Monday, 30 June 2025

How to Optimize Amazon Sponsored Products Campaigns: Bidding, Budgeting, and Targeting

 

Note: This article is also published on our main website. For the latest version and more resources, visit AdmazonIQ.com.

How to Optimize Amazon Sponsored Products Campaigns: Bidding, Budgeting, and Targeting

Running Amazon Sponsored Products campaigns is often the first step sellers take into Amazon Advertising—but simply running ads isn’t enough.

Many sellers launch campaigns and leave them untouched, hoping Amazon’s algorithms will “figure it out.” Unfortunately, this can lead to:

  • Wasted spend on irrelevant clicks
  • High ACoS (Advertising Cost of Sales)
  • Missed sales opportunities

Here’s the reality: Amazon rewards advertisers who actively manage and optimize their campaigns. When you fine-tune your bidding, budget allocation, and targeting, you gain control over your costs—and open the door to greater profits.

This comprehensive guide will show you how to transform your Sponsored Products campaigns from basic ads into data-driven sales engines.

Understanding Sponsored Products Basics

Before diving into optimization, let’s quickly recap what Sponsored Products are.

Sponsored Products are pay-per-click (PPC) ads that appear:

  • In Amazon search results
  • On product detail pages
  • Across other placements like “Buy Box” or carousels


You pay when a shopper clicks your ad—even if they don’t buy. That’s why optimization is crucial: you want to pay only for clicks that convert into sales.

If you’re new to Sponsored Products, check out our Amazon Advertising Foundations article for a solid start.

1. Master Your Bidding Strategies

Bidding is the heart of Sponsored Products. How much you’re willing to pay per click determines:

  • How often your ads appear
  • Where they appear (top of search vs. lower positions)
  • Whether you outbid competitors

Types of Bidding on Amazon

Dynamic Bids – Down Only
Amazon reduces your bids in real time if a click seems less likely to convert. Great for cautious advertisers testing new products.

Dynamic Bids – Up and Down
Amazon increases or decreases bids (up to +100%) based on the likelihood of conversion. More aggressive; useful for driving growth.

Fixed Bids
Your bid stays the same, regardless of conversion probability. Offers full control but may miss high-value traffic.

Placement Bid Adjustments



Amazon lets you adjust bids for specific placements:

  • Top of Search (First Page)
  • Product Pages
  • Rest of Search

For instance, if your ads convert well at the top of search, you could add +50% to that placement. If Product Pages underperform, reduce that adjustment to 0%.

Example Bid Strategies

Scenario 1: Selling a new premium yoga mat:

  • Start with Dynamic Bids – Down Only.
  • Base bid: $0.50.
  • Test +30% Top of Search adjustment.

Scenario 2: Mature product with strong reviews:

  • Switch to Dynamic Bids – Up and Down.
  • Base bid: $1.20.
  • Add +50% for Top of Search to dominate visibility.

2. Budgeting for Success

Even the best bid strategy falls apart if your budget runs out halfway through the day.

Tips for Smarter Budgeting

1. Allocate Budget by Product Priority
Focus on your bestsellers, high-margin items, and seasonal or trending products.

Example:

  • Out of 10 products, allocate 70% of your budget to your top 3 performers.

2. Separate Branded and Non-Branded Campaigns
Branded terms often convert better than non-branded terms. Keep them separate so you can control budgets precisely and avoid overspending on lower-converting generic terms.

3. Monitor Daily Budget Depletion
If your campaigns run out of budget early:

  • Increase your daily budget
  • Lower bids to stretch spend
  • Review budget reports to identify trends

Calculating Your Ideal Budget

A simple formula:

Daily Budget = (Target Daily Sales x Average Order Value x Target ACoS) / 100

Example:

  • Daily sales goal: $500
  • Average Order Value: $25
  • Target ACoS: 20%

Daily Budget = (500 x 20%) / 100 = $100

Small vs. Large Budget Scenarios

  • Small Budget ($10–$30/day): Focus on top products, keep bids conservative, test fewer keywords.
  • Large Budget ($100+/day): Broaden keyword testing, aggressively pursue Top of Search, allocate funds for competitor targeting.

3. Fine-Tune Your Targeting

Targeting determines who sees your ads—and how relevant those impressions are. Let’s explore:

  • Keyword Targeting (KT)
  • Product Targeting (PT)

Keyword Targeting (KT)

Keyword targeting lets you bid on specific search terms. But how broad or narrow should those matches be?

Understanding Keyword Match Types

Broad Match
Matches searches that include your keyword in any order, plus synonyms.

Phrase Match
The shopper’s search must contain your keyword in the same order with words before or after.

Exact Match
Matches only searches that are exactly the keyword or very close variations.

How to Bid Across Match Types

Best practice:

  • Bid highest on Exact.
  • Medium on Phrase.
  • Lowest on Broad.

Example:

“wireless headphones”
- Broad: $0.70
- Phrase: $1.00
- Exact: $1.30

Segregating Keyword Campaigns

For better control and analysis, many advertisers separate keyword targeting into distinct campaign types:

  • SP KT Brand: Targets your brand name keywords. Lower ACoS, protects branded searches.
  • SP KT Non-Brand: Targets generic category terms. Essential for growth.
  • SP KT Offensive: Targets competitor brand terms to conquest market share. Riskier due to costs.
  • SP KT AMC Bid Boost: Uses Amazon Marketing Cloud audiences for advanced targeting and bid adjustments.

Pro Tip: Keep these campaign types separate for better budget control and clearer performance insights.

Product Targeting (PT)

Product Targeting places ads on competitor ASINs or categories. Great for:

  • Stealing competitor sales
  • Defending your listings
  • Cross-selling complementary products

Example: target competitor ASIN “B098XYZ” for your wireless headphones.

Product Targeting Expanded (PT Expanded)

PT Expanded allows Amazon to show your ads on related products or subcategories beyond what you manually selected. It’s useful for scaling reach, but can result in lower relevance and higher ACoS if unchecked.

When to use PT Expanded:

  • Turn ON when testing new reach opportunities.
  • Turn OFF if you want precise control and tighter budgets.

Pro Tip: Test PT Expanded in a dedicated campaign with a modest budget first.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Ignoring Negative Keywords: Leads to wasted spend on irrelevant searches.
  • Overbidding on Broad Terms: Generic keywords can drain budgets fast.
  • Running Campaigns on Autopilot: Regular optimization is essential.

Analyze Your Results Like a Pro

Keep an eye on key metrics:

  • ACoS: (Ad Spend / Attributed Sales) x 100
  • ROAS: Attributed Sales / Ad Spend
  • Conversion Rate: Percentage of clicks turning into sales.

Example from a Search Term Report:

Search Term: “Bluetooth headphones under $50”
Clicks: 30
Sales: $0
✅ Add as a negative keyword.

Mini Case Study: Optimizing a Headphone Campaign

Before Optimization:

  • ACoS = 45%
  • Daily Budget = $50
  • Generic keywords burned 60% of spend.

Actions Taken:

  • Shifted budget to long-tail keywords.
  • Added negatives like “cheap headphones.”
  • Increased Top of Search bids +40%.

After 30 days:

  • ACoS dropped to 22%.
  • Sales increased 35%.
  • ROAS improved from 2.2x to 4.5x.

Conclusion & Next Steps

Optimizing Amazon Sponsored Products isn’t a one-time job—it’s an ongoing process of:

  • Smart bidding
  • Thoughtful budgeting
  • Precision targeting
  • Regular analysis

Implement these strategies, and you’ll transform your campaigns into powerful revenue engines.

Looking for more ways to boost your Amazon Ads? Stay tuned for our next article where we’ll dive into “Amazon Advertising Metrics That Matter: A Beginner’s Guide to KPIs and Reporting.” You’ll learn how to read your reports, measure what counts, and make smarter decisions to grow your sales.

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Amazon Advertising Metrics That Matter: A Beginner’s Guide to KPIs and Reporting

  Note: This article is also published on our main website. For the latest version and more resources, visit AdmazonIQ.com . ...