Identify the item clearly
Use the words buyers would use to search, then add exact identifiers like model, size, edition, material, year, or compatibility when they matter.
A practical pricing guide for selling tools online: set a starting price from sold comps and condition. For tools, working status and included accessories drive value.
Pricing should account for comparable sales, condition differences, shipping cost, fees, and how quickly you want the item to move. For tools, the listing should cover brand, model, power source, testing, batteries, accessories, and safety notes before the seller worries about clever copy.
Use the words buyers would use to search, then add exact identifiers like model, size, edition, material, year, or compatibility when they matter.
Photos and condition notes should agree. If there is wear, damage, missing packaging, or an untested feature, say it plainly.
A good price still has to survive shipping cost, fees, supplies, and the speed you want from the sale.
Klysto helps turn item photos into an editable listing draft so the seller can focus on checking facts instead of starting from a blank page.
This page is most useful when the seller has real inventory ready to photograph and wants a repeatable path from item to draft to final listing.
Use one item as a test. Draft it, review the buyer-facing details, then repeat the workflow with a small batch.
Browse Klysto guides for titles, descriptions, condition notes, pricing, shipping, photos, and batch listing workflows.