Web-based software suite to start & grow your Amazon business
Analyze marketplace data while browsing Amazon
A SaaS platform for global voice of customer and product research
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If you sell on Amazon, keyword research is one of the first skills that pays off quickly. Good keywords make your listing easier to find, help ads spend more efficiently, and give you language your customers already use. This beginner friendly guide walks you through a complete workflow using SellerSprite. We will use a simple scenario to keep things concrete.
Scenario: You are launching a new yoga mat. Your goal is to build a focused keyword set, place those keywords correctly in your listing, and create a small test campaign to validate demand.
Throughout the process, keep one rule in mind. Relevance first, volume second. A smaller, highly relevant set will outperform a bloated list.
Start with 3 to 5 seed terms that describe your product clearly. Think like a shopper.
Write these in a simple spreadsheet. Add two columns named Intent and Notes. Mark each seed term as either transactional or informational. You will focus on transactional terms for listing placement and ads.
Look at Amazon autocomplete. Start typing yoga mat and capture the suggestions that make sense for your exact product. Ignore branded phrases and terms that do not fit your listing.
Open SellerSprite and set the correct marketplace and language. Enter one seed term at a time. Export or send results to a working list. You will likely see metrics such as search volume, a trend line, relevancy, a competition indicator, and suggested PPC bid ranges. Your goal is not to copy everything. Your goal is to collect candidates that could realistically convert for your product.
As you scan the list, keep an eye out for long tail phrases. Examples: thick yoga mat for bad knees, non slip yoga mat for hardwood floors. These phrases are specific. They usually have lower competition and higher buyer intent.
Now you will turn a long candidate list into a focused working set. Create three buckets.
Short, high intent phrases that define your product. For a yoga mat, that might include yoga mat, non slip yoga mat, thick yoga mat.
Mid length phrases that add an attribute or audience angle. Examples: yoga mat for men, yoga mat for beginners, pilates mat for home workout.
Specific, lower volume phrases that are close to a purchase decision. Examples: 10mm thick yoga mat, yoga mat for hot yoga sweat proof.
Remove generic or ambiguous terms like mat or sports mat. Remove purely informational queries such as how to clean a yoga mat unless you plan a blog post. Remove brand names that you do not own.
Aim for 10 to 15 primary keywords, 20 to 40 secondary keywords, and as many long tails as you can manage. This is enough to structure your listing and ads without creating chaos.
Find 3 to 5 top competitors that match your price point and features. Paste each ASIN into SellerSprite Reverse ASIN. Export the keywords they rank for and note where they rank highly or frequently. You are looking for two things.
Terms that appear in both your research and competitor reports. These are confirmed opportunities.
Terms competitors rank for that you missed. Add the relevant ones to your shortlist.
Use simple judgment. If a competitor ranks with a branded bundle or a different material that you do not offer, skip those terms. If you see the same long tail appear across several competitors, it is likely worth targeting.
Place keywords where Amazon and shoppers expect to see them. Write for humans first. Use your map to guide content.
Example structure: Yoga Mat, Non Slip, 10mm Thick, Carry Strap Included, Home and Studio
The result is a clean listing that speaks to shoppers and signals relevance to Amazon at the same time.
PPC amplifies your research and helps you validate assumptions quickly. Start small.
Watch three numbers during the first week. Click through rate shows if your keywords and creative align. Conversion rate shows if the listing promises match the product. ACOS shows if a term is economically viable for paid traffic. Promote winners into their own exact match ad groups. Lower bids or pause poor performers. Feed new converting search terms back into your keyword map and listing copy.
Use SellerSprite rank tracking for your primary keywords. Check weekly in the first month, then on a regular schedule. When rankings move, ask why.
Keep a simple spreadsheet with a tab for Research, a tab for Listing Map, a tab for PPC Tests, and a tab for Rank Tracking notes. Treat it as a living document that you update as the market moves.
This small loop compounds quickly. Each pass gives you more precision and more confidence.
Keyword research is not a one time task. Markets change, new competitors enter, and language evolves. The combination of a clear seed list, sensible filters, competitor mining, and disciplined testing gives you a durable advantage. SellerSprite makes each stage faster by turning guesses into data backed decisions. Start with a tight, relevant set, place those words where shoppers expect them, and iterate with small tests. Do that well and your yoga mat will be easier to find, cheaper to advertise, and more likely to sell.
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