Image Stack Audit — ResultSport Push Up Bars

ASIN B00B3TESKU · Amazon.co.uk · Audited 2026-05-26 · 6 gallery slots scraped (no slot 7, no A+ Content)

Executive Summary

The stack ships 6 gallery slots (no slot 7, no A+ Content) and runs the basics — compliant hero, lifestyle shot with human scale, feature close-ups, a strong wrist-stress diagram. But the highest-leverage slot in the stack is misallocated: the wrist-stress diagram (currently slot 3) is the listing's true keystone and should sit at slot 2, while the current slot 2 ("Dimension" spec sheet) belongs in slot 5 or as A+ Content. Two slots (5 and 6) duplicate each other's job. The hero leaves the diagonal-isometric and shadow-grounding CTR tactics on the table. Estimated combined opportunity from re-sequencing + rebuilding slot 2 + adding slot 7 + A+ Content: +5-12% CVR within 90 days based on category norms.
VerdictScore / Status
Slot 1 (Hero) — 4-dim total22 / 40 Competent. Compliant but no CTR push tactics applied.
Slot 2 (Keystone) — 8-dim total26 / 80 Broken — wrong mechanism. Rebuild from scratch using wrist-stress narrative.
Slot 3 (currently shows the wrist-stress diagram)8 / 10 Strong — but in the wrong position.
Slot 4 (lifestyle)6 / 10 Good human scale, but audience mismatch — male-only model excludes women and wrist-injury buyers.
Slot 5 (handle close-up)5 / 10 Duplicates slot 6's job.
Slot 6 (base + handle combo)6 / 10 Decent but better-suited to slot 5; current slot 7 slot is empty.
Slot 7MISSING No comparison chart, what's-in-box, or size grid.
A+ ContentMISSING / Brand-store fallback only Largest single CVR lever sitting unused.

Listing Context

AttributeValue
ProductResultSport Foam Handle Power Push UP Exercise Stand
ASINB00B3TESKU
MarketplaceAmazon.co.uk
Price£14.98 incl. VAT
Rating4.4★ from 995 reviews · 50+ bought past month
CategorySports & Outdoors → Fitness → Strength Training Equipment → Pushup Stands
BrandResultSport (UK FBA seller)

Buyer Avatar (data-backed)

Amazon's own "Customers say" review summary surfaces these themes (frequency in parentheses): Stability (95) · Quality (84) · Functionality (61) · Value for money (54) · Grip (43) · Comfort (34) · Weight capacity (27) · Versatility (20). The reviews quote heavily on wrist-relief, gym-class supplement use, yoga/pilates wrist-support, and 18-stone weight capacity. Three avatars emerge:

Top 3 Buying Objections (cross-checked vs SQPR + reviews)

  1. "Will it stay still on my floor?" — stability dominates the review summary (95 mentions). The non-slip rubber base is the answer.
  2. "Will it hurt my wrists / hands?" — wrist injury / hyperextension is the primary search-intent driver behind the sub-niche keywords ("press up handles wrist support", "push up handles for bad wrists", "ergonomic push up grips"). 50-100% conversion share on these queries — but only ONE slot (slot 3) speaks to this directly.
  3. "How does it compare to a rotating or board version?" — competitor rail is dominated by Komodo, Mirafit, Sportneer rotating handles and AmazeFan / RAMASS parallettes. No comparison frame anywhere in the current stack.

Keyword Evidence (cross-linked from kw-workbook)

ClusterVolWhere in stack today?Verdict
Core (push up bars, push up handles)~64,000/mo combinedSlot 1 hero, slot 4 (lifestyle), slot 5/6 (close-ups)OK — covered, but uninspired.
Sub-niche wrist-support / ergonomic / foam~350+/mo combined, 50-100% pur shareOnly slot 3Mis-allocated — strongest converting cluster is in the 3rd-most-viewed slot.
Cross-use (pilates / yoga / calisthenics)~150/moNowhereGap — addressable in slot 4 redesign or A+ module 2.
Comparison-intent (vs rotating / vs board)~600/mo combinedNowhereGap — needed in slot 7.
Misspellings (push uo bars, push uo handles)~250/moNot relevant to imagesBackend-only.

Stack-Level Diagnosis

Three structural problems and one positive finding:

  1. The keystone is in the wrong slot. Slot 3 (the wrist-stress diagram) is the strongest persuasion frame in the entire stack — it picks mechanism #3 (Objection pre-empt) with a clear visual move (force-arrow diagram) and a complete sentence headline ("Reduce Stress on Wrists and Tendons"). On mobile, slots 1 and 2 carry 80%+ of viewed-image time; slot 3 takes ~50-60% less attention. The strongest argument the listing has is being shown to half the audience that the listing's data says converts on this exact angle.
  2. Slot 2 is a hero+1 spec shot. The current "Dimension" image is useful information but it's a spec sheet, not a keystone. It runs no recognised mechanism (it's closest to Differentiation but with no actual reframe — just measurements). A spec shot belongs in slot 5 / 6 (feature detail) or as A+ Content module — not in the highest-leverage slot.
  3. Slots 5 and 6 duplicate each other. Both show the foam handle close-up with safety/comfort headlines. Each only needs to nail 2-3 of the eight observable elements — but together they nail the same 2-3. One of them needs to be repurposed: feature deep-dive with callouts (slot 5) or use-case variety (slot 6).
  4. Slot 7 + A+ Content are vacant. No comparison chart vs rotating-handle / push-up-board / parallettes competitors. No "what's in the box". No A+ modules — currently the listing falls back to a generic ResultSport brand store snippet. This is the single biggest CVR lever still sitting unused.

Positive: the hero is compliant, the human-scale shot in slot 4 is well-executed (just audience-narrow), and the wrist-stress narrative — while misallocated — exists and works. The bones are there; the sequence and missing pieces are the fix.

Slot 1 — Hero (THE biggest CTR lever)

ResultSport push up bars on white background
Filename: Images/slot1.jpg · 500 × 500 px
DimensionScore / 10Note
Category legibility8Clear — two push up bars on white, instantly readable as the category.
Crop strength5Loose crop with too much empty space. Both bars sit in the lower-left/center, leaving ~25% of frame as dead white.
Trust cue5No branding visible on product; nothing to lift premium perception at thumbnail size.
CTR push potential4No CTR push tactics applied — straight-on angle, no shadow grounding, no luminosity drop.
Total22 / 40Competent. Compliant. Headroom on every dimension except category legibility.

Compliance: ✓ Pure white background · ✓ Product fills >50% of frame · ✓ No text overlays · ✓ No props or models · No violations.

CTR push tactics to consider

  • Zero risk Diagonal isometric rotation — angle the pair so both bars run along the canvas diagonals (X and Y axes); fills more pixels at thumbnail size. Always recommended when the product geometry suits it — this product is wide-and-short, perfect candidate.
  • Zero risk Micro-shadow grounding — add an ambient-occlusion shadow directly under each rubber base contact point. The current image reads as a flat cutout; a shadow makes both bars feel like real, weighty objects.
  • Low risk Luminosity drop — drop the background from RGB 255,255,255 to RGB 253,253,253. Creates a faint tile separation in mobile search results. Worth doing in Pushup Stands where READAEER (Best Seller #1) and Kipika both use this trick.
  • Medium risk Ghost packaging — render a 3D-printed branded box behind the bars with "Soft Foam · Non-Slip · Wrist-Friendly" printed on it. Massive USP smuggling, but manual reviewers may require reupload. Optional, not recommended unless the seller is willing to absorb a one-time audit.

Top fix: Rebuild slot 1 with diagonal isometric rotation + micro-shadow grounding + luminosity drop (the two zero-risk + one low-risk combo). Expected CTR lift in this category: 5-10%.

Slot 2 — Keystone (THE biggest persuasion lever)

Push up bar with dimension callouts
Filename: Images/slot2.jpg · 500 × 500 px

Current mechanism: None cleanly identifiable. Closest is Differentiation (#6) but without an actual reframe — it's just a spec sheet placed where the keystone belongs.

DimensionScore / 10Note
Mechanism clarity2No mechanism running. Reads as "spec sheet" not "positioning".
Thumbnail / 3-sec clarity5"Dimension" headline reads at thumbnail, but the message ("here are some measurements") doesn't move the buyer.
Risk-kill strength2No wrist-safety badge, no certification, no reassurance on the #1 category objection.
Human-scale presence3Floating product. No hand, no body, no scale that means anything emotionally — just cm/inch.
Brand clarity2No brand mark anywhere.
Typography craft5"Dimension" is legible, but the layout is product-catalogue-style.
Category reframe3Reinforces the commodity category rather than re-positioning it.
Personality / craft4Stock-template feel.
Total26 / 80BROKEN — actively costing CVR. Rebuild from scratch.

Recommended mechanism for the rebuild

Mechanism #3 — Objection pre-empt, executed with the wrist-stress visual move (already proven in current slot 3). Reasoning: the kw-workbook High Opportunity tab shows that "press up handles wrist support", "push up handles for bad wrists", "ergonomic push up grips" and "neutral push up grip" convert at 50-100% purchase share. Wrist relief is the single most-converting angle the product owns. The current slot 3 image already does this well — but it's in the wrong slot.

Top 3 fixes

  1. Swap slot 2 ↔ slot 3. The wrist-stress diagram is the keystone; promote it. Move the current "Dimension" spec sheet to slot 5 (feature deep-dive) where spec data actually belongs. This single re-sequencing earns ~80% of the lift available — no new image design required.
  2. Then rebuild the promoted slot 2 with the 8 observable elements. Current wrist-stress image scores ~8/10 on objection clarity but only ~4/10 on brand presence (no ResultSport mark), ~5/10 on typography craft (basic), and ~3/10 on personality. Layer in: small ResultSport corner watermark, replace clip-art arrows with a designed force-vector overlay, add a "Wrist-Neutral Grip Position" badge in the top corner, raise headline weight from regular to extra-bold.
  3. Add the avatar mirror. The current wrist-stress image uses a generic male hand. Add an inset second hand showing a smaller/female-coded hand on the bar — answers the "is this for women too?" implicit question. The kw-workbook shows "push up bars for women" at vol 344, 0% share — addressable here.

Slot 3 — Objection #1 Visual Answer

Wrist stress reduction diagram with force arrows
Filename: Images/slot3.jpg · 500 × 500 px
DimensionScore / 10Note
Job clarity9Crystal clear — body weight crushes wrist on bare floor; bar fixes it. Mechanism #3 running cleanly.
Execution7Strong headline ("Reduce Stress on Wrists and Tendons" is RAG-ready). Red arrows feel clip-art-y; could be designed force vectors. No brand mark.
Compliance10Pass. No medical claim language — "reduce stress" is descriptive, not curative.
Total8 / 10Strong but in the wrong slot. Promote to slot 2.

Biggest fix: Promote to slot 2 (see slot 2 section above). After promotion, the freed slot 3 should run Objection #2 — the stability / non-slip question, which is currently lurking inside slot 6.

Recommended new slot 3 (after promotion): "Tested to 18 Stone (114 kg)" badge with a stability demo — a person mid-press at full body weight, with a "rubber base" callout showing the bar planted on a hard floor. Carries 95 review-mentions of "stability" into a visual answer.

Slot 4 — Use-Case in Context

Male athlete using push up bars for strength training
Filename: Images/slot4.jpg · 500 × 500 px
DimensionScore / 10Note
Job clarity7Mechanism #4 (Use-case framing) running — "Build Muscle, Improve Strength". Reads as a generic muscle-building shot rather than locking in a specific buying context.
Execution6Strong typography (navy headline matches brand). Photography is stock-feeling — topless male athlete is the cliché choice for this category.
Compliance10Pass. No banned claims. "Toning... and Improving your Flexibility" is descriptive.
Total6 / 10OK — execution is fine but audience too narrow.

Audience mismatch: the listing copy claims "for Men and Women" but slot 4 shows only a young, lean, topless male. Excludes the wrist-relief buyer (often older), the female yoga/pilates user, and the home-workout beginner who doesn't already have visible abs. The kw-workbook shows "push up bars for women" (vol 344, 0% share), "push up handles for bad wrists" (vol 2, 100% share when seen), "pilates push-up handles" (vol 1, 100% share) — all under-represented audiences.

Biggest fix: Replace with a 2-up split: left half shows the current male strength athlete; right half shows a woman in mid-30s mid-yoga or mid-pilates plank using the bars for wrist-neutral grip. Caption: "Built for every body — strength, mobility, recovery." Holds the strength buyer + adds the cross-use buyer in one frame.

Slot 5 — Feature Deep-Dive

Close-up of soft foam handle
Filename: Images/slot5.jpg · 500 × 500 px
DimensionScore / 10Note
Job clarity6Feature shot — but no callouts, no detail breakdown, no spec. Just "soft grip handle" as a sentence.
Execution5Light blue background, foam visible, but no exploded-view or sectional treatment.
Compliance10Pass.
Total5 / 10Duplicates slot 6's job.

Biggest fix: Repurpose as the spec / dimension slot — move the "Dimension" content from current slot 2 here. Add 3-4 callouts: foam handle density (mm thickness, mm length, durometer if known), rubber base diameter, total weight per bar, max user weight (114 kg). Becomes the "engineering" frame for the listing.

Slot 6 — Feature / Lifestyle

Two callouts showing non-slip base and soft grip handle
Filename: Images/slot6.jpg · 500 × 500 px
DimensionScore / 10Note
Job clarity7"Stable Non-slip Rubber Base and Soft Foam Grip Handles" — covers two features. Callouts are designed (circular insets with leader lines) — strongest execution in the stack.
Execution7Best layout in the stack. The two-callout pattern is industry-standard and reads clean at thumbnail.
Compliance10Pass.
Total6 / 10Strong execution, wrong position. Should be slot 5.

Biggest fix: Promote to slot 5 (feature deep-dive) where it belongs. After promotion, the freed slot 6 should run the cross-use / lifestyle / aspiration angle — a montage of three use contexts (push-up · yoga plank · pilates wrist-support) with three small captions, mirroring how buyers actually use the product per the review summary.

Slot 7 — MISSING

P0 — MissingSlot 7 is empty. This is the highest-leverage build in the stack.

Three plays — pick one based on the biggest pre-purchase confusion the listing faces:

OptionPlayWhy this play
A (recommended)Comparison chart — ResultSport vs (a) rotating push-up handles, (b) plastic push-up board, (c) wooden parallettes — across 6 attributes: foam grip, wrist-neutral angle, weight capacity, base stability, footprint, price bandkw-workbook shows ~600/mo combined search volume on "rotating push up handles" + "push up board" + "parallettes" — buyers actively cross-shop these. Comparison frame intercepts the cross-shopping decision. Don't name competitor BRANDS — name product TYPES.
BWhat's-in-the-box flat-lay — 2 push-up bars + (if applicable) any included documentation, packaging insertReduces "I didn't realise this is the basic 2-bar set" returns. Less leverage than option A but easy production.
CSize grid — bar dimensions next to common household reference (smartphone, A4 sheet, palm)Reinforces the compact/portable USP. Less leverage than option A.

Recommendation: Build option A. Pairs naturally with the conquest ASIN PPC campaigns from the ppc-campaigns workbook and addresses the comparison-intent cluster that's currently unanswered anywhere on the listing.

A+ Content — MISSING (largest single CVR lever)

P0 — MissingThe listing currently shows a generic ResultSport brand store snippet rather than product-specific A+ Content.

A+ Content typically lifts conversion 5-15% when modules earn their space. The downstream amazon-aplus-content skill will own the full design — this section flags the gap and seeds the 6-module strategy.

Recommended 6-module structure (handed off to amazon-aplus-content):

  1. Brand banner — "ResultSport · UK-Designed Fitness Equipment Since 2013" + one-sentence brand promise.
  2. Wrist-neutral grip explainer — anatomy diagram showing the difference between flat-palm and vertical-grip wrist angles. Cluster anchor: ergonomic / wrist-support sub-niche.
  3. Use-case grid — 4 photos: strength training, yoga plank, pilates wrist-support, rehabilitation. Cluster anchor: cross-use adjacent.
  4. Comparison chart — ResultSport vs rotating-handle vs push-up-board vs parallettes. Same data as slot 7 option A but with deeper attribute breakdown.
  5. Q&A block — the 5 Rufus-seeded questions from the listing-rewrite skill output (floor type, weight capacity, wrist comfort, rotating-handle comparison, storage).
  6. Brand close — UK FBA dispatch · 30-day return policy · 4.4★ from 995 reviews · founder line.

Stack-Level Compliance Pass

Compliance lineStatus
Slot 1 pure white background✓ Pass
Slot 1 no text overlays or models✓ Pass
No medical / disease language ("reduce stress" is descriptive, not curative)✓ Pass
No promotional badges ("Best", "Sale", "Free Shipping")✓ Pass
No competitor brand names visible✓ Pass
No fake certifications✓ Pass
Every on-image claim substantiated in bullets / description✓ Pass (after listing-rewrite goes live; current bullets are weaker but no claim contradictions)
Slot 4 model representation (male only) — not a compliance issue but a coverage gap⚠ Audience-coverage gap

Measurement Plan

MetricToday (baseline)Target (30 d post-rebuild)Target (90 d post-rebuild)
Main image CTR (Search → PDP)Not directly measurable via Seller Central; use Sessions / Glance Views proxy+5-10%+8-15%
PDP → Add-to-Cart conversionBaseline measure week-of+3-6%+5-12%
Mobile pre-scroll bounce rateBaseline measure week-of-3-5%-5-10%
Returns flagged "wrong product"Pull last 90 d baselineFlat (no change expected before A+ + slot 7 ship)-10-15%

Session caveat: if the listing receives under 1,000 monthly sessions, an A/B test won't have statistical power. Recommend a single decided swap with pre/post measurement instead — most quickly readable in the 4-6 week window after launch. Current rate of 50+ bought/month implies ~3,000-5,000 monthly sessions (typical ~1.5-2% CVR in this category) — A/B is feasible if needed.

Next Steps (Ranked)

P0 · This week

P1 · Within 2 weeks

P2 · Within 30 days