Why this matters
Descriptive filenames get found
Google and Google Images read the filename. rustic-leather-recliner-western.webp tells search engines exactly what the photo is — IMG_4821.jpg tells them nothing. Properly named images are far more likely to surface in search and pull shoppers and readers to your product and blog pages.
Lighter images load faster
Converting to WebP and resizing makes each file ~30% smaller with no visible quality loss. Faster pages mean better Core Web Vitals, higher rankings, and fewer visitors leaving before the page even loads — on product pages and blog posts alike.
Run every product photo and blog image through this before you save and upload it to your website. Clean name in, web-optimized file out.
① Ownership & SEO Metadata
② Per-Image Content (SEO)
These get embedded individually. Use placeholders to auto-fill from filename.
Placeholders:
{name} {brand} {date} {index}③ Output Settings (Web-optimized)
WebP (recommended)
JPEG
WebP is ~30% smaller than JPEG and loads faster → better Core Web Vitals → better SEO. Supported everywhere modern.
④ Bulk Rename
Secure AI naming
AI naming examines each image and suggests an SEO-friendly filename. The request runs through this Digital Wheelhouse and Anthropic API key.
When filled, this is appended to each filename — e.g. ...-rj-chisum. Set it per batch for whichever vendor you're processing.
⑤ Images
Drop images here
or click to browse · JPG, PNG, WebP, TIFF · unlimited bulk
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