Launched this week
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.











Remy AI
If it can update tracking and message customers, that removes a lot of daily admin.
SellerClaw
@artyom_zhuravlev
Exactly, that's a big chunk of the daily admin gone.
Worth noting how tracking actually reaches the buyer: on marketplaces, they see status and tracking numbers right in their account, and on Shopify they get the shipping email with the tracking number and an estimated arrival. So the baseline updates are already handled by default.
Where we add value is being smart about what's worth a message. We don't ping the customer at every leg of the journey ("now it's in this state, now the next one"), because that's just noise that ends up annoying people. Instead we notify on the moments that matter, shipped and delivered, plus we flag the exceptions: a tracking number that stops updating, a damaged label, or a cross-border parcel stuck at customs. Those are the cases where the buyer actually needs to step in, so that's where the agent reaches out.
So less routine busywork for you, and fewer pointless notifications for your customers.
SellerClaw
@artyom_zhuravlev Exactly — and if you have a dropshipping supplier connected, it can also fulfill orders fully autonomously, which is where it starts saving a lot of real operational time.
SellerClaw
@artyom_zhuravlev That's exactly the kind of admin SellerClaw takes off the plate. Fulfillment tracking and customer communication are both covered.
Fundraisly
This seems especially useful for dropshipping, where supplier issues show up every day.
SellerClaw
@alena_medvedevaa
Exactly — the supplier side is what we built the workflow around. The agent runs the full loop: source a product from a supplier into your catalog, list it, and when an order comes in, buy it from the supplier and fulfill it. The part that matters for daily supplier issues: it keeps re-checking supplier stock and prices across your catalog on its own, automatically syncs stock-outs down to your live listings so you don't sell what can't ship, and won't complete a purchase if the supplier's cost has jumped — so price spikes don't quietly eat your margin. Proactively chasing stuck or lost shipments is still on our roadmap.
SellerClaw
@alena_medvedevaa Dropshipping breaks in the handoffs more than anywhere else. Supplier stock changes, data goes stale, and by the time an order lands the inventory is already gone. The Supplier Agent stays on top of that layer continuously.
SellerClaw
@alena_medvedevaa
You've both said it better than I could, so I'll just put a bow on it.
Dropshipping doesn't break at the big, visible steps. It breaks in the quiet handoffs between them, the moment supplier stock shifts, a price ticks up, or data goes stale between the order landing and the fulfillment going out. That gap is where margins leak and customers get disappointed, and it's invisible until it's already cost you.
That's the whole reason the Supplier Agent exists: to live in that gap and watch it continuously, so the boring-but-critical work of re-checking stock and prices and syncing it down to your live listings just happens, without you babysitting it. You spotted exactly the pain we set out to kill.
Thanks for getting it, this is the part we're most excited about.
Can SellerClaw work with messy supplier portals, or does the catalog need to be structured?
SellerClaw
@maria_tirskaia The harder part in either case is that supplier data mostly gives you availability and price. What you don't get is whether the margin holds after shipping, or whether the product actually has a reason to sell. That part takes selection logic on top, regardless of how the data comes in.
SellerClaw
@maria_tirskaia Both, depending on the supplier. Today we have a full integration with CJ Dropshipping, and that flow is completely automated. We pull the entire product catalog, help you surface trending items or ones that fit your store's niche, and list them straight to Shopify or your marketplace, no manual structuring needed.
More suppliers are on the roadmap right after launch. CJ is just where we've already got the end-to-end flow working.
Shopify only for now, or can this handle mixed stores too?
SellerClaw
@konstantin_alkhimov Not Shopify only. Shopify and eBay are live now, with more channels coming. The same agent logic runs across whichever stores are connected.
SellerClaw
@konstantin_alkhimov
Mixed stores, not Shopify only. Here's where things stand right now:
Sourcing / dropshipping: CJ Dropshipping
Sales channels: Shopify and eBay (Amazon and Etsy are next on the roadmap)
Ads: Google and Facebook
And it's not one store per account, you can connect several Shopify stores and several eBay accounts to a single SellerClaw login and run all of them from one window. So if you're juggling multiple storefronts across both platforms, they all live in one place.
Fundraisly
Can it edit product images too, or is the listing work mostly text?
SellerClaw
@annmast
A bit of both, and the image side is growing fast.
Today we have photo sourcing: if you don't have images for a product, we can find them by SKU/barcode across web sources and match them to your listing. Those tend to be the standard white-background factory shots, so think of it as covering the basics.
What's coming soon is more interesting. Based on competitor analysis and the product description, we'll generate proper infographics that highlight the product's unique selling points, sized automatically to each platform's requirements. So not just sourcing an image, but building listing visuals that actually sell.
And the step after that is A/B testing, letting you compare which visuals and content perform best according to the metrics, so the listing keeps improving over time.
SellerClaw
@annmast @tolstov_gleb
To add on the visuals: it's not only images — the agent can also generate short video for products and ads, either from a text brief or by animating an existing product photo into a moving clip. Short, social/ad-creative length rather than full commercials, but it means a listing can ship with a scroll-stopping clip, not just a static shot.
SellerClaw
@annmast Listing work is primarily text right now: copy, titles, descriptions, structured for each channel. Image editing isn't part of it at the moment. Best way to see what it does: there's a short video on the listing, and if you want to run it yourself, use promo code PH1000 at signup for 1,500 credits free.
How many of these features are actually available? What can we connect and actually start using now.
SellerClaw
@kn0wn All of the features we’ve mentioned are already live — the main limitation right now is the number of integrations. At the moment you can connect Shopify and eBay as sales channels, Meta Ads and Google Ads for ad platforms, and CJ Dropshipping for suppliers. Amazon is coming in the next 2–3 weeks, and TikTok is on the way as well.
Craftwork
Does it learn brand voice from existing listings and past replies? @kamil_bagaviev
SellerClaw
@shepovalovdenis
Yes. The agents use your existing listings and past customer replies as context, so the tone they produce matches how your store already sounds rather than a generic default. You can also set explicit brand guidelines if you want to steer it further, but the baseline is learned from what you've already published.
SellerClaw
@shepovalovdenis @tolstov_gleb
To add one thing: it's not only product listings — that same voice carries into your ad copy too. When the marketing agent writes headlines, descriptions and CTAs for Meta and Google, it stays in the tone your store already uses, so paid creative reads like your brand rather than stock ad-speak. The aim is one consistent voice across everything the agent writes — catalog and ads alike.
SellerClaw
@shepovalovdenis @tolstov_gleb
And it's not only text. Media generation already works today — the agent produces product and ad imagery and short video, and it can build on your real product photos rather than starting from scratch. Keeping that generated media consistently on your brand's visual style is on our roadmap, so the same "looks like your store" idea extends to visuals too.