PPC & Advertising

How to Run Amazon Product Targeting Ads (ASIN Targeting)

Connor Mulholland

Connor Mulholland

· 8 min read
How to Run Amazon Product Targeting Ads (ASIN Targeting)
TL;DR

Product targeting ads show your product on competitor listing pages. Target ASINs where you have advantages: better reviews, lower price, or stronger listing. Avoid targeting products that are clearly better than yours.

What is product targeting?

Product targeting (also called ASIN targeting) lets you show your Sponsored Product ads on specific competitor product pages. When a shopper views a competitor's listing, your product appears as a sponsored alternative in the "Products related to this item" section or the "Compare with similar items" carousel.

This is fundamentally different from keyword targeting. With keywords, you're reaching shoppers based on what they search for. With product targeting, you're reaching shoppers who are already looking at a specific product, which means they're further along in their purchase decision. They've already searched, filtered, and clicked on a product. You're inserting yourself into that consideration moment.

Product targeting is one of the highest-intent ad placements available. The shopper is literally looking at a competitor's product page and deciding whether to buy. If your ad appears and you have a clear advantage (better reviews, lower price, superior listing), the conversion potential is significant.

Choosing ASINs to target

The success of product targeting depends almost entirely on which ASINs you choose to target. Target the wrong competitors and you'll waste money. Target the right ones and you'll consistently capture customers who were about to buy from someone else.

Target competitors where you have clear advantages:

  • Fewer reviews: If a competitor has 80 reviews at 4.0 stars and you have 350 reviews at 4.5 stars, shoppers who see your ad will often choose you. The social proof difference is immediately visible.
  • Higher price: If a competitor charges $34.99 and you're at $29.99 for a similar product, your ad on their page is a compelling alternative. Price-sensitive shoppers (which is most Amazon shoppers) will click.
  • Weaker listings: Competitors with poor main images, thin bullet points, or no A+ Content convert poorly. Shoppers visiting these pages are less committed and more likely to explore alternatives like your ad.
  • Frequent stockouts: Track competitors with inconsistent availability. When they're out of stock, their listing page still gets traffic from bookmarks and external links. Your product targeting ad captures that traffic.

Avoid targeting:

  • Products with significantly more reviews, better ratings, and lower prices. You'd be sending shoppers to a comparison you'll lose.
  • Amazon's own brands (Amazon Basics, etc.). These have pricing and placement advantages that are very hard to compete against.
  • Products in completely different price tiers. A $15 product targeting a $50 product won't convert well because shoppers expect a different quality level.

Campaign setup

Organize your product targeting into separate campaigns for clean data and easy optimization:

Campaign 1: Direct competitor targeting. ASINs that are direct substitutes for your product. Same use case, same customer. These should be your primary focus and biggest budget. Group 10-15 similar competitor ASINs per campaign.

Campaign 2: Complementary product targeting. ASINs that pair with your product. If you sell cutting boards, target cutting board oil, chef's knives, kitchen organizers. Shoppers buying those products are in a kitchen-shopping mindset and might add your product.

Campaign 3: Category targeting. Instead of specific ASINs, target an entire product category or subcategory. Broader reach, lower intent, but useful for discovery. Start with a lower budget.

Bid strategy: Start with bids 10-20% lower than your keyword campaign bids. Product targeting typically has lower conversion rates than keyword targeting (shoppers are looking at a competitor, not actively searching for you), so your bids should reflect that. Adjust based on performance data after 2 weeks.

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Optimization strategy

After 2 weeks of data collection, optimize your product targeting campaigns:

Remove non-converters. Any ASIN you've been targeting for 2+ weeks with zero conversions should be removed. You've given it enough data. Some competitor products just don't generate clicks or conversions for your ad, move on.

Increase bids on winners. ASINs that consistently convert at a profitable ACoS deserve higher bids to win more impressions. If targeting competitor B0ABC123 generates sales at 18% ACoS and your target is 25%, increase the bid to capture more of that traffic.

Add new targets continuously. Use tools like Jarvio's competitor analysis to identify new ASINs entering your market. New competitors with few reviews are often the best product targeting opportunities.

Monitor competitor changes. If a competitor you're targeting improves their listing (adds A+ Content, accumulates more reviews, drops price), your ads on their page may stop converting. Review monthly and remove targets where your advantage has eroded.

Common mistakes

Targeting too many ASINs without segmentation. Dumping 50 ASINs into one campaign makes optimization impossible. You can't see which specific products are converting. Keep campaigns focused with 10-15 similar ASINs each.

Using keyword campaign bids. Product targeting converts differently than keyword targeting. Using the same bids leads to overpaying. Start lower and adjust based on actual product targeting conversion data.

Ignoring your own listing quality. Product targeting only works if your listing is compelling. If a shopper clicks your ad from a competitor's page and your listing has poor images, few reviews, or a higher price, you've just paid for a click that won't convert. Fix your listing before investing heavily in product targeting. See listing optimization.

Not negating your own ASINs. If you have multiple products, make sure you're not targeting your own ASINs. This is wasted spend, you'd be advertising to shoppers who are already looking at your product.

Jarvio
Which competitor ASINs should I target with ads?
Analyzing competitors in your category... Best targets (you have clear advantages): 1. B0ABC123: 3.8 stars, 120 reviews. You: 4.6 stars, 340 reviews. Their price: $32.99. Yours: $29.99. Strong conversion opportunity. 2. B0DEF456: weak main image, no A+ Content. Your listing quality is significantly better. 3. B0GHI789: frequently out of stock. Target during their stockouts to capture their customers. 4. B0JKL012: 4.1 stars but only 45 reviews. Your review count is 7x higher. Avoid targeting: • B0TOP001 (4.8 stars, 2,400 reviews, lower price). You'd be sending traffic to a stronger listing. • B0TOP002 (Amazon's own brand, rarely worth competing against). I'll also set up a complementary targeting campaign: bamboo cutting board oil, knife sets, and kitchen organizers that pair with your products. Want me to create both campaigns?
Yes, create them. Start with $15/day each.
Creating two product targeting campaigns: 1. CuttingBoard_PT_Competitors: targeting 8 competitor ASINs where you have advantages. $15/day, bids at $0.65. 2. CuttingBoard_PT_Complementary: targeting 6 complementary product ASINs. $15/day, bids at $0.55 (lower intent, need lower bids). I'll review performance weekly. After 2 weeks, we'll have enough data to optimize: increase bids on converting ASINs, remove non-converters, and potentially add new targets. Campaigns are live.

Frequently asked questions

Which competitor ASINs should I target?
Target competitors with fewer reviews, higher prices, or weaker listings than yours. You want ASINs where your product has a clear advantage that converts browsers.
What ACoS should I expect from product targeting?
Product targeting typically has 10-20% higher ACoS than keyword campaigns but can capture customers actively considering competitors.
Should I target complementary products too?
Yes. Targeting complementary products (e.g., targeting cutting board oil if you sell cutting boards) can reach buyers in a purchase mindset with very relevant offers.
How many ASINs should I target per campaign?
Start with 10-15 ASINs per campaign. Group similar ASINs together (e.g., all direct competitors in one campaign, complementary products in another) so you can manage bids effectively.
Connor Mulholland

Connor Mulholland

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