Nichesss Review: AI Copywriting Tool Too Beta to Recommend?
Nichesss promises AI-powered copywriting and niche business idea generation, but its buggy editor, weak outputs, and unfinished features make it hard to recommend over more polished competitors.
Nichesss
A GPT-3 powered AI copywriting tool that generates product descriptions, blog posts, AIDA frameworks, and business ideas from Reddit niche research.
Content creators and entrepreneurs looking for AI-assisted copywriting and niche business idea generation.
Jasper, Copy.ai, Writesonic, Rytr
What Is Nichesss?
Nichesss (spelled with three S's, the last two being dollar signs) is a GPT-3 powered AI copywriting tool that tries to differentiate itself with built-in niche research features. It's available both as a monthly subscription and as a lifetime deal.
This review is part of a larger series comparing AI copywriting tools head-to-head, all using the exact same inputs so you can see how each tool performs with identical prompts. The short version? Nichesss feels very much like a beta product — from its emoji-based homepage to its buggy document editor. Let's dig into why.
The Nichesss Interface and Template System
Rather than organizing features as standalone templates like most AI writing tools, Nichesss groups them into sections that each contain multiple templates. For example, the "Product Tools" section includes book descriptions, book titles, product descriptions, product descriptions with emojis, product paragraphs (how-to and problem-solution variations), and a business tagline generator — about seven templates in total.
You can select multiple templates and have the tool generate copy for all of them at once, which sounds convenient in theory. In practice, some templates require output from others as input, so the batch approach doesn't always work smoothly. Paying subscribers get unlimited report generation, while the free trial caps you at four reports.
Reddit Niche Research: A Unique But Limited Feature
The most distinctive feature in Nichesss is its Reddit search tool, which is something no other AI copywriting app in this series offers. The idea is straightforward: browse Reddit communities to identify potential business niches, then use the AI to generate product and monetization ideas for that audience.
You can filter subreddits by subscriber count and toggle NSFW content, but that's about it — there's no keyword filtering or any other way to narrow results. The slider controls for subscriber counts are clunky and would benefit from simple text input fields instead.
Once you find a subreddit like r/ketorecipes, you describe the audience ("people who love to eat high fat foods"), then choose what kind of product you'd sell them: Amazon products, a book, a course, an e-commerce store, events, gifts, membership sites, a restaurant, a subscription box, or a YouTube channel.
Business Idea Generation: Creative but Shallow
After selecting a niche and product type, Nichesss generates a "report" with business ideas. For the keto niche with Amazon and membership site options selected, the suggestions included selling high-fat food items, creating cookbooks, and designing t-shirts or socks featuring hamburgers and nutritional tables. The membership site ideas were similarly surface-level: share recipes, offer motivation, build a diet community.
The monetization tips were equally obvious — charge people when you sell them something, or charge monthly for a membership. None of this requires AI to figure out. If you spend more than a few seconds thinking about what keto enthusiasts might buy, you'd arrive at the same conclusions.
To give Nichesss credit, the niche research workflow is genuinely unique among AI copywriting tools. The problem is that business ideas are cheap. Most entrepreneurs don't struggle to come up with ideas — they struggle to execute on them. A tool that generates shallow, obvious suggestions doesn't solve a real pain point.
Product Description Quality
Using the exact same inputs provided to every other tool in this review series, the product descriptions from Nichesss were disappointing. The tool was given a description of Profitable Tools — a site that helps people start or grow an online business with tutorials on software and business tools.
The first output pivoted to talking about domain names, which wasn't related to the input at all. Another output was essentially a bullet-point list reformatted as a paragraph. A third started with a reasonable premise about being an e-commerce resource but then awkwardly bolted on membership sites at the end, creating copy that felt unfocused and scattered.
With only four outputs generated at a time, the hit rate was low. None of the descriptions were as strong as what competing tools produced from identical inputs, and the original human-written description consistently outperformed the AI-generated alternatives.
AIDA Framework Results
The AIDA (Attention, Interest, Desire, Action) framework is a classic copywriting structure, and it's a good test of whether an AI tool understands persuasive writing. Nichesss struggled here.
The first "Attention" headline was "After you join, you'll receive five of our best training courses for free." As Dave put it, that's like walking up to someone and saying "After we're married, I'll give you five houses" — it skips straight past the hook. The call to action was simply "Join Profitable Tools now," which hardly requires AI to write.
One output opened with "Internet marketing" in the headline — an instant spam flag that would get you blocked on most social platforms. Another suggested "Learn how to make money online," which is the kind of phrase that sends emails straight to junk folders. The few halfway decent outputs still needed significant shortening and rewriting to be usable, defeating the purpose of using an AI writing assistant.
Blog Post Titles and Outlines
Blog title generation was similarly underwhelming. Highlights from the batch included generic titles like "How to Start a Successful Online Business" and "How to Start an Online Business Step-by-Step," which could apply to thousands of websites. One title ballooned into a full paragraph rather than staying concise.
The worst offender was a classic internet marketing relic: "How to Build an Online Business That Generates at Least $1,000 a Month in Passive Income With No Website, No Product, and No Email List." That's straight out of 2001 and would immediately tank credibility with a modern audience.
Blog outlines suffered from formatting issues — multiple outline items crammed onto single lines without proper structure. The content of the outlines was often circular, with items like "Step 1: Create an engaging video" for a post titled "How to Create Engaging Videos." You'd end up modifying your topic to fit the AI's outline rather than the other way around.
The Long-Form Blog Editor
The document editor is where Nichesss feels most like a beta product. The concept is collaborative writing: you write some text, then the AI continues where you left off. You need at least 102 words before the AI will generate anything.
There's no text formatting available — you can't create headings, bold text, or any other structural elements. When the AI did manage to produce output, it often ignored the context of what you'd written and generated generic content unrelated to your headings or outline.
The editor was also riddled with bugs during testing. After encountering an error, the AI generation stopped working entirely. The workaround was to copy everything into a brand new document and start over — not something anyone should have to deal with in a paid product.
UI Quirks and Collaboration Features
Nichesss does offer a few nice touches. Export options include DOC, TXT, and CSV formats, which is more flexibility than some competitors provide. There's also a content sharing feature for collaborating with team members or clients.
However, the sharing feature has its own issues. The toggle is labeled "Locked" (shown in green) when content is private, which is confusing — most users would interpret a green "Locked" indicator as meaning the content can't be edited, not that it's simply private. When you do share a page, a massive orange email signup bar for Nichesss appears prominently in the shared view, which looks unprofessional when sharing with clients.
Notably missing are any feedback or collaboration tools on the generated content. You can't upvote, downvote, edit inline, copy individual outputs, or leave comments. The favoriting feature lets you star content, but there's no way to filter your favorites afterward, making the feature essentially useless.
Final Verdict: Too Beta for Your Money
Nichesss has one genuinely original idea in its Reddit-based niche research workflow. Unfortunately, that feature produces shallow results, and everything else — product descriptions, AIDA frameworks, blog titles, outlines, and long-form content — falls well short of what competing GPT-3 tools deliver from the same inputs.
The application feels unfinished at every level. The homepage is placeholder-quality, the UI has confusing labels and broken features, the document editor is buggy, and the AI outputs consistently need more editing than they save in writing time. Whether you're looking at the monthly subscription or the lifetime deal, it's difficult to justify spending money on a tool that doesn't reliably produce usable copy.
If you're in the market for AI copywriting, tools like Jasper, Copy.ai, Writesonic, or Rytr are all more polished alternatives that produce stronger outputs. Nichesss may improve over time, but in its current state, it's simply too beta to recommend.
Watch the Full Video
Prefer watching to reading? Check out the full video on YouTube for a complete walkthrough with live demos and commentary.