Overview
In the fast-moving Amazon marketplace, many agencies and brands obsess over immediate metrics like Advertising Cost of Sales (ACOS) and Total ACOS (TACOS). But a new game-changing metric is emerging as the key to sustainable growth: Customer Lifetime Value (LTV). In an expert webinar episode, Alden Wonnell – CEO of the Amazon agency Adverio – shared how focusing on LTV can transform an Amazon seller’s strategy. This comprehensive guide distills those insights into actionable strategies for Amazon agency professionals. We’ll explore what LTV means for Amazon sellers, why it matters more than ever, and how to increase repeat purchase rates, average order value, and overall customer retention. By the end, you’ll understand why Amazon customer lifetime value is the next big shift in ecommerce strategy and how to leverage it to drive long-term growth.
What Is Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) for Amazon Sellers?
Customer Lifetime Value (LTV, also called CLV or CLTV) measures the total revenue a single customer generates over the entire relationship with your brand. In simple terms, it’s a prediction of how valuable a customer is to your Amazon business beyond just their first purchase. On Amazon, LTV can be calculated with a basic formula:
- LTV = Average Order Value (AOV) × Purchase Frequency per Year × Customer Lifespan (in years).
For example, if a typical customer spends $50 per order, orders twice a year, and remains a customer for 3 years, their LTV would be $50 × 2 × 3 = $300. This means the average customer is worth $300 in revenue to your Amazon store over three years. Understanding this long-term value is crucial for Amazon sellers because it shifts the focus from one-time transactions to customer retention and loyalty.
Why LTV Matters: Knowing your LTV helps answer critical questions: How much should you spend to acquire a new Amazon customer? Which marketing strategies will maximise profit over time? As Alden Wonnell explains,
“LTV really dictates what you should be willing to spend to acquire a new customer – it’s a game-changer for Amazon sellers”.
Brands that understand their LTV can invest confidently in marketing, outbidding competitors for ads, and even justify short-term losses on the first sale, banking on profitable repeat business later. In short, customer lifetime value Amazon metrics give you a long-term lens to balance immediate ACOS targets with future growth.
Why LTV is the Next Big Shift for Amazon Agencies
Amazon agencies traditionally report on metrics like ACOS (ad spend vs. sales) and more recently TACOS (total ad cost of sales, which factors in total revenue). While those metrics are useful, they only capture a snapshot of short-term efficiency. LTV, on the other hand, captures long-term customer value and loyalty, making it arguably a more strategic metric for scaling brands.
Alden Wonnell, who has been in the Amazon space since 2013, notes a pattern: many Amazon-native brands plateau in growth when they continue using the same tactics that got them to seven figures as they try to reach eight figures. The missing piece is often a focus on lifetime customer value. Agencies that educate their clients on LTV are helping them shift from a “single sale” mindset to a “lifetime loyalty” mindset. This is a thought leadership moment for agencies – those who can demonstrate the importance of LTV will stand out in the crowded marketplace. Wonnell’s own agency, Adverio, differentiates itself by being very data and technology-focused, incorporating advanced metrics like LTV into every client strategy.
Good vs. Bad LTV: Naturally, clients ask, “What is a good LTV for my brand?” A “good” LTV is one that significantly exceeds your customer acquisition cost (CAC). In fact, many experts recommend aiming for an LTV-to-CAC ratio above 3:1, meaning a customer’s lifetime value is at least three times the cost to acquire them. At a minimum, LTV should be higher than CAC plus Amazon fees and product costs – otherwise, you’re losing money on each customer. A “bad” LTV is when the math flips: if your LTV is lower than the cost to acquire that customer, you’re in trouble. However, context matters. New brands often start with a low or even negative LTV-to-CAC in the early days as they invest in building a customer base. Over time, though, the goal is to drive LTV higher through repeat purchases and larger basket sizes so that each customer becomes more profitable.
Why Now? Amazon is providing more tools and data around customer behaviour (more on that shortly), signalling that customer loyalty and repeat business are becoming a focal point. Rising advertising costs and competition also make pure ACOS optimisation unsustainable – sellers need to maximise value from each acquired customer. All these factors make LTV the next big shift. As Wonnell mentioned in the webinar,
“I really do think it’s the next big shift... Most brands have been talking ACOS and now TACOS; the next move is to LTV.”
For agencies, this is a chance to lead the conversation and guide clients to smarter long-term strategies.
Key Metrics that Complement LTV on Amazon
When evaluating LTV for an Amazon brand, it’s important to also track a cluster of related metrics. These provide a 360° view of customer value and help identify how to improve LTV. Key metrics include:
- Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC): How much you spend in advertising/marketing to acquire a new customer. LTV only becomes meaningful in the context of CAC – a high LTV is great, but if it costs too much to acquire those customers, the business may still suffer. Amazon agencies should calculate CAC for campaigns (using Amazon Advertising data or external traffic costs) and compare it to LTV. For instance, if your average CAC on Amazon is $20 and your LTV is $50, your LTV:CAC ratio is 2.5, which might be okay but could be better. Many businesses strive for a 3:1 LTV to CAC ratio or higher for healthy growth.
- Average Order Value (AOV): The average dollar amount a customer spends per order. This metric directly feeds into LTV. Increasing AOV on Amazon is one of the quickest ways to boost LTV. Strategies to do this include offering product bundles or multi-packs, cross-selling related products, and using Amazon’s “Frequently Bought Together” or “Customers also bought” suggestions to encourage larger carts. For example, a brand selling coffee makers might upsell filters or offer a coffee bean bundle, raising the AOV of each purchase. Wonnell emphasised that well-merchandised brands naturally see AOV grow:
“If you can get your average order value to increase – via multi-packs, accessories, etc. – your LTV will go up.”
- Repeat Purchase Rate: This is the percentage of customers who make more than one purchase over a given period (monthly, quarterly, yearly). On Amazon, repeat purchase rate is a critical indicator of loyalty. A higher repeat rate means customers are coming back, which boosts LTV. Many consumables and replenishable product brands track this closely. For example, a supplements brand might see a 50–60% repeat purchase rate thanks to Amazon’s Subscribe & Save program driving regular reorders. If half of your customers buy again, that effectively increases the realised LTV by the amount of those repeat orders. Amazon’s Brand Analytics now provides a Repeat Purchase Behaviour report, which shows what percentage of orders in the last 12 months are from repeat buyers – a handy baseline to estimate LTV. As Wonnell noted,
“There are three ways to increase LTV: increase AOV, increase purchase frequency, or extend the customer lifespan. Any strategy that gets customers buying more often will raise LTV.”
- Profit Margins: Don’t forget to factor in profit. LTV is often discussed in revenue terms (total revenue per customer), but savvy agencies will also calculate a net LTV – taking out Amazon fees (referral fees, FBA fees), product cost of goods, and advertising spend. This gives a true picture of how profitable a lifetime customer is. For instance, if a customer’s LTV is $100 in sales, but after fees, costs, and marketing, you only net $20 profit, your strategies will differ versus a scenario where you net $50 profit. Ensure you look at LTV after all costs when making decisions on budget and bids.
By monitoring AOV, repeat rates, CAC, and margins alongside LTV, Amazon sellers get a holistic view of customer value. These metrics help pinpoint levers to pull – whether that’s tweaking pricing, running loyalty promotions, or improving product offerings – to maximise the long-term value of each customer.
LTV in Different Amazon Categories: Not Just for Consumables
One common question is whether LTV is relevant for all product categories. After all, if you sell mattresses or industrial equipment, customers might only buy once. While it’s true that consumable categories (e.g. groceries, supplements, beauty) naturally lend themselves to higher lifetime value through repeat purchases, almost every category has some opportunity to increase customer value:
- Consumables & Supplements: These categories typically have high repeat purchase rates. Amazon Subscribe & Save plays a big role here, making it easy for customers to schedule repeat deliveries. If you manage a supplements brand and see a 50% repeat rate quarterly, that’s a huge LTV driver. Make sure you encourage subscriptions and perhaps offer small incentives for repeat buyers (like a discount on the 3rd purchase via a loyalty coupon).
- Durables & One-Time Purchases: For categories like consumer electronics, tools, or home goods, a customer might not need the exact product again soon. However, you can still increase LTV by cross-selling and upselling. For example, someone buying a power drill might come back for drill bits, tool kits, or other accessories. Or a customer who bought a sofa might later buy matching home décor from the same brand.
Alden Wonnell shared an example: a brand selling oil pumps for tractors assumed it was a one-and-done purchase, but found that those customers later bought related accessories and parts. Amazon’s “Customers also bought” and product recommendations are your friends here – leverage them to showcase complementary items. Additionally, consider launching product lines that naturally go together to encourage repeat brand purchases, even if the exact same item isn’t bought twice.
- Seasonal & Big Ticket Items: If your product is truly a very infrequent purchase (say, a high-end appliance), LTV gains might come from referrals or brand trust translating into sales of other products. Also, ensure a great customer experience – even a one-time buyer can become a valuable reviewer or word-of-mouth advocate, indirectly contributing to lifetime value.
The bottom line: LTV is relevant to all Amazon sellers, but how you improve it will vary. Consumables focus on reorders and subscriptions; non-consumables focus on increasing basket size and multiple product ownership. Don’t write off LTV just because you think you sell a “one-time” product. Think creatively about how to keep customers engaged with your brand’s ecosystem.
Educating Clients on LTV: An Agency’s Guide
For agencies serving Amazon brands, introducing LTV into the conversation can be transformative – but it requires education. Many Amazon-native brands have grown up only caring about ACOS (“I spend X on ads to get $Y in sales this month”). LTV asks them to zoom out and consider long-term customer value, which can be a mindset shift.
Start with an Analysis: Wonnell’s agency approach is to perform an LTV analysis during the onboarding phase. Before even finalising a strategy, they calculate the client’s baseline LTV using available data. This involves pulling order reports (which include customer order history by ID) and crunching numbers to see, for example, how many customers from last year bought again this year and how much they spent. Presenting a simple stat like “Your 12-month repeat rate is 30%, and those repeat customers’ average total spend is $120” immediately gets a client’s attention. It quantifies the opportunity – or the problem.
Use Amazon’s Own Data: Highlight Amazon’s new tools that validate the focus on customer value. Amazon Brand Analytics now features a Repeat Purchase Behaviour report and a Customer Loyalty (Lifetime Value) dashboard. As an agency, walk your client through these. Show them the Repeat Purchase Rate metric (what percent of customers are repeat buyers) and how it’s trending. Then show the Customer Loyalty Analytics, which segments customers into groups like “New”, “Active”, “At Risk”, and “Loyalist”, with Amazon’s predictive LTV for each segment. This not only educates the client but builds buy-in; it’s hard for a brand to ignore LTV when Amazon is literally providing a dashboard for it.
“Brands that started off-Amazon typically know their LTV by heart,” Wonnell says, “but brands that grew up on Amazon often don’t track it because Amazon made it difficult to measure.”
By bridging that gap – using Amazon’s data to illuminate LTV – you as an agency become an invaluable strategic partner. You’re not just managing ads; you’re helping them understand their customer base on a deeper level.
Crawl-Walk-Run Approach: Not every client will immediately embrace changes like increasing ad spend based on LTV. In fact, when you first show a positive LTV analysis, the immediate reaction might be, “So you’re telling me I need to spend more on marketing?!” There can be resistance, especially if the brand has been very ROI-focused. Wonnell suggests a gradual approach:
- Crawl: Introduce the concept and show the data. For the first quarter, simply track LTV and report it alongside familiar metrics. This plants the seed without demanding action.
- Walk: Identify a few pilot strategies to test the waters. For instance, if data shows strong repeat purchase behaviour for a product line, propose a slightly higher ad budget on those products, explaining that “even if we break even on the first sale, the repeats will make it profitable.” Or launch a small loyalty promotion (like a brand-tailored promo targeting past customers) and measure the impact.
- Run: Once the client sees some wins – maybe an uptick in repeat sales or a successful upsell campaign – they’ll be more comfortable rolling out LTV-driven strategies broadly. Now you can set more aggressive goals, like increasing subscribe & save sign-ups by X% or raising AOV by bundling.
Throughout this process, communication is key. Provide regular updates on LTV metrics: quarterly LTV reports, cohort analyses, etc. When a client sees LTV improving over time (say from $100 to $130 year-over-year), they’ll start to connect the dots that the strategies are working. Many will become eager to invest more once they trust the metric. As an agency, you transition from being seen as a cost centre (“they manage my ads”) to a strategic partner (“they’re helping grow my customer equity”).
Shaping Strategy with LTV: Practical Impacts
Incorporating LTV into your Amazon strategy isn’t just about number-crunching; it leads to concrete changes in how you operate and allocate resources. Here are some strategic shifts and actionable tactics once LTV becomes your North Star:
- Rethinking Ad Spend and ACOS Targets: Instead of a rigid ACOS target across the board, you might adopt a tiered approach. For products or campaigns aimed at customer acquisition, you can justify a higher ACOS (even one that looks unprofitable on first sale) because you know the LTV will compensate over time. For instance, if a brand insisted on a 10% ACOS cap before, but you’ve shown that the average customer buys four times, you might convince them to accept a 40% ACOS on prospecting campaigns. In practice, this could mean aggressively bidding on top-of-search Sponsored Product placements for your hero product, or running Sponsored Brand Video ads that grab attention – even if the immediate ROI is lower. The goal is to win the customer first, then profit on their future purchases.
- Avoiding Price Wars – Use LTV as Offense: Many Amazon sellers feel pressure to discount heavily or undercut competitors on price to win sales. However, constant discounting erodes margins and brand value. LTV thinking offers an alternative. As Wonnell put it,
“If you don’t want to lose your brand integrity in a price war, spend more to acquire the customer at full price instead.”
In other words, rather than slashing prices by 20% to boost conversion, consider keeping your price and allocating that 20% as additional ad budget targeted at the same audience. You maintain your premium pricing (which supports a quality brand image) and effectively “fund” the customer’s acquisition through ads. Over the customer’s lifetime, this often pays off better than a one-time discount would.
- Inventory Planning and Cash Flow: When you can predict that X% of customers will rebuy in 3 months, it informs your inventory planning. You’re less likely to stock out (missing out on repeat revenue) or overstock. Additionally, knowing LTV can help in forecasting cash flow. For example, if you acquire 1,000 new customers this month, and you know the average repeat rate and AOV, you can project how much additional revenue those customers will bring in over the next quarter. This insight can justify investing more in inventory or even in launching a new product line. It’s a powerful way to convince finance teams or investors that marketing spend has a tangible long-term return.
- Product Strategy – Focus on the Sticky Products: By analysing LTV at the product level, you might discover which products are “gateway” products that lead to repeat purchases. Perhaps customers who buy your protein powder first have a high lifetime value because they come back for protein powder every month and eventually try your other supplements too. That might lead you to promote that protein powder more heavily as the tip of the spear to acquire loyal customers. Conversely, you might find some products have low repeat rates or attract deal-hunters who don’t stick around. In those cases, consider whether it’s worth promoting them, or if you do, ensure you upsell or cross-promote other items to increase their LTV. Some agencies even create cohort analyses: e.g., customers who entered via Product A vs Product B, and see which cohort had higher 12-month value. This can guide where to focus marketing efforts.
- Customer Experience & Follow-up: Maximising LTV isn’t just about marketing – it’s also about customer satisfaction. Happy customers come back. Solicit reviews and feedback from your buyers. Use tools like Amazon’s “Request a Review” and manage your Seller Feedback. If someone has an issue with a product and leaves feedback, address it proactively (refund or replace if needed). These steps build goodwill and can turn a potentially lost customer into a loyal one. While Amazon keeps customer contact info limited, you can still include insert cards or follow-up messages (within Amazon’s communication guidelines) that thank the customer and subtly remind them of your brand’s other offerings or values. Brand building, even on Amazon, contributes to LTV by creating repeat buyers who seek out your name.
In essence, measuring LTV reshapes your Amazon strategy from top to bottom. From advertising tactics and pricing strategy to inventory management and customer service, the lens of lifetime value ensures every decision is made with long-term profitability in mind, not just short-term gains.
Leveraging Amazon’s New Tools for LTV Insights
Until recently, calculating LTV on Amazon felt like detective work – piecing together reports and using third-party software. Now, Amazon has rolled out native tools that make it easier to glean LTV-related insights, especially for Brand Registered sellers. Amazon agencies should take full advantage of these, both for analysis and to demonstrate opportunities to clients.
- Brand Analytics – Repeat Purchase Behaviour: Under Amazon Brand Analytics, the Repeat Purchase Behaviour report provides a quick look at metrics like percentage of repeat customers, total orders, and sales from repeat buyers. If you set the date range to the last 12 months, you might see something like “Repeat Purchase Rate: 25%” meaning a quarter of your customers placed another order within that period. This is a goldmine for rough LTV estimation. For instance, if AOV is $40 and 25% repeat, you could infer an average of $10 additional revenue per customer (since 1 in 4 came back for another $40, that’s $10 spread across all customers). That would suggest a baseline LTV of $50 instead of $40. It’s a simplistic model, but it gives a sense of scale. The report can also break it down by ASIN, revealing which products have the highest loyalty. That can hint at which products drive LTV and should be emphasised.
- Brand Analytics – Customer Loyalty (Lifetime Value) Dashboard: Introduced around late 2023, this Customer Loyalty Analytics dashboard is Amazon’s first direct foray into LTV metrics for sellers. It segments your Amazon customer base into cohorts:
- New (first-time buyers in the period),
- Active (repeat buyers who are still engaging),
- At Risk (haven’t bought again in a while),
- Loyal (frequent repeat buyers).
For each segment, Amazon provides metrics like the total spend this year and a predicted spend next year (this is Amazon’s own “predictive LTV” using something like an RFM model – recency, frequency, monetary value). The dashboard even lets you take action: you can create brand-tailored promotions targeting, say, the “At Risk” group to win them back (perhaps a 10% off coupon for a repeat purchase). While the UI can be a bit confusing, it’s a step in the right direction. Agencies should use this tool to identify segments. For example, if “Loyal” customers have a 3x higher spend than average, that’s a case to reward them – maybe enroll them in a VIP reviewer program or target them with upsell ads via Amazon DSP’s audiences.
Access Tip: Ensure you have the right permissions to see these analytics. The brand owner needs to give users access to Brand Analytics in the Amazon console, and specifically enable the “Customer Analytics” features in user permissions. Once set up, any Amazon brand-registered account can access these tools.
- Market Basket Analysis (Advanced): Another feature in Brand Analytics is Market Basket Analysis. It’s not directly an LTV tool, but it shows which products customers commonly purchase together. This insight can help increase average order value on Amazon by informing your bundle strategies or cross-promotions. For example, if Market Basket shows that customers buying your shampoo often buy a certain conditioner, you might create a value bundle of both or at least run ads for your conditioner on your shampoo’s detail page (via Product Targeting ads). By getting customers to add one more item to their basket, you increase the immediate order size and likely the lifetime spend as well.
- Amazon “New-to-Brand” Metrics: In Amazon Advertising, particularly for Sponsored Brands and Sponsored Display, there are metrics called New-to-Brand orders and sales. This tells you how many purchases in a campaign are from customers who have never bought from your brand before. By comparing this with overall orders, you can indirectly gauge repeat business. If a campaign has, say, 30% new-to-brand orders, it means 70% of sales were from existing customers – a sign of strong loyalty. New-to-Brand metrics combined with repeat purchase data provide a fuller LTV picture. They also let you measure how well your marketing is acquiring truly new customers vs. capturing reorders from current fans.
By mastering these Amazon tools, agencies can quantify LTV with more precision and take targeted actions. More importantly, you can show your clients concrete numbers from Amazon itself. It’s not abstract theory – it’s their own dashboard indicating, for instance, that loyal customers spend 5x more than new ones or that product X has a 40% repeat rate. This data makes the case for investing in LTV strategies practically self-evident.
How to Boost LTV: Tactics to Increase Repeat Sales and AOV
Understanding LTV is half the battle; the other half is actually improving it. Fortunately, there are several proven tactics on Amazon to increase how much customers buy and how often they come back. Here are practical strategies to boost that lifetime value metric:
- Enroll in Subscribe & Save (Where Applicable): If you sell consumable or replenishable products, Amazon’s Subscribe & Save program is your best friend. It allows customers to set up automatic repeat deliveries at a slight discount. Brands have seen dramatic increases in repeat purchase rates thanks to this feature – as mentioned earlier, some supplement brands enjoy over 50% repeat rates largely due to Subscribe & Save. To make the most of it, ensure your Subscribe & Save discount is enticing (but still within margin) – commonly 5-15%. Also, advertise the option on your product detail page (“Save 10% with regular deliveries”). Subscribers tend to stick around unless given a reason to cancel, so it’s a direct path to higher LTV.
- Optimise Your Product Catalogue for Cross-Selling: Think of your product line as an ecosystem. Are you fully leveraging the breadth of your catalogue to encourage customers to try more than one of your products? Use Amazon’s “Frequently Bought Together” bundles by creating virtual product bundle ASINs (Amazon allows virtual bundling for brand owners without needing to physically package items together). For example, if you sell a coffee machine and mugs, bundle them virtually – it increases the chances a customer buys both, raising the initial order value and exposing them to more of your catalogue. Also consider the Amazon Brand Store: organise your storefront in a way that highlights complementary products and directs visitors to related items easily. A well-designed Brand Store with lifestyle images and clear category pages can improve browsing and cross-selling, increasing the number of items each customer eventually purchases from you.
- Leverage Coupons and Promotions for Loyalty: While we cautioned against broad discounting for acquisition, targeted promotions can be great for retention. For instance, Amazon’s Brand Tailored Promotions allow you to send exclusive offers to certain customer groups, like repeat customers or those who haven’t purchased in a while. You could set up a promotion that gives a small discount or a free gift on a customer’s third purchase, as a way to say “thank you” for their loyalty. Even a simple 5% off coupon on their next order (delivered via email or push notification from Amazon if they are opted in) can prompt another purchase. Another idea: run a seasonal sale exclusive to past customers (Amazon’s Manage Your Customer Engagement tool can send emails to followers for new product launches or deals). These tactics make customers feel valued and keep them coming back, directly boosting LTV.
- Utilise Cohort Analysis for Insights: This is a slightly more advanced tactic, but incredibly insightful. Take a specific batch of customers (e.g., those acquired in Q1 of this year) and track their behaviour over time. Do customers acquired during the holiday season have a higher or lower retention than those acquired in summer? Did the cohort acquired via a particular ad campaign end up buying more later or not? By comparing cohorts, you can identify which marketing channels or time periods yield “higher quality” customers. If, for instance, you find that customers gained via an influencer partnership have 2x the LTV of those from generic ads, you’d allocate more budget to that partnership channel. Tools like Amazon Attribution (to tag external traffic) or simple internal analysis can help create these cohorts. Over time, focusing acquisition on sources that bring loyal customers improves overall LTV.
- Free Tools and Resources: Take advantage of free analytical tools or templates that help calculate and simulate LTV. (In the webinar, Alden Wonnell mentioned a free Amazon LTV toolkit Adverio offers to help brands plug in their data and see their LTV and other overlooked metrics.) Tools aside, even a basic Excel/Google Sheets model can do wonders: input your monthly new customers, repeat purchase rates, etc., and project revenue. Seeing the compound effect of repeat sales in black and white can motivate your team to prioritise retention initiatives. Additionally, keep learning from thought leaders – many agencies share case studies or frameworks on improving Amazon customer retention strategies via blogs and webinars. The more ideas you collect, the better you can iterate on boosting LTV.
By systematically implementing these tactics – from programs like Subscribe & Save to clever promotions and data analyses – you’ll create a flywheel: acquire customers, deliver a great experience, get them to buy again (and again), and reap the increased profits that come with loyalty. Every percentage point increase in repeat rate or every few dollars added to AOV can translate to substantial revenue growth when scaled across hundreds or thousands of customers. That is the power of compounding in customer lifetime value for Amazon sellers.
Conclusion: Embrace the LTV Mindset for Long-Term Success
In the ultra-competitive Amazon arena, focusing on customer lifetime value is like shifting from a sprint to a marathon mindset. It’s about building a business that’s not just chasing the next sale, but cultivating a base of loyal customers who drive profit for years to come. For Amazon agency professionals, guiding clients through this shift is a chance to truly become a strategic partner. By synthesising data-driven insights (like those shared by Alden Wonnell of Adverio) with practical actions, you can help brands unlock new levels of growth. The strategies outlined – from increasing average order value and repeat purchase rates to leveraging Amazon’s new LTV tools – all boil down to one theme: prioritising customer relationships over transactions.
As you incorporate LTV into your playbook, you’ll likely see more sustainable results and happier clients. Instead of the constant pressure to lower ACOS at all costs, conversations will evolve to investing in customer experience, brand loyalty, and long-term Amazon success. The numbers will speak for themselves when retention improves and revenue climbs steadily without proportionally increasing ad spend.
Ready to take the next step? If you found these insights valuable, consider watching the full webinar featuring Alden Wonnell for an even deeper dive into Amazon LTV strategies. Feel free to reach out to our team to discuss how to implement an LTV-focused approach for your brand or agency. And don’t forget to subscribe to our newsletter for more expert Amazon strategies and updates on the latest tools. By embracing the LTV mindset now, you’re investing in the future you – and your clients – will be thankful for. Here’s to building brands that last on Amazon!