.
Start with review volume before chasing broad awareness.
Prioritize bestsellers, restocks, bundles, and products with enough proof to convert.
What is happening
- Ecommerce brands already have structured product data, reviews, bundles, and launch calendars.
- Social needs to support product education, proof, urgency, and repeat purchase loops.
- Drops, restocks, seasonal promos, and UGC can be turned into campaign sequences.
What to answer
- Move shoppers from product education to collection pages, bundles, and checkout.
- Use reviews and UGC to answer objections around fit, quality, use case, and value.
- Turn launch calendars into pre-launch, launch-day, restock, and last-call campaigns.
What buyers need
- Check product fit, sizing, inventory, shipping, returns, order status, and bundles.
- Compare use cases, reviews, ingredients/materials, and product alternatives before buying.
- Catch drops, restocks, seasonal offers, and last-call campaigns before they expire.
What Youanai can learn from
- Product pages, collection pages, reviews, UGC, launch calendars, discount rules.
- Founder story, brand voice, bundles, inventory notes, shipping/returns policies.
- Seasonal merchandising plans, high-margin SKUs, bestseller lists, and email/SMS offers.
What to connect
Give Youanai the same context you would give a good marketer
Which products, collections, bundles, and drops should campaigns prioritize?
What inventory, discount, shipping, returns, and sizing details should content respect?
Which reviews, UGC, founder notes, and product proof can be reused?
Which product, collection, email, or SMS CTAs should each campaign use?
Trust builders
Show the proof people look for before they book
Product-page, review, UGC, sizing, material, inventory, and return-policy examples.
Launch, drop, restock, bundle, bestseller, and seasonal merchandising paths.
Email/SMS signup, collection, product, and add-to-cart CTAs tied to specific offers.
Run these first
Start with campaigns tied to real actions
Product objection sequence
Turn reviews, FAQs, sizing, materials, ingredients, and use cases into posts that reduce purchase hesitation.
CTA: Shop the product
Measure: Product, collection, and bundle clicks
Drop and restock calendar
Create teaser, launch, proof, restock, bundle, and last-call content around each release.
CTA: Join the list
Measure: Email/SMS signup and offer engagement
UGC proof loop
Repurpose customer photos, reviews, and founder notes into social proof for bestsellers.
CTA: See bestsellers
Measure: Review/UGC-assisted add-to-cart paths
What you get
Less blank-page posting. More useful drafts.
Create more product-led posts from existing catalog data
Plan launch and restock campaigns faster
Keep offer and proof content in rotation
How it works
Paste the context, review the drafts, schedule what feels right
Import products, reviews, launch dates, offers, and brand voice.
Generate product education, proof, launch, and reminder posts.
Review, schedule, and reuse winning campaign angles.
What to post about
Useful topics beat random daily posts
Product education
Launch and drop campaigns
Reviews and user proof
Bundles and seasonal offers
What can repeat
Let Youanai reuse the boring context
Turn product pages into benefit-led captions.
Create launch sequences for drops and restocks.
Repurpose reviews into proof posts and carousels.
Where to pull context from
- Shopify, WooCommerce, BigCommerce, or catalog exports for products, collections, pricing, and inventory.
- Klaviyo, Postscript, Gorgias, reviews, UGC folders, return policies, and shipping pages.
- Launch calendars, discount rules, bundle pages, bestseller lists, and seasonal merchandising plans.
What to watch after publishing
- Product, collection, and bundle clicks
- Email/SMS signup and offer engagement
- Review/UGC-assisted add-to-cart paths
Fair concerns
Two things worth checking before you trust this
Product posts become repetitive catalog captions.
Split each product into education, proof, objection handling, bundle, launch, restock, and last-call angles.
Inventory, pricing, and offers change too quickly.
Use product data, launch calendars, discount rules, and inventory notes as the source of truth before scheduling.
Before you try it
Questions worth asking
Yes. Product pages, reviews, images, collection notes, and launch calendars can all feed the campaign system.
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