A+ Content Brief — ResultSport Spiky Massage Ball Set of 3
1. Briefing intro
The current A+ block has three components: a Product Description with embedded Rufus-style FAQ (strong — keep), an "Other ResultSport Products" cross-sell module (above category average — keep), and 6+ usage illustrations (alt text is AI-generated & unhelpful — needs human-written alt). The audit flagged three missing modules: no anatomical size-guide, no clean materials/safety panel, no brand-story banner. This brief rebuilds the A+ to fill those gaps without touching the elements that already work.
Expected lift: +5–10% unit-session % when modules earn their space. The single biggest contribution is Module 2 (size→body-zone anatomical guide) which converts the audit's #1 buying objection — "which size do I actually need for what I want to fix?" — into a one-screen visual answer, the same job slot 2 keystone does in the gallery but with more screen real estate.
2. Module plan at a glance
| Slot | Job | Cluster anchor | Image source |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Brand promise / banner | Core: "spiky massage ball" (15,995 vol) | Reuse slot1_final.jpg |
| 2 | "Why us" — size → body-zone anatomical guide | Sub-niche plantar fasciitis · trigger point · myofascial | NEW prompt + body silhouette overlaid in post |
| 3 | 4 use cases — arch / calf / glute / back | "foot massage ball" 6,086 · "physio ball" 6,403 · "massage ball for back" 4,725 | Crops from slot5_final.jpg (3 panels) + slot4_final.jpg |
| 4 | Materials & safety | Objection #2 — safety | Crop from slot3_final.jpg |
| 5 | Comparison closer vs single ball | "lacrosse balls massage" 6,037 (defensive) | Crops from slot7_final.jpg |
| 6 | Brand close — introduces the live cross-sell module | Brand defence | No image (text only) |
| 7 | Premium Q&A — 5 Rufus question/answer pairs surfaced inside the A+ block | Long-tail intent — plantar fasciitis · firmness · pilates · skin safety · vs tennis/lacrosse | No image (text-based Q&A module) |
Premium tier unlocks slot 7. If you don't have Premium access, drop slot 7 and rebuild slot 1 as a standard wide-banner module — the other 5 slots are tier-agnostic.
3. Shared style direction
| Element | Direction |
|---|---|
| Tier | Standard A+ Brand Content (6 of 7 slots used; 1 spare for seasonal swap or future Premium upgrade) |
| Brand palette | Navy #1F4E78 headings · Sage #A8C8B5 accent · Cream #F5EFE6 background · ResultSport red #D7263D brand bar only |
| Typography | Headlines bold (Inter / Arial system stack), mobile-readable. Body text 14pt mobile / 16pt desktop equivalent. |
| Voice | Specific over generic. "PAH-free, phthalate-free, glue-free solid plastic" beats "premium quality". Substantiate every claim. |
| Mobile-first | Each module must read on a 380px viewport. Critical text above the mobile-crop line. Test in Seller Central's mobile preview before submit. |
| Alt text | Manual per image. Do NOT rely on Amazon's auto-alt — the current live A+ has "a hedgehog sitting on a mat with a ball of fur" auto-generated, which is useless for multimodal retrieval. |
Module 1 — Brand banner
Copy ideas
slot1_final.jpg is square so a horizontal crop loses the diagonal composition. Better: render a wide-aspect 3-ball composition on off-white seamless background, with the three sage-green spiky balls spaced horizontally across the canvas (largest 10 cm left, medium 8 cm centre, smallest 6 cm right), generous negative space ABOVE and BELOW for the brand headline + body copy. Same single sage-green colourway, blunt spike tips, matte plastic, soft ambient-occlusion contact shadows. Editorial product-photography tone (Aesop / Muji catalogue). Add this prompt to your next AI Studio batch.Fallback (Standard tier or quick-ship): reuse
slot1_final.jpg cropped 16:10 (970×600) and use as a standard wide-banner module instead of Premium Hero.
Alt text
ResultSport Spiky Massage Ball Set of 3 — three sage-green spike balls on off-white backgroundBrand hero: three solid plastic spiky massage balls in graduated sizes — 6cm, 8cm, 10cmModule 2 — Size → body-zone anatomical guide
Copy ideas
• 8 CM · CALF · TRIGGER POINT — next to the medium ball
• 10 CM · UPPER BACK · MYOFASCIAL — next to the largest ball
Each callout connects to the relevant body zone via a thin navy line on the silhouette layer (silhouette in deep navy
#1F4E78 at 30% opacity, designer-added in post).
#F5EFE6, seamless) with three sage-green spiky balls (single colour #5C8A6E, blunt cone-shaped spike tips, matte plastic) spaced horizontally across the canvas — 6 cm small at left, 8 cm medium centre, 10 cm large right. Generous negative space ABOVE and BELOW each ball for post-production callout text. Even diffused 5000K lighting, slight warmth. Editorial product-photography tone (Aesop / Muji catalogue). No text, no body parts, no silhouettes in the AI render — those are added in post over a clean photo. Landscape / wide aspect.
Alt text
Size guide: 6cm ball for arch, 8cm for calf and glute, 10cm for upper back — ResultSport setAnatomical map of three spiky massage ball sizes matched to body zonesModule 3 — Four use cases
Copy ideas
Body: Sit or stand, place the 6 cm ball under the arch and roll slowly from heel to ball of the foot for 30 to 60 seconds per session. The spike pattern reaches the plantar fascia layer that a smooth tennis ball cannot.
Body: Sit on a yoga mat with the 8 cm ball under the calf or glute and shift weight gently from side to side to find trigger points. Ideal between training blocks for runners and pilates practitioners.
Body: Place the 10 cm ball between the upper back and a wall, lean in and roll side to side along the shoulder blade. Office workers can use the same posture between meetings to release desk-bound tension.
Body: Wedge the 8 cm ball between the lower back and an ergonomic chair backrest. Lean gently for one to two minutes during a long sit. Pre-empts the dull lumbar ache that builds over a working day.
slot5_final.jpg + 1 from slot4_final.jpg — slot 5 is a 3-panel triptych (runner on stretch mat with foot ball / pilates instructor with glute ball / office worker pressing back ball against wall), so crop each panel to a square. The 4th cell crops from slot 4 (office worker at ergonomic chair with lumbar ball). All four cells share the same single sage-green ball colourway across the model archetypes — brand-photography consistency is automatic.
Alt text (one per cell)
Runner rolls 6cm spiky massage ball under bare arch on stretch mat for plantar fasciitis reliefPilates instructor uses 8cm sage spiky ball at glute mid-stretch on yoga mat in studioOffice worker presses 10cm spiky massage ball between upper back and white wall in modern officeOffice worker in ergonomic chair with 8cm spiky ball wedged at lumbar against backrestModule 4 — Materials & safety
Copy ideas
Construction: Single-piece machine-moulded, no glue
Spike profile: Blunt cone tips, skin-safe
Care: Wipe clean with a damp cloth
slot3_final.jpg — square crop centred on the bare forearm contact point with the sage-green 8 cm ball gently pressing into the skin (showing the blunt spike texture is skin-safe, gentle imprint, not painful, not red). Don't include the headline/badge overlay from the gallery composite — the A+ specs are the words, the image is the proof. Source from ai-image-slot3-nano.jpg (raw, no overlay) for cleanest crop.
Alt text
Spiky massage ball pressed against bare forearm — PAH-free phthalate-free plastic, skin-safe spikesMaterials proof: sage-green 8cm spike ball with blunt cone tips on bare skinModule 5 — Comparison closer
Copy ideas
2. Textured spike surface for fascia — ResultSport: Yes, full spike coverage · Single ball: No, smooth
3. Reaches the fascia layer — ResultSport: Yes · Single ball: Surface muscle only
4. Material safety (PAH-free, glue-free) — ResultSport: Yes, declared · Single ball: Varies by brand
5. Covers full body in one purchase — ResultSport: Yes · Single ball: No, multiple needed
slot7_final.jpg — split the gallery comparison composite into two column images: left half shows the 3-ball ResultSport triangle composition, right half shows the single smooth white ball. Both on the same cream #F5EFE6 background. Crop each to a vertical proportion suitable for column-comparison cells.
Alt text
ResultSport 3-size spiky massage ball set arranged in triangle on cream backgroundSingle smooth sport ball on cream background for comparisonModule 6 — Brand close
Copy ideas
ResultSport builds recovery tools that earn their place in the gym bag.
Every product carries the same three principles: a specific, named use case (we won't call a single ball "for everything"); honest material declarations on the label (PAH-free, phthalate-free, glue-free — printed, not implied); and a price that respects buyers who already know what they want.
The Spiky Massage Ball Set of 3 is the toolkit physiotherapists, pilates teachers and runners reach for when one ball isn't enough. The 6 cm sits under the arch of the foot for plantar fasciitis. The 8 cm wedges between a lumbar and a chair, or rolls under a calf. The 10 cm covers the larger frame of the upper back and shoulders. Three sizes, three jobs, one purchase.
If you've already added this set to basket, the other ResultSport recovery tools displayed below — the Lacrosse Massage Balls, the Trigger Massager, the Finger & Hand Massager, the Stress Gel Ball — are built around the same principles. Each one solves a specific recovery problem the way this set solves three of them.
Welcome to ResultSport.
Module 7 — Q&A PREMIUM
The 5 Q&A pairs (pulled verbatim from listing-rewrite.html Phase 3)
A: The 6 cm ball matches the arch of the foot. Sit or stand, place it under the arch and roll slowly from heel to ball of the foot for 30 to 60 seconds per session. The 8 cm ball can also be used for the calf where plantar tension often radiates from.
A: Each ball is machine-formed from a single piece of solid plastic and holds its shape under full body weight. There is no air to deflate and no foam to compress over time, so the ball reaches the deeper fascia layer that softer tools cannot.
A: Yes. Pilates and yoga teachers use spike balls for foot mobilisation before barre work, for posture release against a wall and for grip strength exercises in the hand. The three sizes — 6 cm, 8 cm and 10 cm — cover each of those uses without needing to buy separate props.
A: The balls are made from plastic that is free of PAH and phthalates and contains no glue in the construction, and the spike tips are blunt rather than sharp. Wipe with a damp cloth between sessions.
A: A tennis ball is softer and a lacrosse ball is smooth, so neither reaches the layer of fascia that a textured spiked surface does. The set also includes three sizes — 6 cm, 8 cm and 10 cm — so the same purchase covers small muscles such as the foot and larger ones such as the back, while a single tennis or lacrosse ball cannot.
If you don't have Premium A+ access, drop this module entirely and rely on the Product Description's embedded FAQ (which is already live on the current listing — the questions are even the same ones, surfaced via the "Product Description" zone rather than a dedicated Q&A module).
9. A+ compliance pass
| Check | Verdict | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| No prices / discounts / shipping | PASS | Clean throughout. |
| No competitor brand names | PASS | Module 5 uses "A single sport ball" generic framing. |
| No medical / disease / cure / treat / heal claims | PASS | "Plantar fasciitis", "trigger point", "myofascial release" are descriptors of intended use; no "cures" / "prevents" / "treats" anywhere. |
| No customer testimonials | PASS | Standard tier doesn't have Q&A module; the Rufus pairs from listing-rewrite are Premium-only. |
| Every claim substantiated | PASS | Material claims match listing-rewrite bullets and the actual product spec. |
| No time-sensitive language | PASS | No "New", "Limited", or date references. |
| No asterisks / footnotes / URLs (other than amazon.com) | PASS | Clean. |
| No banned superlatives ("best", "#1", "guaranteed", "perfect") | PASS | None present. |
| Comparison chart uses generic category language | PASS | "A single sport ball" — no brand. |
10. Seller upload notes
At upload time in Seller Central A+ Content Manager, pick the module type per slot from whatever's eligible in your Premium template flow. The brief gives you the content (job, cluster anchor, copy, image idea); you choose the module type that holds it best. Rough guidance (not prescription):
- Module 1 (brand hero): Premium Hero (3000×600 wide banner) — this brief assumes you have Premium.
- Module 2 (size→body-zone): needs a wide image with side or below text — Standard Single Image & Sidebar is the natural fit; or Premium Hotspot if you want the size labels to be interactive.
- Module 3 (4 use cases): any 4-cell module (Standard Four Image & Text / Multiple Image Module A); or Premium Carousel if you want to add a 5th use case.
- Module 4 (materials & safety): Standard Single Image & Specs (the spec-rows layout) holds the 4-row materials block cleanly.
- Module 5 (comparison): Standard Comparison Chart with 2 columns / 5 attribute rows; or Premium Comparison if you want to add more comparator columns later.
- Module 6 (brand close): Standard Product Description Text or any text-only module.
- Module 7 (Q&A): Premium Q&A module — the only Amazon module type that natively renders Q&A pairs in an accordion format. Standard A+ does not have this.
Standard tier fallback (if you don't have Premium access this listing): drop Module 7, rebuild Module 1's image as a 970×600 standard wide banner (or just crop slot1_final.jpg) and use the Standard Image Header with Text module instead of Premium Hero. Modules 2–6 are tier-agnostic.
Future-add: Premium Video. Premium A+ allows a ≤60s video module. If you produce a 60s "how to use" video covering the 3 sizes / 3 body zones — same content as Module 3's use-case scenarios but in motion — it slots in as Module 8 and is the highest-leverage future-add for this listing. Skipped from this brief because no video asset exists today.
Mobile preview test: open each module in Seller Central's mobile preview before submit. Text must read on a 380px viewport. Comparison-chart rows above 5 trigger horizontal scroll on iPhone-class viewports — keep to 5. Premium Hero compresses heavily on mobile (3000×600 → ~380px wide); critical text must be at least 60 px on the source canvas to read at mobile thumbnail.