Launching today
Running even one online store is a full-time job. SellerClaw is a team of AI agents that runs it for you: specialized agents for product sourcing, store management, and advertising, coordinated by a supervisor you direct. Tell it what to sell — the agents build listings, manage ads and pricing, and handle fulfillment and support across Shopify, eBay, and more. You stay in control: every action is visible and approvable, and you set how much runs on its own. Free to start.











The supervisor model is interesting how does it handle conflicting priorities between agents? Like if the pricing agent wants to drop margins to compete and the ad agent is simultaneously scaling spend who wins and how does the user get notified before it costs them money?
SellerClaw
@alexander_gray3 Neither agent acts outside the budget rails you set. If there's a conflict outside those parameters, the Supervisor surfaces it for your approval before anything runs. Notifications come through Telegram.
SellerClaw
@alexander_gray3 That’s exactly what the supervisor layer is for. In a true conflict, it should fall back to the user for final resolution rather than letting two agents push the business in opposite directions.
In practice, though, that situation should usually be prevented earlier: the supervisor first processes the user’s goals, constraints, and guardrails, resolves potential tradeoffs, and only then assigns final tasks to specialized agents. So the pricing agent and ad agent are normally not acting as independent power centers — they’re executing within one coordinated strategy.
@tolstov_gleb How does the credit system map to actual work? Trying to predict roughly what a month costs if I run repricing daily across a few hundred listings.
SellerClaw
@maurya_abhiranjan Credits map to work done: small tasks use a few credits, heavier workflows use more. Our examples are ~2 credits for a customer reply, ~15 for a listing, ~40 for market research, and 100 credits = $1. For daily repricing across a few hundred listings, the exact monthly spend depends on how often you run the loop and how much reasoning is involved, but the dashboard shows estimates before big tasks and exact usage after.
NovaVoice
congrats on the launch! Is Amazon support already live, or are Shopify and eBay the main focus right now?
SellerClaw
@rustam_khasanov thanks! Shopify and eBay are live now. Amazon is coming.
SellerClaw
@rustam_khasanov Thanks! Shopify and eBay are the main focus right now, so those are fully live. Amazon's next — we've already been granted developer access to the SP-API and we're working on bringing it into the product soon. Stay tuned.
SellerClaw
@rustam_khasanov Thanks! Shopify and eBay are the main focus live right now. Amazon support is in progress and should be coming in the next 2–3 weeks.
@tolstov_gleb Really impressive launch. Curious whether the agents coordinate on inventory too, like if a SKU sells out on Shopify, does the eBay manager know to pull or adjust the listing?
SellerClaw
@abhiranjan_mehta Yes — that’s configurable when you connect the channels. You can define both the sync preference and the source of truth for inventory.
So if Shopify is set as the source of truth, then if a product sells out there, SellerClaw can automatically sync the eBay inventory to 0 or adjust the listing accordingly. That way the agents stay coordinated around one inventory state instead of each channel drifting on its own.
How much setup does this need before the agents do anything useful? Asking because I've tried tools that wanted three days of config before the first result.
SellerClaw
@anshu_kumari9 It depends on the use case, but it does not need days of setup before it becomes useful.
There are hundreds of ways to use SellerClaw — from basic automations like inventory sync and order fulfillment to much more advanced analysis and store optimization. So you can start simple, connect a channel or two, and get value pretty quickly, then expand from there.
For example, if you already have an active store, here is my personal favorite use case: you can ask a high-intelligence model like Claude Opus to analyze the whole store, identify which products have the strongest viral potential right now based on real signals pulled from SocialVault, generate creatives, and launch multiple ad campaigns across Meta and Google.
What does pricing look like for someone running maybe 200 SKUs across eBay and Shopify? Trying to figure out if this fits a small operation or only makes sense at scale.
SellerClaw
@kushwaha_8521 For that size, it should still fit a small operation pretty well. Based on the current pricing, 4,000 credits on the $36/month Growth plan is likely enough to actively manage around 200 listings across eBay and Shopify, and that plan also includes unlimited sales channel connections.
There’s also a free plan with 500 credits to try it, and with the current Product Hunt offer you can get an extra 1,000 free credits, so you can test real workflows before committing. The pricing page also notes that light tasks use only a few credits, while bigger jobs use more, and the dashboard shows usage as you go.
@kamilbbs How do you handle a bad agent decision? If the Ads manager burns budget on a dud, can I see why it made that call and roll it back?
SellerClaw
@vishalmehta8340 Yes, by default the agent should stop actions that start affecting the business negatively and report back to the user rather than just continue blindly.
In normal operation, though, that situation should usually be prevented earlier: when the user request is first processed, the supervisor sets the task up with guardrails, limits, and success criteria. So ideally the agent is acting inside those boundaries from the start, and if it drifts outside them, it pauses and escalates.