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TL;DR: Launching a new product on Amazon requires a strategic PPC campaign to drive visibility, sales velocity, and keyword ranking. This step-by-step guide walks you through campaign setup, budgeting, targeting best practices, and cold-start optimization using real-world tactics trusted by beginner and growth-stage sellers.
Note on marketplaces: This guide is specifically optimized for the US market.
Launching a new product on Amazon is like opening a storefront in the middle of Times Square—there’s massive foot traffic, but if no one sees your sign, you won’t make a sale. That’s where Amazon PPC (Pay-Per-Click) advertising comes in. Unlike organic ranking, which can take weeks or months to gain traction, PPC puts your product directly in front of shoppers searching for relevant keywords or browsing competitive listings.
For new sellers and brands, PPC isn’t just a marketing tool—it’s a data engine. Every click, impression, and conversion provides insights into customer behavior, keyword relevance, and competitive positioning. More importantly, early sales from PPC contribute to your product’s sales velocity, a key factor Amazon’s A9 algorithm uses to rank products organically.
Whether you're a beginner testing your first private label item or a growing brand expanding into new categories, mastering Amazon sponsored ads from day one can mean the difference between a slow burn and a breakout success. In this guide, we’ll walk you through a proven framework for launching a high-performing PPC campaign for a new product, complete with best practices, budgeting tips, and optimization strategies tailored for the Amazon US marketplace.
Before launching any Amazon PPC campaign, ensure your product is fully optimized, and your seller account is ready for advertising. A poorly listed product will waste ad spend, no matter how well-targeted your campaigns are.
Optimize Your Listing: Your product title, bullet points, description, and images must clearly communicate value, features, and benefits. Use high-resolution lifestyle and infographic images. Include keywords shoppers actually search for—tools like SellerSprite’s Keyword Research Tool can help identify high-volume, low-competition terms.
Enable Brand Registry: If you have a registered trademark, enroll in Amazon Brand Registry. This unlocks enhanced brand content (A+ Content), brand analytics, and access to advanced ad types like Sponsored Brands and Stores.
Set Competitive Pricing: New products often need aggressive pricing to gain initial reviews and traction. Use repricing tools or monitor competitors manually to stay competitive without sacrificing margins.
Secure Early Reviews: Leverage Amazon’s Vine Program or Request a Review button to gather honest feedback quickly. Products with 5+ reviews convert significantly better, improving your ad performance.
Once your listing is live and conversion-ready, navigate to Amazon Advertising Console (advertising.amazon.com) and connect your seller account. Verify that your payment method is active and your brand is approved for advertising.
A well-structured campaign makes optimization easier and improves performance tracking. For new products, we recommend starting with a three-tier campaign architecture:
Each campaign should have a unique name that reflects its purpose, such as "New Launch - Auto Campaign" or "Manual KW - Broad Match." This naming convention helps you track performance and scale later.
Start with one ad group per campaign. As you gather data, you can segment by match type (e.g., separate phrase and exact match groups) or theme (e.g., "portable blender keywords" vs. "travel blender keywords").
Use SellerSprite’s Campaign Manager to clone, pause, or optimize campaigns efficiently. Structured campaigns reduce overlap, prevent internal competition, and make bid adjustments more precise.
Targeting is the heart of your Amazon PPC strategy. For new products, you need a mix of exploration (finding what works) and exploitation (doubling down on winners).
Amazon offers four automatic targeting options:
Run an automatic campaign for 7–14 days to collect search term reports. These reports reveal which keywords are driving clicks and conversions—gold for building manual campaigns.
After gathering data, launch a manual campaign using broad and phrase match types:
Start with 5–10 high-potential keywords per ad group. Use tools like SellerSprite’s ASIN-to-Keyword Mapping to reverse-engineer competitor keywords.
Product targeting allows you to place your ad on specific product pages. Choose between:
Use this to intercept buyers already considering similar products. Bid slightly higher on ASINs with lower review counts or higher prices to position your product as a better value.
Budgeting for a new product requires balance: spend enough to generate data, but not so much that you drain capital before gaining traction.
Daily Budget: Start with $10–$30 per campaign. If your product is in a high-competition category (e.g., skincare, electronics), lean toward $20–$30. For niche or low-competition items, $10–$15 may suffice.
Bidding Strategy: Use dynamic bids – down only initially. This lets Amazon lower bids when a conversion is unlikely, reducing wasted spend. Avoid "up and down" until you have strong conversion data.
Set default bids based on match type:
Adjust bids every 3–5 days based on performance. Increase bids on keywords with low ACoS (<25%) and high conversion rates. Decrease or pause underperformers.
Use portfolio budgets if running multiple campaigns for the same product line. This ensures consistent daily spend and simplifies management.
The first month is critical for establishing momentum. Follow this 30-day optimization plan:
Track key metrics weekly:
Use break-even ACoS as a benchmark: (1 / Profit Margin) – 1. For example, if your profit margin is 30%, your break-even ACoS is 233%. Any ACoS below that means you’re profitable on ads.
Best practices include starting with an automatic campaign to gather keyword data, using a structured campaign setup (automatic, manual broad/phrase, and ASIN targeting), optimizing your product listing before launch, setting a daily budget of $10–$30, using dynamic bids – down only, and optimizing every 3–7 days. Always use negative keywords to filter irrelevant traffic and scale based on performance data.
Begin with a daily budget of $10–$30 per campaign. For high-competition categories, start at $20–$30. Total monthly spend can range from $300–$900 depending on goals and category. Focus on gathering data in the first two weeks, then adjust based on ROI. Use break-even ACoS to determine sustainable spend levels.
Start with automatic targeting to discover relevant keywords and ASINs. Then launch manual campaigns using broad and phrase match types. Use ASIN targeting to appear on competitor or complementary product pages. After 2–3 weeks, add exact match campaigns for high-converting keywords. Always add negative keywords to improve relevance and reduce wasted spend.
By SellerSprite Success Team
The SellerSprite Success Team combines hands-on Amazon selling experience with data science and advertising expertise. We’ve helped over 10,000 sellers optimize their PPC campaigns, reduce ACoS, and scale profitably. Our strategies are tested in real-world scenarios and updated regularly to reflect Amazon’s evolving algorithm and marketplace trends.
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