In the dynamic world of Amazon retail, data is the new currency. For Amazon vendors (1P sellers supplying inventory to Amazon), leveraging data isn’t just a nice-to-have – it’s essential for elevating performance and profits. Recent changes in Amazon Vendor Central have unleashed a wealth of analytics that were once out of reach for vendors. Brands and agencies that know how to interpret and act on these insights are outpacing their competitors. This article distills expert insights from a recent webinar on Amazon Vendor analytics – featuring veteran Amazon insiders Carina McLeod and Rob Murray – into practical strategies. We’ll show you how to transform raw Amazon data into actionable tactics that drive sales growth, improve profitability, and sharpen your competitive edge.
Whether you’re an Amazon vendor managing your own account or an agency professional optimising clients’ Vendor Central channels, this deep dive will empower you to make data-driven decisions with confidence. Let’s unlock the power of data to elevate your Amazon vendor performance!
For years, Amazon Vendors operated with a data deficit. Unlike third-party sellers who enjoyed rich analytics and APIs, first-party vendors had to scrape by with only basic reports on sales and traffic. That’s changing. Amazon Vendor Central now offers a more robust set of analytics tools – often mirroring those long available to 3P sellers – giving vendors unprecedented visibility into their business.
Retail Analytics (RA): The core Amazon Retail Analytics reports provide vendors with sales and operations data from the customer perspective (often called “sales-out” data). This includes:
Brand Analytics: If you’re the brand owner, Amazon provides Brand Analytics data, too. This goldmine includes:
Importantly, Amazon has opened up Vendor Central APIs that allow pulling these reports programmatically. This means you can integrate Vendor data into your own dashboards or tools (the same way sellers have done for years). In short, the data playing field is levelling: vendors now have the raw data needed to manage by the numbers. The key is knowing how to wield it.
Not all numbers are created equal. To avoid drowning in spreadsheets, focus on the key performance indicators (KPIs) that truly drive your Amazon vendor business. Here are the metrics the experts say deserve your attention:
Bottom line: keeping your items profit-positive for Amazon is non-negotiable if you want to maintain steady orders.
“Gone are the days of growth at all costs – now Amazon cares intensely about profitability,” says Carina McLeod, who spent 7 years as an Amazon Vendor Manager."
Check your Net PPM report regularly to identify low-margin ASINs. You may need to adjust costs, raise your invoice price, or improve supply chain efficiencies for those items. In some cases, it might make sense to discontinue unprofitable products or re-engineer them to hit margin targets.
By homing in on these metrics – profitability, Buy Box, traffic, conversion, top ASINs, and inventory – you gain a clear view of your account’s health. And when something looks “off” in the data, always ask why and investigate. For example, if an ASIN’s conversion plummets, check if a new competitor entered the scene or if a bad review is scaring off buyers. Data is the diagnostic tool that surfaces issues; it’s up to you to find the root cause and remedy.
Data by itself doesn’t move the needle – actionable insights do. Here are five data-driven strategies to boost Amazon vendor performance, informed by the webinar experts’ experience managing dozens of vendor accounts:
1. Diagnose and Fix Conversion Killers: Use your analytics to pinpoint products with high traffic but low conversion. These are prime turnaround opportunities. For instance, if a product page is getting thousands of sessions but converting only a small fraction, improving the listing content can yield quick wins. Optimise the title with relevant keywords (to ensure shoppers know they found the right item), revamp the main image (it should be clear and attractive), and highlight unique value propositions in the bullet points.
Also, check pricing and reviews: if the item is significantly pricier than similar alternatives or has poor ratings, conversion will suffer. Address pricing strategy or initiate a review generation campaign as needed. On the other hand, identify products with excellent conversion rates but low traffic. Those are your under-discovered gems – consider driving more traffic to them via Amazon Ads or external marketing, since they already resonate well with customers who see them.
2. Optimise Your Product Mix and Assortment: Perform an 80/20 analysis on your catalogue using sales data. If a handful of SKUs dominate sales, ensure you’re doubling down on them – keep them in stock, feature them in marketing campaigns, and perhaps expand their variations (new pack sizes, colours, bundles) to leverage their success. For the remaining products, decide case-by-case how to improve or whether to cull. Some may simply need better content or advertising to find their audience.
Others might be a fundamentally low demand on Amazon. Data-driven pruning of unproductive ASINs can actually improve your overall Vendor performance by allowing you (and Amazon) to focus on winners. It can also improve your Net PPM if those slow sellers were dragging down profitability. As Rob Murray notes, “We could spend a huge amount of time optimising products which make no money – better to identify those early and reconsider them.” Focus your efforts where the data shows the most potential return.
3. Keep a Pulse on Buy Box and Stock Availability: It may sound basic, but an often-overlooked data point is simply whether your products are actively available for purchase on Amazon at all times. Even the best marketing or content is futile if Amazon isn’t actually selling your item due to stockouts or other issues. Incorporate a daily Buy Box and in-stock check into your routine. If an item lost the Buy Box to a third-party seller, investigate why – is Amazon out of inventory, or did Amazon suppress your offer due to a pricing issue or policy violation? If it’s a stock issue, you might need to expedite a shipment or work with your Amazon buyer to increase POs.
If it’s a pricing issue (Amazon marked it as too high relative to other retailers), consider adjusting your list price or creating an Amazon-exclusive pack or SKU that avoids direct price comparisons (more on exclusives below). The data to watch: Buy Box percentage and average retail price (to see if Amazon is price-matching others). By quickly addressing Buy Box gaps and stockouts, you safeguard your sales momentum and ranking. “Sometimes the obvious gets missed – if it’s not buyable, it won’t sell,” Carina quips. A simple report of which ASINs are currently unfulfillable can be worth its weight in gold.
4. Leverage Advertising and Search Data: Amazon’s advertising reports and Brand Analytics search terms can feed valuable insight back into your organic strategy. Identify which search queries drive the most sales for your products and ensure those keywords are woven into your content (title, bullets, backend keywords). Also, review your advertising performance by ASIN: if certain products have a very high Advertising Cost of Sales (ACoS) or low conversion via ads, there might be an issue with the product detail page or the targeting.
Use data to refine your campaigns – pause keywords or ads that aren’t converting, and reallocate budget to top performers that are. Additionally, consider Market Basket Analysis data: if customers often buy your product alongside a certain complementary item, maybe you should target that item’s audience via Sponsored Products or even partner with that brand for cross-promotion. The goal is to use all available data (search trends, advertising results, basket combinations) to make informed marketing choices rather than guessing. This drives more efficient spend and higher ROI on Amazon.
5. Benchmark Against the Market: Don’t view your Amazon analytics in isolation. Contextualise your performance with external market data. For example, if Amazon’s reports show you grew 20% last quarter, that sounds good – but if the overall category on Amazon grew 40%, you underperformed relative to the market. Conversely, a flat sales quarter might be a win if the category was down overall. Track category best seller rankings, competitor pricing and promotions, and even off-Amazon retail trends for your product segment. This broader lens will help set realistic goals and reveal opportunities. Market share data (when available via tools or third-party reports) is incredibly valuable – increasing your share of category spend on Amazon is a strong indicator of outpacing competitors.
Carina McLeod emphasises that vendors should “understand what’s going on in the overall market, not just Amazon, to make sure targets are achievable and aligned with reality.”
If top competitors are growing faster or dominating key search terms, use that intel to adjust your strategy (maybe you need more aggressive marketing, or to develop new products that meet emerging demand). In short, always ask: How am I doing relative to the competition and the market? The data can tell you – if you listen.
Sometimes knowing what not to do is just as important. Here are some common mistakes Amazon vendors make with their data (and how to avoid them):
Two advanced strategies often come up in conversations with Amazon agencies and vendors: creating Amazon-exclusive products and managing pricing across channels. Both are aimed at controlling the data variables to your advantage.
Managing an Amazon Vendor account involves a lot of moving data. From daily inventory updates to weekly sales trends and monthly profitability reports, the information stream can be overwhelming. That’s where automation and analytics tools come in – and why many Amazon agencies rely on them to scale their services.
If you haven’t already, explore the tools Amazon provides: the Vendor Central Dashboard widgets, Email alerts for critical events (like PO confirmations or low inventory), and of course, the API, which allows you to pull data into your own system. But beyond Amazon’s native offerings, third-party SaaS platforms can supercharge your analytics.
For example, MerchantSpring (the sponsor of the Marketplace Masters webinar series) provides an integrated dashboard for agencies and vendors, aggregating Retail Analytics, advertising data, and more into a unified view. Instead of toggling between dozens of Amazon reports, you can see at a glance how a brand’s Amazon business is performing across countries or accounts. This not only saves time but can reveal insights you might miss in siloed spreadsheets.
“The ultimate tool for marketplace analytics for agencies and vendors,” as host Paul Sonneveld describes it, MerchantSpring is designed to automate the heavy lifting of data collection and reporting. Of course, there are other solutions too, and even custom dashboards that many vendors build in-house using Amazon’s API and BI software. The exact tool matters less than the result: freeing yourself from manual number-crunching so you can strategise.
When evaluating tools, look for features like: multi-account aggregation, customizable KPIs (so you can track Net PPM or CRaP SKUs easily), alerting systems for out-of-bound metrics, and robust visualisation that makes it easy to communicate performance to stakeholders. Remember, data is only powerful if it’s accessible and understandable. The right tools ensure you and your team get the right data at the right time, with minimal effort.
In the fast-paced arena of Amazon, success isn’t about who shouts the loudest – it’s about who listens to the data. By now, it should be clear that data-driven decision-making is the differentiator for thriving Amazon vendors. The good news is that you’re no longer flying blind: Amazon Vendor Central’s analytics, when properly utilised, can guide almost every aspect of your strategy, from high-level assortment planning down to the fine details of keyword choices.
The experts agree: those who embrace a culture of measurement, analysis, and continuous optimisation will outpace competitors who rely on intuition or old habits.
As Carina McLeod put it, “Stay curious about your data – always dig deeper and ask why,”
because that’s how you uncover the insights that lead to growth. Rob Murray echoed that sentiment, emphasising that solid data foundations (like profitable products and in-stock items) enable scalable success – you can confidently pour fuel on the fire (through advertising or new product development) knowing the fundamentals are sound.
Now it’s your turn. Will you leverage the power of data to elevate your Amazon vendor performance? Start by applying the strategies outlined above: audit your metrics, fix the weak spots, double down on strengths, and put systems in place to keep your finger on the pulse. Small data-driven improvements, compounded over time, lead to game-changing results on Amazon.
Finally, don’t go it alone. The Amazon vendor community is rich with resources and experts eager to help. If you found these insights useful, consider watching the full webinar recording for a deeper discussion and audience Q&A. And if you’re ready to take your Amazon analytics to the next level, reach out to us at MerchantSpring – we’re here to help Amazon vendors and agencies harness data for profitable growth.
Ready to turn data into your competitive advantage? Watch our on-demand webinar on Amazon Vendor Analytics for an even deeper dive, and subscribe to our Marketplace Masters series for monthly expert insights. If you’re looking for hands-on help or a cutting-edge analytics platform to simplify your life, contact our team today – let’s elevate your Amazon vendor performance together!