Mastering Amazon Brand Licensing: Strategies for Growth

Overview

Amazon’s marketplace has evolved into a pivotal channel for brand licensing, offering tremendous growth potential – if you know how to navigate it. Licensing on Amazon can drive massive value for both license owners (licensors) and the sellers of licensed products (licensees). Yet the art of Amazon licensing is often misunderstood. Many brands and agencies struggle with questions like: How do we protect brand equity on Amazon? What’s the best way to set up an Amazon Brand Store for licensed IP? How should licensees optimise product listings and link them to the main brand presence?

In this article, Trisha Hubbard, Founder and Joshua Fulmer, Executive Creative Director at Lunge Marketing, distill insights from their recent expert webinar on Marketplace Masters into actionable strategies for Amazon agency professionals. You’ll learn how to leverage Amazon Brand Registry, storefronts, and coordinated advertising to build an authentic, high-converting brand experience for licensed products. Whether you manage entertainment IPs, consumer goods, or apparel brands, these best practices will help you master Amazon brand licensing and drive growth.

Why Licensing Is a Powerful Growth Lever on Amazon

Amazon’s crackdown on counterfeits and improved brand protection has made it a fertile ground for officially licensed products. In the past, unauthorised sellers could too easily list fake “Disney” hats or “Warner Bros” merchandise. Today, Amazon Brand Registry – especially since its overhaul around 2020 – acts as a gatekeeper against such counterfeits. Brand Registry allows IP owners to “gate” their brands, meaning only authorised sellers can list those products. This dramatically boosts consumer trust that they’re buying authentic licensed products, whether it’s a Cuisinart kitchen gadget with a Marvel character or a genuine Batman™ t-shirt.

“Brand Registry became the authority on Amazon, cleaning out counterfeit and fraudulent products. Now consumers know they are getting truly authentic licensed goods,” says Trisha Hubbard, Founder of Lunge Marketing Group.

Amazon’s efforts – including programs like Transparency for product serialisation – have empowered brands and licensees to deliver official merchandise while kicking copycats off the platform. In short, licensing is a growth lever because Amazon finally gives brand owners the tools to protect their IP and brand equity at scale. Brands can confidently expand their presence, and licensees can capitalise on fan demand, knowing they won’t be undercut by knock-offs.

From an Amazon agency perspective, this shift means the brand licensing strategy should be front and centre. If you’re advising a brand that owns valuable IP (or an Amazon Vendor managing licensed brands), enrolling in Brand Registry is step one. It’s the gateway to everything: brand gating, Amazon Brand Store creation, A+ Content, Sponsored Brands ads, and powerful anti-counterfeit tools. We’ll explore each of these in the context of licensing. But the big picture is clear – when done right, Amazon brand licensing can unlock new revenue streams, reinforce brand loyalty, and enhance the customer experience, all while keeping the brand’s reputation safe.

Building Brand Control with Amazon Stores and Registry (For Licensors)

For license owners (the brand/IP holders), success on Amazon starts with establishing a controlled brand presence. Your goal is to be the authoritative source of information and shopping for your brand’s products on Amazon, even if you don’t sell directly. Here are the key steps and best practices for licensors:

  • Enroll in Amazon Brand Registry: This is non-negotiable. Brand Registry not only protects your intellectual property but also links your brand to a Brand Store and unlocks marketing tools. To enroll, you’ll need a registered trademark (or at least a pending trademark application) for your brand name. Amazon will verify your ownership or authorisation of the trademark before granting access. If you’re a license holder but not the manufacturer, you may need to provide Amazon an authorisation letter confirming your relationship with the brand. Once approved, you can create an Amazon Brand Store and gain the power to kick off infringers via Amazon’s IP enforcement tools.

  • Create and Optimise a Branded Amazon Store: An Amazon Brand Store is essentially a multipage mini-website for your brand on Amazon. It’s exclusive real estate with no competitor ads or distractions – just your content. 

    “Those brand stores are front and centre because no one can compete with the advertising there. It's just your product and your brand,” notes Joshua Fulmer, Executive Creative Director at Lunge Marketing

    Use this to your advantage. Build out a compelling store that showcases your brand’s story, categories, and products. High-quality design consistent with your brand’s style guide is crucial. Keep the branding consistent – logos, imagery, and tone should mirror your official website and style guidelines. A well-optimised store not only impresses consumers but also lifts performance metrics. In fact, Amazon stores and related content can significantly improve click-through and conversion rates. They also encourage basket-building; a store makes it easy for fans to discover related merchandise. (One Amazon agency even noted that Brand Stores can upsell shoppers into multiple licensed products in one session)

  • Act as the Hub for Licensees: As a licensor, think of your Brand Store as the central hub that connects shoppers to all official products, even those sold by various licensees. Amazon only allows one store per brand, so you’ll be curating a collective storefront. Work with your licensees to get their products represented on your store. This usually involves coordinating with them to obtain product listings (ASINs) and adding those ASINs to your store pages via the Amazon Advertising console. A clear internal process or “workflow” is needed: ensure every time a licensee launches a new product, there’s a checkpoint to have it linked to the Brand Store. This gives customers a seamless shopping experience – they can click your brand name and see all the official merchandise in one place, rather than scattered results.

  • Leverage Brand Registry Tools for Brand Protection: Amazon offers a suite of brand protection tools for registered brands, and these are especially vital in licensing scenarios. Use Project Zero and Report a Violation to quickly take down any counterfeit or unauthorised listings that slip through. Enroll in the Amazon Transparency Program to serialise products with unique codes – this prevents unverified units from being sold, as only items with your issued codes can be listed. 

    “Transparency is a great stopgap to prevent unauthorised third-party sellers coming onto your detail page,” Trisha Hubbard emphasises. 

    Also, consider setting up Amazon brand gating by working with Amazon’s internal teams or legal avenues. Brand gating restricts the sale of your branded products to only pre-approved sellers. Combined with transparency, it’s a one-two punch against grey-market sellers and helps maintain your authorised sellers on the Amazon list.

In short, brand owners should seize the initiative to control their Amazon presence. By registering your brand, building an optimised store, and policing your IP, you create a win-win environment. Licensees benefit from a well-managed brand umbrella that drives traffic and instills consumer trust, and you protect your franchise’s reputation while potentially earning royalties on every sale.

Best Practices for Licensees: High-Converting Product Pages and Brand Alignment

If you’re an Amazon seller carrying licensed products (the licensee side of the equation), your success is tightly interwoven with the brand owner’s strategy. You have the rights to sell a popular brand – now you need to execute expertly on Amazon so that your products shine and customers convert. Here are key best practices for licensees to optimise listings and align with the licensor’s brand presence:

  • Use the Correct Brand Name on Listings: It may sound obvious, but ensure the “Brand” field on your Amazon product detail page exactly matches the official brand name enrolled in Brand Registry. This is how your listings automatically link to the Brand Store via the clickable byline under the product title. Using your own company name in the brand field (instead of the licensed brand) is a common rookie mistake – it will isolate your product from the main brand store and confuse shoppers. Always list under the licensor’s brand name (with their permission). This way, when customers click the brand name on your listing, they go straight to the official Brand Store rather than a dead-end or random search results. The data shows this approach pays off: products properly linked to a robust brand store tend to see higher conversion rates and buyer trust, since shoppers can explore the full range of related merchandise.

  • Adhere to Brand Style Guides in Content: 

    “If a licensee’s design doesn’t adhere to the brand’s style guide, it breaks consumer trust – and the licensor’s trust,” warns Joshua Fulmer. 

    Consistency is king for licensed products. Make sure you’ve obtained the licensor’s latest brand style guide (for imagery, logos, colours, fonts, tone of voice, etc.) and apply it religiously to your Amazon content. This means your product titles, descriptions, A+ Content modules, and images should feel like they belong to the brand’s universe. For example, if you sell a superhero-themed kitchenware line under a Marvel license, use approved character images, follow any phrasing guidelines, and maintain the brand’s tone. Not only does this keep the licensor happy (they might pull your license if you go rogue), but it also reassures customers. Shoppers can tell when a product listing looks “off-brand,” which can raise red flags about authenticity. Conversely, a polished listing that matches the brand identity boosts confidence and conversion.

  • Optimise Product Pages for Conversion: Beyond branding, remember the fundamentals of Amazon listing optimisation. Use high-quality product images (and plenty of them, including lifestyle and infographic shots). Craft benefit-driven bullet points that highlight both the product features and the licensed brand appeal (“Featuring the official Hogwarts crest – a must-have for Harry Potter fans,” for instance). Leverage A+ Content to tell a story and compare your other offerings.

  • For licensed products, A+ Content is prime real estate to explain the authenticity (perhaps a section about the brand or the collection) and to cross-promote related items. Ensure that your SEO keywords include relevant brand and franchise keywords (within Amazon’s rules – avoid forbidden keyword stuffing, but make sure fans searching the brand or character will find your item). High conversion not only drives sales directly but also signals Amazon’s algorithm to rank your product higher for relevant searches.

  • Coordinate with the Licensor’s Storefront: Ideally, establish a relationship with the brand owner or their Amazon agency (in many cases, agencies like Lunge Marketing manage the brand’s presence). They can feature your products on the Brand Store, which is a huge opportunity for visibility. Being included in the official store’s product galleries or category pages can funnel eager fans to your listing. Proactively share your new ASINs, product launch dates, and marketing plans with the licensor. They might have a launch calendar or promotion tied to the IP (e.g. a movie release or anniversary) that you can piggyback on. 

    On Amazon, they can create a dedicated section for your product line or include your items in the main brand catalogue on the store. If something isn’t linking correctly (e.g., you listed under the correct brand name but the byline linkage failed), work with the licensor to file a Brand Registry support ticket to fix the brand store linking. Amazon’s system sometimes needs a nudge to associate a new ASIN with the brand’s catalogue; a request from the brand side can often resolve this quickly. Remember, you paid for the license – make sure you reap the benefits of the brand’s traffic!

  • Mind the Basics – Trademarks and Approvals: Surprisingly, some smaller licensees skip basic steps like securing their own trademark (for their sub-brand or company) or getting the proper Amazon category approvals. Don’t overlook these. Trisha Hubbard notes that a common pitfall for new brands (licensed or not) is failing to have a registered trademark, which blocks you from Brand Registry and listing optimally. Before you even list your first product, ensure the licensor has provided a licensing agreement letter or FAMA (Factory Authorisation) if required, and have those documents handy in case Amazon asks for proof of authorisation. Also, check if the product falls under any restricted categories on Amazon – you might need ungating approval or to submit compliance certificates (common in toys, electronics, beauty, etc.). Getting all this sorted up front will save you costly downtime later.

By following these best practices, licensees can maximise sales of licensed products on Amazon while staying in the good graces of both Amazon and the licensor. The bottom line: treat the brand as if it were your own. Align your content and conduct with the brand’s standards. In return, you’ll likely enjoy increased support, better exposure, and stronger sales. As Trisha puts it,

“It brings a lot more traffic to your products if you’re in their store as opposed to just your own store under your manufacturing name.”

n the next section, we’ll delve into driving traffic to these listings and stores – which requires a smart Amazon advertising strategy and teamwork between licensors and licensees.

Driving Traffic and Protecting Brand Equity with Advertising

Getting your Amazon listings and Brand Store set up is half the battle – now you need to drive shoppers there. This is where Amazon advertising comes in. Licensors and licensees each have a role to play, and a coordinated approach is essential to maximise results without stepping on each other’s toes. Additionally, the way you advertise can either enhance or erode your brand equity on Amazon, so it’s important to advertise strategically.

Sponsored Brands & Store Spotlight (Licensor’s Role): As the brand owner, you’ll typically be the one running Sponsored Brands ads that feature the Brand Store. Sponsored Brands (formerly Headline Search Ads) appear at the top of search results and can showcase the brand logo, a tagline, and a few products. You can use these to direct traffic to your Brand Store homepage or sub-pages. It makes sense for licensors to fund and control these campaigns because they benefit the entire brand ecosystem (all licensees on the store) and ensure brand-consistent messaging.

For example, if Warner Bros. is the licensor, they might run a Sponsored Brands campaign for “Batman Merchandise” that leads to the official Batman brand store on Amazon, rather than to any single product. This protects brand equity by controlling the shopper’s first impression – customers see a polished, brand-sanctioned page rather than a mishmash of products from various sellers. It also blocks competitors from stealing that top-of-search spotlight. Licensors should coordinate with their licensees to feature key products in these ads (for instance, highlight a new product from a licensee that ties into a movie launch). Keep the visuals and copy on-brand, and use these ads to tell the brand story while capturing broad traffic (e.g. fans searching the brand or characters).

Sponsored Products & Deals (Licensee’s Role): Licensees, on the other hand, usually focus ad spend on Sponsored Products (and Sponsored Brands Video ads, if available) that drive directly to their product detail pages. Your goal is to win your specific product’s relevant searches and category placements. Since you reap the direct sales, you’ll want to invest here. But coordinate with the licensor on keywords and budgeting to avoid redundancy.

For example, if the licensor is already bidding on the broad brand name keywords to push the store, you as a licensee, might focus on specific product names, long-tail keywords, or category terms (plus your brand name for defense). Ensure your ad creatives (especially for Sponsored Brand Video or any display ads) meet the brand’s guidelines. If the licensor sees your ad with an off-brand look or messaging, expect a call asking to fix it – and rightly so, because a rogue ad can dilute the brand image. It’s all about complementary strategy: the brand owner drives brand awareness and discovery through store-centric campaigns, while licensees capture purchase intent on individual items.

Omnichannel and Timing: In many big licensing pushes, there might be external marketing (social media, PR, influencer campaigns, etc.) that create a surge of interest on Amazon. Coordination on timing is key. If a new movie release is impending and several licensees are launching products, a licensor might coordinate a cross-brand Amazon campaign (“Discover [Franchise] Collection on Amazon”) while each licensee ramps up their own ads for their products.

Communication ensures that, say, a licensee doesn’t waste ad spend bidding on the brand name if the brand owner is covering that broadly. Instead, they can allocate budget to product display ads or Amazon DSP if appropriate, to retarget interested shoppers off Amazon and bring them to the listings. When both parties share data (like which ads drive the most sales, or which search terms are trending), they can refine the strategy to boost the overall brand sales, not just individual silos.

Protecting Brand Equity in Ads: Another aspect both sides must watch is defensive advertising – protecting the brand from competitors. Licensors should consider running Sponsored Brands campaigns on their own brand keywords (so that when someone searches your brand, they see your official store or products, not just resellers or knockoffs). Licensees should similarly bid on their product-specific terms and even on the brand name in Sponsored Products (if allowed), to block others from capturing that traffic. It’s common courtesy to discuss this: some brands might prefer licensees not bid on the core brand term (to centralise traffic through the store ad), while others are fine with it as long as you’re an authorised seller.

The overarching goal is to preserve the brand’s value. Avoid any advertising tactic that could cheapen the brand – for example, don’t run a misleading ad that promises a huge discount if that contradicts the brand’s premium image. Also, maintain MAP (Minimum Advertised Price) if the licensor has one; a licensee running constant undercutting promotions or 70% off sales on a premium brand’s products can hurt the brand equity. Licensors should monitor pricing and perhaps use Amazon’s Pricing Dashboard or third-party tools to ensure compliance. In short, advertise to amplify the brand, not to cannibalise it.

By orchestrating advertising efforts, licensors and licensees can significantly increase traffic while keeping brand integrity intact. One real-world example: a major entertainment studio coordinated a product launch with multiple licensees on Amazon, achieving a surge in sales by aligning ads on Amazon Search, Amazon DSP, TikTok, and beyond – all pointing back to the Amazon Brand Store and product pages at launch time. The key was planning ahead (with shared calendars and creative assets) and having a clear split of responsibilities. As Joshua Fulmer advises,

“Figure out your workflow and who owns what. Everyone should be driving to the brand store where appropriate, filtering ASINs to the right owners, and adhering to checkpoints for launches.”

With a unified front, your brand’s Amazon presence can dominate search results and delight customers, all while each stakeholder gets their piece of the pie.

Collaboration and Coordination: Licensor–Licensee Partnerships in Action

Throughout the above sections, one theme has been implicit: communication between the brand owner and the licensee (or among multiple licensees) is crucial. Let’s spotlight this explicitly. No matter how big or small the brands you manage, treating the licensor-licensee relationship as a partnership will yield far better results on Amazon. Here are some tips to improve coordination:

  • Set Up Regular Touchpoints: If you’re a licensor with many licensees, consider a quarterly (or even monthly during big seasons) call or email round-up with all licensees selling on Amazon. Share updates from Amazon (policy changes, new ad features, upcoming shopping events like Prime Day), and let licensees share their product launch timelines or challenges. This forum can surface issues like unauthorised sellers, MAP violators, or content discrepancies early, so you can address them together. Licensees benefit by gaining insights from each other and from the brand’s broader strategy, rather than operating in isolation.

  • Establish a Clear Escalation Path: Sometimes a licensee will face an Amazon issue they can’t solve alone – e.g. a hijacker on their listing that Amazon support isn’t handling, or a byline link that remains broken. Licensors often have dedicated Amazon account managers or higher-tier support as vendors. Make it known to licensees that if they hit a wall, they can funnel the issue to you for escalation. Trisha Hubbard recounts instances where their team, on behalf of Warner Bros as the licensor, leveraged Amazon vendor managers to remove persistent unauthorised sellers when regular seller support tickets went nowhere.

    “Having a close relationship with the brand owner means they can go after violators on your behalf if you’re not making headway with Amazon,” 

    She says. This backstop can be a lifesaver for a licensee. Conversely, licensees should immediately inform the licensor if they notice serious infractions like counterfeit versions of the licensed products or other sellers violating brand policies. Swift, coordinated action can nip problems in the bud before they damage the brand’s sales or reputation.

  • Coordinate Big Launches and Campaigns: We touched on this in advertising, but it goes beyond ads. If multiple licensees are launching products around the same event (say, a new film or game release), the licensor should play air-traffic controller. Who’s releasing which products when? Will there be an Amazon Live event, a social media push, or an Amazon homepage takeover? Make sure the Amazon Brand Store is updated in time with a special banner or section for the event. 

    Licensees might share costs on an Amazon Demand-Side-Platform campaign or a promotional video. By planning jointly, you avoid duplication and ensure a consistent brand message. The result can be a tidal wave of unified visibility that helps everyone. Josh Fulmer shared a success story of a coordinated launch with a major movie IP: multiple licensees, one cohesive Amazon activation – and backup plans in place for any hiccups. The preparation paid off in a seamless customer experience and a sales spike across the board.

  • Share Data and Celebrate Wins: Amazon provides a lot of data (Brand Analytics, Search Query Performance, etc.) that can be very telling for brand performance. Licensors, consider aggregating some high-level data and sharing it with licensees to motivate them and guide efforts. For example, “Brand Store saw 50,000 visitors last quarter with a 15% increase in click-through – our collective marketing is working.” Or “Our top search term is ‘[Brand] hoodie’ but we have no licensed hoodies – maybe an opportunity for next season?” 

    Licensees can likewise share insights: perhaps one seller found that video ads led to a big conversion bump, or another saw a surge in Europe that suggests expanding marketplaces. Exchange of these insights fosters a team mentality. After all, success on Amazon for each product ultimately feeds the overall brand success and likely the royalty calculations. Celebrating milestones (e.g., “We hit $1M in shipped units this year across all licensees – congrats team!”) can reinforce the value of working together and encourage continued collaboration.

In summary, an open line of communication and a spirit of partnership are as important as any technical Amazon tactic. Licensors who support their licensees and licensees who respect and involve the brand owner will together create a much stronger Amazon presence. This collaboration is the secret sauce that turns a collection of individual sellers into a unified brand force on the marketplace.

Common Pitfalls in Amazon Licensing (and How to Avoid Them)

Even savvy brands and sellers can stumble when it comes to licensed products on Amazon. Here are some common pitfalls and how to sidestep them:

  • Skipping Trademark and Amazon Authorisation Steps: As mentioned, a surprising number of small brands rush to list products (even licensed ones) without securing their trademark or enrolling in Brand Registry. This is a non-starter. If you’re a licensee, make sure the brand is trademarked and you are authorised under that trademark on Amazon. That might mean the licensor adds you as an authorised user in their Brand Registry account, or you apply and submit a license certificate. Without this, you might find your listings suppressed or hijacked. Solution: Do not pass Go until trademarks and Amazon brand permissions are confirmed. It can take a few weeks to months to get a trademark – plan accordingly, even before product manufacturing if possible.

  • Inconsistent or Low-Quality Listings: Some licensees assume the big brand name will do the selling, so they put minimal effort into the Amazon listing content. This results in poor images, skimpy descriptions, and even wrong categorisations. Not only does this hurt conversion, it can reflect badly on the brand (from a customer’s perspective, it’s the brand putting out subpar info). Solution: Treat each product detail page as a flagship store display. Use all the content enhancements available through Brand Registry (A+ Content, brand story, etc.). Have the licensor review the listing if they’re willing – they may catch off-brand phrasing or errors. And ensure things like packaging shots clearly show authenticity (official logos, license info) to reassure buyers.

  • Not Linking Products to the Brand Store: This bears repeating – a pitfall is when licensees create separate generic storefronts or leave their products orphaned. If a licensee lists the brand name incorrectly or doesn’t coordinate, their products won’t show up in the main Brand Store. That’s a huge missed opportunity and fragments the brand presence. Solution: Double-check the brand attribution on every ASIN and run periodic audits. Simply search the brand name on Amazon and see if your product appears and links properly. If not, take action (update brand field via a listing flat file or open a support case). Liaise with the brand owner to get any stragglers added to the Brand Store manually. Remember the advice from Amazon’s forums: one brand gets one store, and if you want your ASIN there, the brand must add it, or the system must recognise the brand name match.

  • Price and Channel Conflicts (MAP Violations): If you, as a licensee, get overzealous with pricing (like constantly undercutting MSRP on Amazon to win sales), you might face pushback from the brand owner, especially if they have MAP agreements with other retailers. Or worse, it can trigger a race to the bottom with other sellers. Solution: Align on a pricing strategy. Many licensors outline pricing policies in the licensing agreement – stick to them. If you need to run a sale, consider coordinating with the brand if it’s significant, and ensure it doesn’t breach any terms. It’s better to compete on content and service than on price for licensed goods, since the product is not exclusive to you. Use Amazon’s Minimum Advertised Price tools if available, and the licensor should monitor for violators (they can often get Amazon to enforce pricing parity if someone is really rogue).

  • Ignoring Unauthorised Sellers and Product Variations: A tricky pitfall is when an unauthorised seller lists a similar or even a legitimate product on your detail page (if you sell via Seller Central and someone else jumps on the listing) or sells a different version not approved by the brand. If licensees ignore this, it can steal the Buy Box or hurt ratings (if the seller’s stock is old or low quality). Solution: Both licensors and licensees should stay vigilant. If you see another seller on your ASIN and you suspect they’re not authorised, alert the licensor. 

    The licensor can use Amazon’s infringement reporting to assert that the seller is not authorised to use the IP, which can sometimes get the listing removed or the seller blocked. Also, consider Amazon’s Transparency codes as mentioned – with transparency, even if someone lists against your ASIN, their units won’t ship unless they have the valid codes, effectively blocking them. Proactively secure your listings by being the first to create them correctly, and enroll in Brand Registry programs that lock down contributions from others (like Listing Attribute Control, which Amazon offers to some brands).

Avoiding these pitfalls comes down to diligence and partnership. By checking all the legal boxes, maintaining quality standards, linking everything properly, and policing the marketplace, you significantly reduce the chance of unpleasant surprises. When in doubt, ask – tap into Amazon’s forums, your network of other Amazon sellers, or the licensor’s resources. It’s easier to prevent a fire on Amazon than to put one out.

Measuring Success and Adapting Your Amazon Licensing Strategy

How do you know if your licensing efforts on Amazon are paying off? Both licensors and licensees need to track performance metrics that tie back to their goals:

For license owners (licensors), a primary metric is often total shipped units and sales revenue of the licensed products on Amazon. This gives a concrete measure of consumer demand. Trisha Hubbard advises brand owners to monitor the sell-through to customers rather than just the orders from licensees or distributors. If an officially licensed product isn’t actually moving on Amazon, that license might need re-evaluation. Licensors should also watch brand-level metrics available through Brand Analytics: overall conversion rate of the Brand Store, total traffic to the store, and search share for the brand keywords. An increasing Brand Store conversion rate, for example, might indicate that content improvements or store updates are effective in closing sales. A rise in brand search volume on Amazon could reflect successful off-Amazon marketing, driving people to find the brand.

For licensees, success is more granular – you’ll track your product’s conversion rate, sessions, sales, and advertising ROI. But also pay attention to metrics like the percentage of your sales coming via the Brand Store (you can see referrer tags for store traffic if you use Amazon Attribution or tagging on store links). If being on the brand’s storefront is yielding a lot of sales, that’s a sign your collaboration is working – and also a reminder to keep your products in stock and your listings fresh, because they’re in a high-visibility spot. Advertising performance metrics are key too: ACOS (Advertising Cost of Sale) for your campaigns, click-through rates on your Sponsored Product ads, etc. Share these with the licensor if appropriate, especially if you need to discuss shifting strategies (for instance, “Sponsored Brands video isn’t working well, can we collaborate on a better creative?”).

Another crucial aspect is qualitative feedback. Look at your product reviews and Q&A: are customers mentioning authenticity, quality, or confusion? A spike in comments like “I got a fake” could indicate an unauthorised seller issue – time to investigate. Or questions like “Is this the official brand?” might mean you need to highlight authenticity more in your listing content. These soft signals can be just as important as hard numbers in refining your approach.

It’s also wise to periodically revisit your keyword strategy and SEO performance for the licensed products. Use tools or Amazon’s Search Query Performance to see what keywords you’re winning. Ensure you’ve incorporated all relevant trending keywords (like those mentioned in this article: Amazon Brand Store optimisation, Amazon brand protection tools, selling licensed products on Amazon, etc.) in your content where appropriate. SEO is not a one-and-done, especially if new competitors or products enter the space.

Finally, consider the bigger picture ROI: If you’re a licensor, compare Amazon sales of licensed goods to other channels (brick-and-mortar or other e-commerce). You might find Amazon growing to a dominant share, which could influence how you negotiate future license deals (perhaps favouring partners who excel on Amazon). If you’re a licensee, track how the Amazon sales perform relative to your overall account forecast. Also, factor in intangible benefits: for example, being featured on the brand’s Amazon Store might not have a direct dollar value, but it likely improved your sales and could even help you secure renewal of the license.

In the end, a successful Amazon licensing program is a moving target – it requires continuous optimisation. The marketplace changes, consumer behaviour shifts, and Amazon will roll out new features (or restrictions). By keeping a close eye on performance data and maintaining agility in your strategy, you can ensure that both the brand owner and licensee thrive in the Amazon ecosystem.

Conclusion: Mastering the Art of Amazon Licensing

Licensing on Amazon is indeed an art – it blends brand management, e-commerce know-how, and collaborative execution. But as we’ve outlined, when license owners and licensees work in harmony, the results can be game-changing. You can achieve a unified brand presence that delights customers with authentic products, drive massive traffic through joint advertising efforts, and protect the brand’s reputation while maximising sales. It’s about seeing the Amazon marketplace as a partnership platform rather than a free-for-all. As one expert put it, View Amazon not just as a sales channel but as a brand visibility and data platform… optimising Amazon presence ensures control over brand representation, protects IP and prevents counterfeit activity.

For Amazon agency professionals, the take-home message is to proactively guide both sides of the licensing equation. Educate your clients on the importance of Brand Registry and brand stores, facilitate introductions between brands and sellers, and develop playbooks for synchronised marketing. By doing so, you position yourself as a strategic partner in their success, not just an operational vendor.


Ready to put these insights into action? If you’re a brand owner or licensee looking to elevate your Amazon licensing game, don’t go it alone. Contact us or watch our full webinar on Mastering the Art of Licensing for a deeper dive into these strategies. As Amazon continues to grow and evolve, those who master licensing will have a serious competitive edge. Now is the time to turn these best practices into real results on the world’s largest marketplace.

To learn more from the experts and see real examples of these tactics, be sure to watch the on-demand webinar featuring Trisha Hubbard and Joshua Fulmer. If you have questions or need support with your Amazon licensing strategy, reach out to our team for a consultation. Let’s make your brand the next Marketplace Master!


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