Product Title Case Converter
Amazon doesn't enforce title casing, but every listing that looks like it belongs on page one uses it. A title in all lowercase reads like a draft nobody finished. A title in ALL CAPS reads like the seller is shouting. Title Case — capitalizing the important words, leaving the small connectors lowercase — is the quiet standard, and this tool applies it without you hunting through each word by hand.
Paste a title in any case and it comes back clean: first and last words capitalized, major words capitalized, and the little connectors (and, for, the, with, to) left lowercase unless they sit at the very start or end. That last rule is the part people get wrong manually — "Water Bottle For The Gym" looks off because "For" and "The" shouldn't be capped mid-title.
Why casing affects trust
Nobody decides not to buy because of a lowercase "and." But casing is part of the overall impression a listing makes in half a second. A title that's cased like a sentence looks maintained; one that isn't looks abandoned. When a shopper is choosing between two near-identical products, the polished one wins more often than it should on merit alone.
What the tool protects
Acronyms. If your title has "BPA Free" or "USB Charger," the converter leaves those alone, because all-caps words are almost always deliberate. It also leaves numbers and symbols untouched, so "32 oz" stays "32 oz" and doesn't become "32 Oz." That matters — "Oz" capitalized looks wrong and can even read as a different word.
Use it alongside the others
Run this before the Title Length Checker. Casing doesn't change your character count, but a clean title is easier to read when you're judging whether it's too long or stuffed. And pair it with the Bullet Point Formatter if your bullets came from the same messy source — consistency between title and bullets is what makes a listing feel put together.
One caveat: brand names with intentional odd casing (iPod, easyOff) will get normalized. Fix those by hand after the conversion.