Amazon Vendor Advertising Strategy: Maximize ROI in 2025
Overview
Amazon’s advertising platform may look the same for third-party sellers and first-party vendors, but seasoned Amazon vendors know there are crucial differences that can make or break your return on investment (ROI). If you’re an Amazon vendor looking to supercharge your advertising performance, you need strategies tailored to the vendor experience. Unlike sellers, vendors operate on an invite-only Amazon Vendor Central platform where Amazon becomes your retailer – taking control of pricing, inventory purchases, and more. In an episode of the Marketplace Masters webinar by MerchantSpring, host Paul Sonneveld (Co-founder & CEO of MerchantSpring) sat down with Cagan Aceter – an ex-Amazon advertising leader and CEO/Co-Founder of the agency Margad – to unveil advanced tactics for maximising advertising ROI as a vendor. This article synthesises those expert insights into a clear game plan for Amazon agency professionals and vendor-side marketers.
An Amazon vendor’s advertising strategy requires meticulous planning and unique tactics. Vendors must account for factors like Amazon-controlled pricing and fulfillment promises when optimising campaigns. From unique challenges vendors face, to offensive and defensive ad tactics, to leveraging Vendor Central tools and analytics – we’ll explore how you can maximise ROI on Amazon Vendor Central. Read on for expert tips, advanced Amazon advertising strategies, real-world examples, and a playbook to drive success
Unique Challenges for Vendors in Amazon Advertising
At first glance, Amazon’s ad console and formats are the same for vendors and sellers. However, vendors confront distinctive challenges that call for a different approach:
- No Price Control: As a vendor, you sell inventory to Amazon at wholesale; Amazon then sets the retail price for customers. You cannot directly adjust your listing prices to influence conversion. Amazon is known to adjust prices based on market conditions and margin requirements – the final pricing decision is entirely up to Amazon. This means your product’s price could drop without warning to match a competitor or maintain Amazon’s margin, instantly boosting conversion rate but potentially squeezing profit per unit. Conversely, Amazon might raise prices or even refuse to discount, which can slow down sales. 
Impact on advertising: Since price heavily affects conversion rate, vendors must closely monitor Amazon’s pricing of their products and be ready to adjust ad spend. For example, if Amazon unexpectedly lowers your product’s price, that product becomes more competitive – a signal to increase ad coverage and capture the surge in demand. On the flip side, if Amazon’s price is higher than competitors’, your ads might underperform due to lower conversion, and different tactics are needed (more on those soon). - Longer Attribution Window: Amazon’s ad attribution window differs for vendors. Vendor Central advertising uses a 14-day attribution window, whereas Seller Central typically uses 7 days for Sponsored Products. In practice, this means an ad click can be credited with a sale up to two weeks later for vendors. While the extended window can capture more conversions, it also delays the visibility of results. Fast-paced agencies must be cautious – reporting on a campaign too early could undervalue its performance (since some sales take up to 14 days to register). An effective Amazon vendor advertising strategy involves accounting for this lag. For instance, when evaluating a new campaign’s ROI, vendors should wait the full two weeks to gather data, or use interim metrics like click-through rate and early sales as indicators.
 - Tighter Unit Economics: Many vendors operate on thinner margins and strict funding terms with Amazon. Amazon requires a wholesale discount that ensures their profit; if your products don’t meet Amazon’s margin targets, they may request additional funding or co-op fees, cutting further into your budget for advertising. Unlike sellers who set their own retail prices, vendors can’t simply raise prices to cover ad spend – Amazon might not accept higher cost prices or could reduce POs if sell-through suffers. As a vendor, you must evaluate Advertising Cost of Sales (ACoS) in the context of both sell-through and sell-in. In other words, consider how ad spend fits into your cost of goods sold to Amazon. We’ll discuss metrics like vendor ACoS and vendor TACoS in detail below. The key challenge is ensuring your ad investments still make sense after Amazon’s margin and fees.
 - Dormant Accounts: If a vendor account has been inactive or neglected for a long period, reactivating it for advertising can be surprisingly difficult. Many vendors who “spin back up” after a hiatus find that their Amazon Advertising Console is limited – it may take time and Amazon support intervention to regain full access and ad delivery momentum. The takeaway: vendors should avoid letting their Amazon business stagnate. Even if sales slow, keep minimal campaigns running to maintain algorithmic history. A “cold start” on a vendor account is much harder than it is for sellers, due to the vendor system’s inertia.
 
Understanding these challenges is the first step. Next, let’s explore how savvy vendors navigate these hurdles with advanced tactics.
Advanced Advertising Tactics Tailored to Vendors
Vendors can’t rely on generic Amazon PPC advice – they need strategies that account for the nuances of the vendor model. Cagan Aceter highlights a two-pronged approach: defensive tactics to protect your performance when conditions change, and offensive tactics to capitalise on competitors’ weaknesses. Here are some advanced tactics in each category:
Defensive Tactics – Adapting to Your Own Conditions:
- Price Drops – Double Down: Since Amazon may drop your product’s price at any time (to stay competitive or move inventory), watch your pricing daily. When you see Amazon lower the price on your product, treat it as a window of opportunity. The product’s conversion rate is likely to increase due to the more attractive price point. To exploit this, increase your advertising spend or bids on that ASIN immediately. You can safely push for more impressions because the higher conversion should keep ACoS in check (Amazon’s discount is effectively funding the ad efficiency). Unlike in the third-party seller scenario, where a price drop directly cuts into your margin, here, Amazon is taking the hit, so boosting ads can yield more sales without hurting your unit economics. This agile response can significantly lift your market share while Amazon’s price drop lasts. (Note: Ensure the price drop isn’t due to Amazon’s clearance of your item, which might indicate they won’t reorder – in such a case, coordinate with your vendor manager.)
 - Extended Delivery Promises – Pull Back: Delivery promise refers to the shipping estimate shown to customers (e.g. “Arrives in 2 days” with Prime). For vendors, Amazon’s supply chain can sometimes extend this promise if stock is low or inbound shipments are delayed – for example, if Amazon projects an ASIN will ship only after 2-3 weeks. A long delivery promise kills conversion rates, as many shoppers won’t buy a product that takes too long to arrive. Cagan’s advice: pause or reduce ads on any ASIN with an extended delivery promise. If Amazon suddenly quotes 30-day delivery on one of your products, driving ad traffic to it will likely waste spend and drag down your performance metrics. Reallocate the budget to products that are readily in stock and shipping fast. Keep an eye on inventory and any Amazon supply chain notifications – your advertising strategy should adapt in real time to Amazon’s fulfillment status for each product. As Cagan put it, “If an ASIN’s delivery promise extends to, say, 30 days, you must cut ad spend on it. Driving traffic to a slow-fulfillment item won’t convert and only creates inefficiency.”
 
Offensive Tactics – Exploiting Competitor Weaknesses:
- Competitor Price Hikes or Stockouts: Just as you monitor your own price, keep tabs on your competitors’ pricing and stock status (this can be done with third-party tools or manual checks of top competing ASINs). If a competitor raises their price significantly or goes out of stock (which might also show as a long delivery estimate on their listing), that’s your cue to strike. Increase your Sponsored Product product targeting and Sponsored Brands ads targeting that competitor’s ASIN or brand. With their offer less competitive, shoppers will be more likely to consider alternatives – and your ads should be front and centre to capture that spillover traffic. By aggressively targeting competitor listings when they experience issues, a vendor can steal market share and win new customers. Essentially, your competitor’s misstep becomes your opportunity.
 - Competitor Delivery Delays: Similarly, if a rival product starts showing slower delivery (e.g. they ran low on FBA stock and now ship in 3 weeks), ramp up your ads against it. Shoppers hitting that listing might see the delay and look for other options – your ad for a similar product with normal Prime shipping can pull them in. This tactic turns Amazon’s customer experience focus to your advantage: customers will gravitate to the offer that arrives sooner. Be the vendor who’s ready to serve those impatient buyers by occupying the ad slots around a faltering competitor.
 
These advanced tactics require vigilance and fast action. It’s a more dynamic style of Amazon advertising management that proactive agencies and vendors are adopting to maximise ROI. You might need to set up alerts for price changes and use tools (or Amazon’s reports) to watch competitor stock status. The payoff, however, is advertising efficiency and sales gains that competitors not watching these signals will miss.
Leveraging Vendor Central to Optimise Campaigns
Vendor Central isn’t just a portal for purchase orders – it also contains marketing features that can amplify your advertising efforts, yet many vendors underutilise them. While Vendor Central’s interface has a notoriously clunky reputation (despite a recent cosmetic refresh), savvy vendors and agencies know to take advantage of a few key tools:
- Marketing Packages (Vendor Powered Marketing): In Vendor Central, “Marketing Packages” refer to various premium placements Amazon offers to vendors – things like category page banners, editorial recommendations, or email campaigns that Amazon can run on your behalf (often for a cost or as part of co-op marketing funds). In major markets like the US or UK, these programs have mixed results and are often considered expensive or ineffective. However, in emerging Amazon marketplaces (e.g. Sweden, Poland, the Netherlands, and Turkey), marketing packages can be incredibly powerful. Why? Newer marketplaces have lower competition and different shopping habits – customers often browse by category rather than use search as heavily (since the product selection is smaller). 
Vendor marketing placements that put your products on high-traffic category pages or in site-wide promotions can drive tremendous visibility when few competitors exist. Additionally, Amazon tends to favour vendors in the first year or two of a new marketplace launch: it’s common for 80-90% of sales in a young Amazon market to come from 1P vendors (since Amazon recruits brands to fill catalogue gaps). If you’re a vendor in one of these markets, allocate budget to marketing packages and work with your Amazon vendor manager to secure placements. They can be a shortcut to establishing brand presence before the 3P seller crowd catches up. - Business (B2B) Discounts: Another often overlooked feature in Vendor Central is the ability to set quantity discounts for Amazon Business customers. If your product line is relevant to business buyers (e.g. office supplies, industrial goods, or even B2B use of consumer products), enabling bulk discounts can boost your conversion rate and average order value for those customers. These discounts (just like on Seller Central) are funded by you, the vendor, but they can significantly improve win rate with business buyers who often compare unit costs. 
An insider tip Cagan shared: if you have an Amazon Vendor Manager or use the Amazon Vendor Services (AVS) program, ask your rep for an industry-segmented sales report. Amazon can provide a breakdown of your sales by customer industry (education, hospitality, healthcare, etc.). This is gold for a vendor – you might discover, for example, that a large chunk of your sales are going to the education sector. With that insight, you could tailor your marketing and ads (and business discounts) to better target schools and universities, on and off Amazon. Leveraging such data goes beyond advertising, but it directly feeds into a smarter ad strategy (e.g. targeting keywords or crafting ad copy that appeals to those industry buyers). - Vendor Central Promotions and Coupons: Vendors have access to many of the same deal tools as sellers (coupons, Lightning Deals, etc.), though the interface and funding may differ. A well-timed coupon can enhance your ad conversion rates (the little green coupon badge on your listing can improve click-through and conversion). While these are not advertising tactics per se, they are levers within Vendor Central that amplify ad performance. Ensure your hero ASINs have some promotional angle, especially during big events, so your ads stand out with a compelling offer.
 - What’s Missing in Vendor Central: It’s worth noting that Vendor Central still lacks some useful features that sellers enjoy. For instance, the Search Query Performance dashboard (which provides keyword-level impression and conversion data) is not available to vendors. Additionally, Brand Tailored Promotions (targeted offers to select customer segments) are not directly offered to vendors in the same way – these might fall under Market Development Funds (MDF) arrangements where Amazon runs certain marketing activities for a fee, but you have less control and no guarantee of results. Being aware of these gaps reminds vendors to find alternative solutions – for example, using third-party analytics to get search term insights, or negotiating with your vendor manager for marketing support during key seasons.
 
Bottom line: Don’t ignore Vendor Central’s marketing tools just because the UI is clunky. Tap into marketing packages, B2B discounts, and promotions strategically, especially in contexts where they shine (new marketplaces, business customers, major sales events). They can give your products an extra push that complements your paid advertising and helps maximise ROI.
Key Metrics and Analytics for Vendor Advertising Success
Amazon advertising is a data-driven game. But for vendors, the standard metrics can be misleading if not interpreted in the right context. Two metrics in particular are critical for vendor-side advertising evaluation: Vendor ACoS and Vendor TACoS.
- ACoS (Advertising Cost of Sales) – In Amazon’s ad console, ACoS is displayed as ad spend divided by ad-attributed sales. For vendors, the “sales” in that equation are the sell-through revenue (what Amazon sold to end customers) attributed to ads within the attribution window. However, as a vendor, your revenue doesn’t directly come from those sales at retail price – your revenue comes from Amazon’s wholesale purchases (the POs Amazon places to buy inventory from you, often termed shipped COGS or PCOGS for “purchased cost of goods sold”). Thus, to truly measure advertising cost against your revenue, many vendors calculate Vendor ACoS = Ad Spend / (Amazon’s purchase cost of the advertised products). 
This essentially measures ad spend as a percentage of the money you earned from Amazon for those products. It will generally be higher than the console ACoS (since Amazon’s retail price is higher than your wholesale price), but it’s a more accurate reflection of your ROI as a supplier. Cagan recommends calculating this at the ASIN level, since each product may have a different margin structure. One ASIN might justify a higher ACoS due to better margins, while another cannot. By computing Vendor ACoS per product, you can adjust your ad aggressiveness to each item’s profitability. For example, if you spend $500 on ads for Product A and Amazon’s wholesale cost for Product A units sold (shipped) is $2,000, then Vendor ACoS = 25%. You can judge if 25% is acceptable given your profit margins. Tracking this metric helps ensure your advertising isn’t secretly unprofitable after Amazon’s cut. - TACoS (Total Advertising Cost of Sales) – TACoS is typically defined as ad spend as a percentage of total sales. For vendors, we again distinguish between Amazon’s sales and your sales. Vendor TACoS can be viewed as Ad Spend / Total Amazon Purchase Orders (for the period). In other words, how much of the overall business you did with Amazon was spent on advertising. This metric gives a big-picture view of how much investment in ads is driving your Amazon business growth. A rising TACoS might be acceptable if you’re in market share expansion mode, but unsustainable if Amazon’s orders (sell-in) aren’t growing. 
One complication is timing: Amazon’s orders (POs) can be lumpy week to week, so Vendor TACoS is best looked at over a longer period or averaged. Some vendors use Amazon’s shipped COGS in a given month as the “total sales” baseline for TACoS, which smooths out the ordering cycle a bit. The key is consistency – pick a method that aligns ad spend with the revenue base you want to analyse (monthly, quarterly, etc.). Vendor TACoS is a powerful metric for evaluating the overall efficiency of your Amazon channel marketing. For example, if over a quarter you spent $20,000 on ads and Amazon purchased $200,000 of your products, your TACoS is 10%. You can then trend that over time or compare it to other channels. - Analytics and Tools: Calculating these vendor-specific metrics often requires blending data from Amazon Advertising and Amazon Retail Analytics (ARA) or VC reports. This is where having the right analytics tool can save hours and improve accuracy. A solution like MerchantSpring’s analytics platform, which is built for Amazon vendors and agencies, can automate the aggregation of ad spend and vendor sales data into a single dashboard. Instead of manually crunching spreadsheets from the Advertising Console and Vendor Central reports, such tools present your ACoS, TACoS, and other KPIs in vendor-tailored views. 
They can also help monitor things like stock levels, price changes, and even delivery lead times alongside ad performance – providing a holistic picture. Investing in analytics not only cuts down reporting time but also uncovers insights (for instance, identifying an ASIN where high ad spend isn’t translating to more POs from Amazon, indicating a possible issue with Amazon’s retail side). As an Amazon agency managing vendor accounts, using robust analytics software is almost a necessity to maximise ROI for your clients. Data-driven optimisation is the name of the game – the better you measure, the better you can optimise. - Other Key Metrics: Don’t ignore the usual suspects – click-through rate (CTR), conversion rate, cost per click – but always interpret them in context. For example, a conversion rate drop might not be due to poor ad targeting; it could be because your delivery promise got worse, or a new competitor entered at a lower price. Always correlate changes in ad metrics with the vendor-specific factors we discussed. Also, pay attention to incremental metrics like new-to-brand sales (if using Sponsored Brands or DSP), which indicate if your ads are bringing in new customers to your brand – a key to growing Amazon orders long-term.
 
In summary, define what success looks like in numbers for your Amazon vendor business. Track those numbers religiously. And use tools or platforms (Excel at minimum, or advanced analytics dashboards) to combine retail and ad data. When you have a firm grip on your Vendor ACoS and TACoS, you can make informed decisions such as: where to cut spend, where to scale up, which products are ad-efficient or inefficient, and how your Amazon advertising is impacting your bottom line.
Case Study: Expanding Market Share Beyond Amazon’s Platform
One scenario discussed in the webinar is when a vendor is already a category leader on Amazon. Suppose you have maximised your share of voice on Amazon search – you’re running all the right campaigns, and incremental gains are hard to find because you already dominate your category’s ad slots. How can you drive further growth? The answer may lie beyond Amazon’s walls, by feeding more demand into Amazon.
The Situation: A vendor client was the top seller in their category on Amazon – they owned the bestseller badge, and competitors were far behind. Traditional ad optimisation was yielding diminishing returns; any additional Sponsored Product spend was mostly cannibalising their own organic sales or hitting a plateau. They needed a way to bring new customers into the category or reach those not currently shopping on Amazon.
The Strategy – Off-Amazon Demand Generation: We deployed a combination of Amazon Sponsored Display ads, Amazon DSP, and Amazon Attribution with external ads to expand the funnel:
- Sponsored Display Ads: This ad type (available in the Advertising Console for vendors) can show your ads both on and off Amazon, including on third-party websites and apps that are part of Amazon’s network. We used Sponsored Display’s audience targeting, especially Product Retargeting and Interest-based segments, to re-engage shoppers who had viewed similar products or who fit the category’s shopper profile, even if they were currently browsing elsewhere on the web. For a category leader, Sponsored Display is a quick win to ensure anyone who showed interest in your product (or related products) is served a reminder to come back and purchase. It’s like running retargeting ads for your Amazon products without needing the DSP. We cranked up Sponsored Display budgets to capture these off-Amazon impressions, which funnelled more shoppers back to Amazon to buy from us.
 - Amazon DSP (Demand Side Platform): For a more advanced, large-scale approach, we also utilised Amazon DSP campaigns. DSP allowed for precise audience targeting (e.g., in-market audiences, lifestyle segments) and access to premium placements like IMDb or Fire TV. With DSP, we targeted complementary audience segments that might not have visited our category on Amazon yet – for instance, people researching related high-value items who could also be interested in our product. We also ran video ads highlighting the product’s value proposition to build awareness outside of Amazon. DSP can be a bigger investment and often requires a minimum spend or working with an agency partner, but it offers powerful ways to reach new customers and then drive them to Amazon to purchase.
 - Amazon Attribution for Search and Social Ads: We didn’t stop at Amazon’s ad products. Using Amazon Attribution, we ran test campaigns on Google Search and Facebook, directing traffic to the Amazon product listing. Amazon Attribution gave us tracking links to measure sales and conversions from these external campaigns. For example, we bid on Google keywords related to our product category, where we were the leading brand. Our ads would show a call-to-action like “Buy [Brand] on Amazon” and lead directly to our Amazon detail page. Why send them to Amazon instead of our own site? Because on Amazon we owned the category and conversion rates were higher thanks to Prime shipping and trust – we wanted to leverage that strength. The Attribution program allowed us to prove ROI by showing how many Amazon purchases resulted from those Google ad clicks.
 
The Results: By expanding the demand pool, the vendor saw a notable increase in total Amazon sales quarter-over-quarter, even in a “saturated” position on Amazon. Sponsored Display in particular delivered a cost-efficient boost – capturing the low-hanging fruit of shoppers who were already aware of the product but hadn’t purchased yet. The DSP and Google Ads efforts were incremental on top, helping to grow brand awareness and reach new customers who weren’t actively searching on Amazon. In essence, we helped the client break through the ceiling by enlarging the pie (bringing more shoppers into the Amazon ecosystem to buy their product), rather than fighting for a bigger slice of the same pie.
Takeaway: For vendors leading their category, traditional PPC tweaks might yield only incremental improvements. Consider an omni-channel approach to drive traffic into Amazon – leverage Amazon’s own display network and even external channels. Even if you’re not a category leader, these tactics can work if you have a defensible conversion advantage on Amazon (strong reviews, Prime eligibility, etc.). Just remember to track everything (using Attribution tags or promo codes) so you can measure the true impact on Amazon ROI. And if DSP is out of reach budget-wise, Sponsored Display ads are a great starting point that any vendor can use today to capture off-Amazon audiences.
Adapting Strategies for Emerging vs. Established Marketplaces
Amazon is a different beast in each country. An advanced Amazon advertising strategy must consider whether you’re operating in a mature, established marketplace (like Amazon US, UK, or Germany) or a relatively new marketplace (like Amazon Sweden, Poland, or the Middle East). The tactics and expectations can differ markedly:
In Established Markets:
 Major markets have high competition, sophisticated sellers and vendors, and Amazon’s algorithms are finely tuned from years of data. Here, advertising is all about precision and efficiency:
- Keyword Relevance is King: Amazon’s ad algorithm in mature markets won’t waste impressions on irrelevant searches for long. If you target broad or unrelated keywords, you might see a brief test, but quickly, Amazon will stop showing your ad if it doesn’t convert. This means you should conduct thorough keyword research and focus on highly relevant terms. Use tools and Amazon’s Brand Analytics (if available to you) to identify the keywords that matter. High-impact SEO keywords for your category (e.g. “wireless noise-cancelling earbuds” if that’s your product) should be woven into your campaigns and content. Long-tail keywords can be lucrative too, but they must align closely with your product’s use case.
 - Competitive Bidding: In a saturated market, you’ll likely face higher cost-per-clicks (CPCs). Dynamic bidding strategies, dayparting, and placement adjustments (e.g. Top of Search bid modifiers) can help squeeze more efficiency. Don’t be afraid to bid aggressively on your own branded keywords and key competitor terms – defensive and offensive plays are necessary just to maintain share. Also, consider advanced ad types like Sponsored Brand Video to stand out in search results; these often have higher conversion rates, improving ROI.
 - Analytics-Driven Optimisation: Small changes can have big effects in a competitive field. Lean on analytics to frequently optimise your campaigns – prune out high ACoS keywords, refine targeting, and A/B test your creatives (especially for Sponsored Brands and Display). The margin for error is thin in established markets, so a data-driven, iterative approach is needed.
 
In Emerging Markets:
 Newer Amazon marketplaces have less competition and a growing customer base that may behave differently:
- Wide-Net Approach: Early on, Amazon’s ad algorithm in a new marketplace is less trained. Cagan noted that in places like Amazon Sweden or the Netherlands, when they launched, you could bid on very broad keywords (even somewhat unrelated ones) and still get impressions – something that would never fly in the US. This is because Amazon is still learning what relevancy means there, and also, there may not be many sellers bidding. As a vendor, you can take advantage of this by casting a wide net initially. Bid on broader category terms to capture general browsing traffic. You might discover pockets of demand that you wouldn’t target in a mature market.
 - Low CPC, High Volume: Early-stage marketplaces often have very low CPCs due to limited competition. Even if conversion rates are lower on broad terms, the cost might be so low that it’s still efficient to advertise. You can dominate the ad slots across many searches at a minimal cost – essentially buying cheap brand exposure and market share. This helps in building your brand’s presence before others enter. It’s not uncommon for a proactive vendor to practically “own” the first page of search via ads in a new market, for a few cents per click.
 - Category & Browse Visibility: As mentioned earlier, shoppers in new markets might rely on category browsing (navigating through departments) more than search, especially if local language search behaviour is nascent. This is where those Vendor Central marketing placements can help (if available). Even without them, ensure your products are correctly categorised and consider advertising on category keywords or using Product Targeting to appear on top category player listings. Essentially, make your product unmissable for someone perusing that category on Amazon.
 - Budget Allocation: You might not need to spend a lot to see big results. Prioritise getting reviews and a solid star rating too, because in new markets, even a handful of reviews can make you the most trusted option. Balance your advertising vs. other launch investments (like Amazon’s Vine program for reviews or enhanced content) since being a first mover means you need to build the whole flywheel (content, reviews, ads) simultaneously.
 
In summary, tailor your strategy to the market’s maturity. In established markets, surgical precision and competitive tactics rule. In emerging markets, go broad, be aggressive, and capitalise on the cheap reach to cement your brand early on. Keep an eye on how the market evolves – as it matures, gradually shift your strategy to be more like an established one (focus targeting, refine bids). Having a flexible approach will ensure you’re maximising ROI, whether Amazon is an old hat in that country or the new kid on the block.
The Vendor Playbook: Strategies of Successful Vendors
After years of working with Amazon vendors (both as a former Amazonian and as an agency leader), Cagan observed that the most successful vendors approach their business with a clear playbook. In other words, they have predefined strategies for different scenarios, rather than a one-size-fits-all or ad-hoc approach. Here are four key scenarios and the distinct strategy mindset each requires:
- Business as Usual (Steady-State Maintenance): Even outside of big promotions or special initiatives, vendors need a plan for day-to-day management. Successful vendors set baseline advertising campaigns to continually drive sales at a target efficiency. This often means always-on campaigns for your core products, focusing on your primary keywords and defensive brand terms, tuned to a sustainable ACoS. The goal in BAU mode is to maintain rank, keep competitors from encroaching on your turf, and hit any everyday sales targets. It also involves regular housekeeping: trimming non-performing spend, ensuring stock is available, and keeping content optimised. Vendors who treat BAU as a proactive strategy (not a static routine) tend to stay ahead. They monitor trends and adjust budgets periodically to respond to seasonality or competitive moves, even in “normal” times.
 - Market Share Expansion (Growth Mode): There are times you decide to aggressively grow – for instance, entering a new sub-category, aiming to become the #1 brand in your category, or responding to a competitor’s weakness. In these periods, your strategy should shift to offence and investment. Expect higher ACoS or TACoS as you pour in budget to capture new customers. This could involve broadening keywords, increasing bids for top-of-search placements, running category-level Sponsored Brand campaigns, and maybe accepting a temporary hit to profitability. You might also augment with off-Amazon ads, as discussed, to pull more shoppers in. The key is, you have a plan: “For the next X months, we will overspend on ads to grow market share by Y%,” and you monitor progress. Crucially, once the goal is achieved (or the period ends), successful vendors then pivot back to a more efficient mode, lest they overspend for too long. Those without a plan either never seize the growth opportunity or they overspend without clear goals.
 - Event/Seasonal Peak (Prime Day, Black Friday, Holidays): Big shopping events require a dedicated playbook. You can’t treat Q4 or Prime Day like any other week. Top vendors prepare well in advance: securing deals or coupons, budgeting extra for those days, and crafting specific campaigns. For example, you might create Prime Day-specific Sponsored Brands highlighting your deals, or ramp up budgets 2 weeks before Black Friday to build momentum. During the event, you may prioritise conversion-driving ads (perhaps pulling back on awareness campaigns and focusing on bottom-funnel). Bids often spike due to competition, so some vendors choose which products to truly push (hero ASINs) and which to save budget on. Post-event, analyse performance to gather learnings for next time. In short, treat major events as projects with a start and end – successful vendors come in with a battle plan. They don’t just slightly raise bids the day of; they orchestrate a comprehensive strategy to maximise the ROI from the surge in traffic.
 - New Product Launches: Launching a new ASIN as a vendor is a critical moment that needs its own strategy. The playbook here might involve a substantial advertising budget for the first 4-8 weeks purely to generate awareness and sales velocity. Successful product launches often use a combination of tactics: auto campaigns (to discover converting terms), aggressive manual campaigns on relevant keywords (even if ACoS is high initially), product targeting ads on competitor pages, and possibly promotional pricing or deals to drive trial. The strategy should outline what success looks like – e.g., “Achieve X reviews and Y ranking by the end of the launch period” – and allocate Ad budget accordingly. Notably, vendors can also coordinate with Amazon on launches (like “Born to Run” programs that allow sending more initial stock) or ensure the item is enrolled in Vine for reviews. The advertising strategy in a launch is very different from BAU: you overspend relative to immediate revenue in order to kickstart the flywheel (reviews, ranking, organic visibility). Vendors who have a launch playbook are far more likely to have new products gain traction, whereas those who just “throw it up and see if it sticks” often see new ASINs languish with low discoverability.
 
To put it simply, failing to plan is planning to fail on Amazon.
As Cagan noted, “The vendors who approach each business scenario with a clear playbook are the ones who win. Those with no plan simply won’t.”
By preparing distinct strategies for different objectives and periods, you’ll be ready to execute with purpose rather than reacting on the fly. Take a moment to evaluate your current approach – do you have a playbook for each of the above? If not, start drafting one, even if it’s a simple checklist or budget allocation for each scenario.
Quick Win: Holiday Retargeting for High-Value Products
With the holiday season approaching (at the time of the webinar, it was just weeks before Christmas), one practical tip stood out for vendors looking to maximise Q4 sales: leverage retargeting on high-ticket items.
If you sell higher-priced products – think electronics, appliances, premium toys, etc. – the holiday period is when many consumers pull the trigger on these bigger purchases (either as gifts or personal buys during deal events). Often, people research or wishlist such items for weeks or months before buying. As a vendor, you want to ensure that when the customer is ready to purchase, they buy from you. This is where retargeting ads come in:
- Sponsored Display Product Retargeting: Use Sponsored Display campaigns with the targeting option for audiences like “Viewed” or “Searched for” your products. This will serve ads to shoppers who showed interest in your item or similar items, reminding them to come back. During the holiday season, boost the budgets on these campaigns, especially for your priciest SKUs, since each conversion is high-value. You can even tailor the ad creative (if you have the custom image option) to add a holiday theme or urgency (“Ready to make that big gift happen? Get it by Dec 24 with Prime.”).
 - DSP Retargeting: If you have access to Amazon DSP, set up retargeting pools of audiences who viewed your product in the last 30 or 60 days. Create ads (display or video) highlighting any holiday promotions or the product’s popularity (“#1 wishlisted in [Category]!” for example). DSP allows you to reach those users across the web, not just on Amazon, increasing the chances they’ll click and convert on Amazon when they’re in buying mode. Even a short DSP burst in December can pay off if executed right, focusing on users already aware of your product.
 
This tactic acknowledges a key consumer behaviour: research now, buy later – which is amplified for expensive products. By staying in front of the consumer through retargeting, you increase the likelihood that their eventual purchase is through your Amazon listing. The beauty for vendors is that if Amazon has plenty of your stock, you don’t worry about fulfillment – you just drive the demand and Amazon handles the rest, getting those last-minute gifts delivered.
Cagan’s advice was clear: if you have high ASP (Average Selling Price) products, ramp up retargeting ads as the holiday shopping frenzy hits. It’s a quick adjustment that could snag those big sales that make your quarter. Even in the final weeks of the year, a well-timed ad reminding someone of “that great product you were looking at” can seal the deal.
The Holistic Approach: Connect Advertising to Everything
We’ve delved into granular tactics, but it’s crucial to zoom out and look at the bigger picture. A recurring theme in expert advice is holism – treating Amazon advertising as one piece of an interconnected puzzle. For vendors, this is especially important. Here’s why a holistic mindset drives success:
- Advertising ≠ Silo: Don’t silo your ad team from your vendor account management. Everything from supply chain to pricing to customer reviews influences ad performance. The best vendors have their advertising strategy tightly integrated with inventory planning, finance, and account management. For example, if your logistics team informs you that a certain ASIN might go out of stock or face delays, you can proactively dial down ads as discussed. Or, if your finance team plans a cost renegotiation with Amazon or expects a funding attrition (like an increase in co-op fees), you factor that into your ad ROI calculations.
 - Monitor Key Business Metrics: Beyond the ad metrics, keep an eye on overall vendor health metrics. These include in-stock rates, purchase order lead times, chargebacks or stockouts, and even the retail metrics like Amazon’s realised margin on your line. They provide context to your advertising. For instance, if Amazon is barely breaking even on your product (their system might signal that via requests for funding or reducing orders), it’s a sign that pushing too hard on ads could backfire, since Amazon might suppress your item if it’s not profitable for them. A holistic view means understanding Amazon’s incentives too – aim for a win-win where your ads drive sales and Amazon is happy with the profitability.
 - Competitive Landscape: Your success is relative to competitors. As a vendor, sometimes decisions need to be made at the account level, not just per product. If a new competitor floods the market with similar products, you might need a holistic response – perhaps shifting advertising focus to defend your hero products, improving content, and collaborating with Amazon on pricing or promotions to stay competitive. Advertising alone can’t fix a big competitive gap (like if your price is much higher or your reviews are worse), so address those elements in tandem. Successful vendors use ads to amplify a strong product offering, and they also work on product-market fit, pricing strategy, and review generation continuously.
 - Cross-Channel Effects: Remember, Amazon doesn’t exist in isolation. Your efforts on other channels (D2C site, other retailers, social media) can impact Amazon sales and vice versa. A holistic strategy coordinates campaigns across channels. For example, if you know a huge TV or online media campaign is dropping for your brand, be prepared on Amazon with sponsored ads to catch the wave of interest (people will search your brand on Amazon after seeing an ad elsewhere). Similarly, if Amazon sales are spiking due to an ad campaign, ensure your production can meet increased POs – otherwise, stockouts could squander the momentum.
 
In Cagan’s parting words, “Don’t treat advertising as an isolated module. In the vendor business, everything is connected.”
The vendors who succeed are those who align their advertising goals with overall business objectives and who are nimble in adjusting one lever when another changes. They track upstream and downstream metrics: from traffic (ad clicks) all the way to sell-in (orders Amazon places) and even consumer feedback. By doing so, they can diagnose issues (e.g., lots of ad clicks but Amazon hasn’t reordered – is there a retail margin issue? A hidden suppressor like a safety compliance hold?) and capitalise on strengths (e.g., an ad-driven sales spike that signals strong demand – maybe negotiate a larger Amazon order or introduce new variations).
In essence, think like a general manager of your Amazon business, not just an advertiser. Use the advanced tactics as tools in a toolbox, but always know which tool to use when by seeing the whole board. This holistic, interconnected approach will ensure that your ROI maximisation efforts are sustainable and grounded in business reality, not just ad vanity metrics.
Conclusion and Next Steps
Advanced advertising tactics can significantly boost ROI for Amazon vendors, but the real magic lies in combining those tactics with strategic planning and a holistic view of your business. From managing Amazon-controlled variables like price and delivery times, to seizing opportunities in both fledgling and mature markets, to calculating true performance with vendor-specific metrics – it’s clear that successful vendors leave no stone unturned. They proactively adjust to challenges, launch offensives against competitors, leverage every tool Amazon provides, and plan for every scenario.
If you’re ready to elevate your Amazon vendor advertising to a true thought leadership level, start implementing the strategies outlined above. Develop your playbooks, invest in analytics, and most importantly, keep learning and iterating. The Amazon marketplace is ever-evolving, and staying ahead means continuously refining your approach with the latest insights and data.
If you found these insights useful, consider subscribing to our blog or the Marketplace Masters podcast for more expert discussions.
Finally, if you’re looking to streamline your marketplace analytics and turn data into actionable strategies, reach out to us at MerchantSpring. Our platform is designed to give Amazon vendors and agencies a sharper insight into metrics and performance, so you can make informed decisions and stay ahead of the competition. Contact us for a demo or consultation – let’s maximise your Amazon vendor ROI together.
          
        
            
              
    
    
    
    
    
      
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
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