Write a UX Copy Review
Review the UX copy on this screen: [describe or paste UI text]. Check for: clarity, action-orientation, error message empathy, loading state messaging, and onboarding tone. Suggest rewrites for anything that could cause drop-off.
UX copy is the most overlooked conversion lever; this prompt treats it with the same rigour as design.
When you're designing a product interface, the words matter just as much as the pixels. Most designers focus on layout and visual hierarchy, but UX copy is the conversion lever that sits quietly in the background—and this prompt puts it front and center. The Write a UX Copy Review prompt is built for product designers, UX writers, and design leaders who want Claude to audit the actual text on their screens. Instead of guessing whether your button labels, error messages, and onboarding flows will confuse users, you paste the existing copy directly into Claude and get a thorough critique backed by conversion psychology principles.
To use this prompt effectively, you'll need to describe or paste the actual UI text you want reviewed. For example, if you're redesigning a checkout page, you might paste the complete text from your cart, shipping, and payment sections. Include everything: button labels, error messages like "Card declined please try again," loading states like "Processing your order," and any instructional text. The more complete your paste, the better Claude's analysis. You can also photograph a screen and transcribe the text, or simply describe the interface if you're in early design stages.
When you run this prompt, Claude delivers exactly what you need: a systematic review checking clarity, whether copy drives action, and whether error messages feel helpful rather than punishing. You'll get specific rewrite suggestions that account for why users might drop off at certain points. Claude flags tone inconsistencies, jargon that might confuse, and messaging that doesn't match user intent.
The pro tip here is to run this prompt iteratively as you design. Don't wait until your interface is finished. Test it on early prototypes, competitor products you admire, or even your own existing product. Each round helps you internalize what good UX copy looks like, and Claude becomes your second opinion on whether your words are actually earning trust.