Ad Copy Generator
Generate Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok ad copy variations for your dropshipping product.
Dropshipping Ad Copy: The Structure That Beats the Algorithm
Ad copy is the single biggest lever in dropshipping ad performance. A great hook with mediocre creative will outperform a mediocre hook with great creative every time. The Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok algorithms reward copy that earns attention in the first three seconds and drives a click within the first five. Everything else is decoration.
The Universal Ad Copy Framework
Every winning dropshipping ad we have analyzed in the last five years follows a four-part structure:
- Hook (first 1–2 lines). A pattern-interrupt that names the pain or aspiration. "Tired of waking up with a stiff back?" or "I sold my ergonomic chair after trying this $39 brace."
- Story / Proof (2–4 lines). How the product works, who it's for, what results to expect. Include a number ("12,000 customers"), a time frame ("in 7 days"), or a transformation ("from slouching to standing tall").
- Offer (1–2 lines). The exact price, the discount, the bundle, and any urgency. "$39.99 (was $79) — this week only."
- CTA (1 line). A specific, low-friction action. "Tap to claim yours," "Click to see sizes," "Shop now before they're gone."
Platform-Specific Notes
Facebook feed: 3–5 short paragraphs with emoji at the start of each. Long copy still works on Facebook if it earns the scroll. Lead with a question or a strong claim.
Instagram feed: 1–2 sentences above the fold, then a long caption for those who tap "more." Hashtags at the bottom, not in the middle.
TikTok: Text overlay on the video itself (3–5 words), with a 1-sentence caption. Native TikTok copy sounds casual, almost anti-salesy. Avoid polished marketing language.
Ad Copy Anti-Patterns That Get Disapproved
- Before/after body claims. Facebook bans ads that imply body transformation. Use "feels better" language, not "looks thinner."
- "Cures" or "treats" language. Health claims trigger policy reviews. Say "supports," "helps with," or "promotes" instead.
- Personal attributes. "Are you a stressed mom?" violates Facebook's personal attributes policy. Reframe to "Moms love this because…"
- False urgency. "Only 3 left!" when you have 300 in stock will get your ad account flagged if reported. Use real urgency only.