We’re ecstatic about our most recent client, MICROBE-LIFT, a collection of home, garden, and pet products for odor, septic treatment, and aquariums.
Ecological Laboratories manufactures MICROBE-LIFT. Their biotechnology techniques produce natural, pet-friendly, and Earth-friendly microbial solutions for individual consumers. Their philosophy centers on creating clean, safe, and effective products that make the world a cleaner, safer place.
Ecological Laboratories is family owned and operated since 1976. So, their consumers turn to them to eliminate harmful pollutants and smelly odors in and outside their homes. They are expanding their brand, constantly adding and improving their products.
Our team will manage Amazon paid media and creative design for MICROBE-LIFT to increase sales and build brand awareness for their best-selling Amazon products.
Brook Llewelyn Shepard, Mason Interactive Founder and CEO, says, “MICROBE-LIFT is an exciting brand to work with because of their commitment to being environmentally-friendly. Mason Interactive gives their full support in helping them reach families and refresh homes!”
Are you ready to start or improve your Amazon Advertising campaigns, optimize your listings for conversions, and create a custom Amazon Storefront? We invite you to contact us for a free consultation with our team. To learn more about MICROBE-LIFT, click here.
Amazon is the fastest-growing retail media advertising platform in 2021. Currently, 67% of retailers using Amazon plan to increase ad spend, and Amazon’s digital market share is growing faster than Facebook and Google (eMarketer).
The 2020 eCommerce boom, driven by the pandemic and remote living, changed our thoughts of Amazon shopping. Because of lifestyle demands, notable brands make it a priority to be where their customers want them to be online. For many individual and manufacturer brands, Amazon is the most straightforward retail partner for online sales.
In this guide we’ll deep dive into Amazon seller and advertising best practices, the different types of ads and how they work.
Amazon Seller Central and Amazon Advertising
Introducing Amazon Seller Central
So, who shops on Amazon? Everyone! But, what we shop for on Amazon is changing. Amazon started as a way to get books online. Now, it’s a video streaming service, retailer, advertiser, and a delivery solution. Amazon shoppers look for competitive pricing, trusted reviews, and relevant search results.
What about who advertises on Amazon? Most advertisers on Amazon are direct-to-consumer brands. But, Amazon recently created options for professional services to join the marketplace, so we should expect to see advertising developments down the road. You don’t have to sell on Amazon to promote on Amazon, but it’s common to begin advertising as Amazon sellers. There are a few things you’ll need to know about becoming a seller on Amazon before creating your first advertising campaign.
Why sell on Amazon? Here are a few common reasons for selling your products on Amazon:
You need to move certain products as quickly as possible. If you’ve decided to discontinue a line or get rid of products with old packaging, Amazon is a strategy for increasing unit sales in a shorter time frame. With stiff competition riding the D2C wave, Amazon helps you reach sales goals.
Your products won’t convert on your website. Convenience and shopping products do well on Amazon because the platform simplifies the evaluation process. So, depending on your brand, Amazon might be a better choice for driving sales since that’s where your customers want to shop.
Only certain parts of your brand make sense for D2C. Everything you have to offer might not make sense to sell to customers directly. For example, you’re a manufacturer only selling to wholesalers and retailers, but you want to come out with a new product line to reach an attractive consumer market. Does it make sense to rehaul your website or create a complicated integrated marketing strategy? Maybe! But, selling the selection on Amazon might be a quicker way to start the process before making a considerable investment of time and resources.
1. Becoming a third-party seller on Amazon
There are two main ways to sell products on Amazon: Amazon Seller Central or Vendor Central. Most beginner brands are third-party sellers through Amazon Seller Central. Joining Seller Central makes sense if you want your buyers to be individual customers. If you want your buyers to be other sellers, become a vendor.
In this guide, we’ll assume you want to sell products directly to consumers. You might have to get approval before becoming a seller depending on your product category. Check out the list of product restrictions here.
Registration through Amazon Seller Central is simple.
Setting up your Amazon Seller Account
To set up your Amazon Seller account, register for one of the Amazon seller plans online. You’ll need your business, credit card, and banking information to complete the process. Amazon provides two types of plans: individual and professional. How do you decide which is best for you? To choose the best account, consider the following:
Individual
Professional
Cost
$0.99 per item + fees
$39.99/mo + fees
Quantity of products you want to sell
Less than 40
More than 40
Advertising opportunities
No
Yes
Note: Advertising on Amazon requires a Professional plan. If you don’t want to use Amazon Advertising, or have a different strategy for driving traffic to your listings, select the Individual plan if you have less than 40 products.
What other costs are there in addition to the subscription plan? Outside of advertising spend, the costs of being an Amazon Seller include the subscription plan, referral, and fulfillment fees. Your fees depend on the type of product you’re selling, and some product listings requirea professional account to sell within the appropriate category. To learn about all associated costs specific to you, click here. Once you’re registered, it’s time to make your product listings and fulfillment options.
2. Understanding product listings and fulfillment on Amazon
To complete your product listings, you need product identification (GTIN and SKU numbers), titles, descriptions, images, and shipping information.
Amazon Product Identification 101: GTIN, SKU, and ASIN
Each item listed requires a GTIN, SKU, and ASIN. A Global Trade Identification Number (GTIN) includes a UPC or ISBN (Note: ISBNs are for books). A Universal Product Code (UPC) is the barcode and 12-digit string of numbers associated with the barcode. If you don’t have UPCs for each product type, purchase them through the GS1 American Branch. If you’re selling in European markets, you need a European Article Number through the GS1 UK branch.
You also need the SKU for each of your product types. You’ve likely already created a list of SKUs internally to track your inventory. Once your product is listed, Amazon generates a unique 10-digit code for each productlisting called an ASIN (Amazon Standard Identification Number). You can learn more about the types of product identifiers on Amazon here.
Product titles, descriptions, and images
When creating your product listings, you want effective content for each one. We recommend doing a competitive audit to see how other brands list products similar to yours on their product detail pages. For example, if your competitor puts “16 oz” in the title of their body lotion listing, it’s essential to include it in your listing too. It’s critical to optimize your listing using a keyword strategy for product visibility and customer-inquiry relevancy.
Amazon SEO: Optimizing your listing titles, descriptions, and images
To optimize your Amazon product listings, implement a keyword strategy. For each product, select relevant keywords to focus on in your titles, descriptions, and details. Amazon works similarly to a search engine, so use these Amazon SEO tactics for successful listings:
Choose 2-3 key terms/phrases per listing: Map out your keywords by researching search results, categories, and intuition.
Find a balance between brand and non-brand keywords: You’ll want to use your brand name for the mid-to-bottom funnel and non-brand keywords for top-of-the-funnel approaches.
Use negative keywords: Include keywords that you don’t want to be relevant for using negative keywords. For example, if your skin oil product has coconut oil, you might want to include negative keywords to avoid showing up for coconut oil for cooking.
Need help with Amazon SEO?Click here to chat with our team of Amazon strategists.
Creating a product detail page
Once you have your keyword strategy, create the content for your product detail page which the customer sees before adding your product to their shopping cart. Here’s a list of necessary content on the product detail page:
Product Title – 200 character limit
Product Description – usually bullet points right below the title
Product reviews and ratings
Images and videos of the product and product variations– Images should be at least 500×500
Pricing – competitive pricing
Purchase options – variations, sizes, shipping info, etc.
Offerings: promotions, discounts, bundles
Fulfillment options on Amazon: FBM vs. FBA
As you’re setting up to sell and advertise on Amazon, you’ll have to figure out the pros and cons of fulfilling your orders versus Amazon fulfillment. It’s essential to know the difference between Fulfillment by Merchant (FMA) and Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA).
Fulfillment by Merchant (FMA)
If you’re an individual seller ($.99/per item seller plan), you’ll always fulfill customer orders. If you choose FMA, it means you’re going to store and ship products directly to customers. Fulfillment by merchant might be your only option based on certain conditions (weight, content, materials). But, you can choose FMA for a product listing at any time no matter what type of seller plan you’re under.
Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA)
If you’re a professional seller ($39.99/mo seller plan), Fulfillment by Amazon is an option for you. When using FBA, you ship your products to an Amazon Fulfillment center using their packing guidelines. The fulfillment center processes and ships the orders, and you manage your FBA orders in Seller Central.
Amazon Prime Seller
If you’re a professional seller using FBA, you’re able to offer Amazon Prime Member benefits on your products, like two-day shipping. To maintain your Prime seller status, you need to make sure you’re properly managing your inventory with the fulfillment center.
Choosing your fulfillment options for each listing comes down to profitability. Do you have space to store products and process shipping? Or, are you renting space currently? Would it be more affordable to pay FBA fees to utilize the Amazon fulfillment center space? Consider all associated costs and select the option that best fits your needs.
Need help calculating the costs of selling on Amazon? Amazon provides a free cost calculator to estimate your sales margins and a FBA Revenue Calculator to help you with this process.
Now that we’ve discussed getting set up to sell on Amazon, let’s look into Amazon advertising.
Amazon Advertising for Beginner and Growing Brands
As a beginner or growing brand, Amazon’s self-serving advertising solutions are perfect for you. Self-serving advertising means that you can create and manage campaigns without Amazon’s advertising team. Amazon’s advertising team typically requires a hefty ad spend before they work strategically with you. So, lean on your digital marketing agency, yourself, or experienced advertising team to create and manage your ad campaigns. Successful Amazon advertising requires excellent keyword research for search optimization, quality creatives, and activating best seller practices.
Amazon advertising uses PPC (pay-per-click) and DSP (demand-side-platform) ads to promote your brand, product line, or individual products. Advertising using Amazon PPC requires you to sell products on Amazon. Each time someone clicks on your sponsored advertisement, you pay for the click. Amazon DSP is a network of displays using programmatic exchanges across Amazon and other third-party sites.
1. How search optimization impacts your Amazon advertising strategy
Why is search optimization so important on Amazon? Well, search optimization impacts your content and advertising strategy because Amazon is customer-centric, not seller-centric. Their seller fees and costs are structured to be profitable for them no matter the product. So, they’re not concerned about whothe buyer purchases from as much as the purchase itself.
Your keyword strategy determines if the buyer will see your product after typing in the Amazon search bar(Note: we refer to this as visibility). The customer has options to filter by price, reviews, ratings, and other features. But how well your product appears on the search results page organically depends on your keyword strategy(Note: we refer to this as relevancy).
Also, your paid ads rely on keywords, negative keywords, and competitive targeting. So, spend time building, tracking, and optimizing with the right keywords in your ads and branding, so you’re visible and relevant to your target audience.
2. Branding Strategies on Amazon
One downfall of selling and advertising on Amazon is less control over the creative environment. But, there are ways you can spice things up and stand out to potential customers using Enhanced Branded Content and Amazon Storefronts.
Enhanced Branded Content
Enhanced Branded Content (EBC) goes on your product detail page in the product description section, below the listing information and before the review section. You must be a professional seller and registered brand to create EBC. Amazon provides EBC templates, but you make the template’s visual assets. Visual assets include text, images, and videos. Here’s an example of EBC of our client, Fire Cider:
*Disclaimer – Mason Interactive did not create Fire Cider’s Enhanced Branded Content.
Amazon Storefronts
Amazon Storefronts are like mini-websites within the platform. Customers visit your storefront to learn more about your products, offerings, and brand. It also provides the most creative flexibility and allows you to connect with your customers outside of Amazon by linking your social media accounts. Creating a beautiful storefront requires great visuals, copy, and flow.
You’ll build the storefront using Amazon’s drag and drop platform. Optimizing the store images, page titles, and descriptions using your keyword strategy is equally important. Other search engines, like Google and Bing, crawl Amazon pages so you can drive organic traffic to your storefront using SEO techniques.
Here’s an example of an Amazon Storefront from our client, Tayst Coffee:
3. Sponsored Ads on Amazon
There are four types of PPC ads on Amazon, including Sponsored Brand Ads, Sponsored Product ads, Product Display Ads, and Sponsored Video Ads. Use sponsored ads strategically in your media mix strategy by running the appropriate campaign type for each type of ad.
Sponsored Brand Ads
Brand ads are great for awareness campaigns
If you’re a registered brand, you can run sponsored brand ads. Sponsored Brand Ads (also known as Headline search ads) appear at the top of the Amazon search results page. They typically include your logo, 1-3 product images, and links to your storefront and featured products. But, your brand ads can appear for a variety of brand and non-brand search terms. When running a sponsored brand ad, use the appropriate keywords in your ad copy and feature the most relevant products to those keywords.
Sponsored Product Ads
Product ads are great for brand awareness and driving conversions
Sponsored Product Ads appear in the first row of results on the Amazon search results page. Compared to brand ads, you’re only advertising one product instead of an entire line. Sponsored product ads go directly to the product detail page, where customers can add to their cart.
Product Display Ads
Product display ads are great for competitive targeting and driving conversions
Product Display Ads show up on the product detail page, typically below where customers add items to their cart or below the listing bullet points. Here’s a tip for product display ads: use competitive targeting using the ASIN of products similar to yours. Just as someone considers purchasing a product, they’ll see your product display ad and view your alternative while they are in the mood to buy.
Sponsored Video Ads
Video ads are great for building brand awareness
Sponsored Video Ads appear towards the middle of the Amazon results page. Video ads have a video, product image, and link to the product detail page or your Amazon storefront. Video ads capture attention while consumers are scrolling through their search results.
4. Introduction to the Amazon DSP
Amazon DSP (Demand-Side Platform) is programmatic advertising on the Amazon platform or other sites using DSP. Other words, you decide how much you want to bid for your ad to appear in certain locations of the programmatic network. If your bid wins, it’s automatically exchanged and gets displayed to the customer.
Do you have to sell on Amazon to use the Amazon DSP? You don’t have to sell on Amazon to use the Amazon DSP. It’s a self-service option, so managing campaigns allows you to buy-in to bidding. Amazon provides consultative services for advertisers if they have a $35,000 ad spend minimum. So, if you want to use DSP but you’re not able to commit to that budget, partner with an agency experienced in growing brands on Amazon.
5. Best Seller Practices
Now that you’re ready to sell and advertise on Amazon, it’s time to focus on Best Seller practices. Your optimization and advertising strategy require the support of proper inventory, ratings, and review management.
Inventory Performance
Seller central provides an Inventory Performance Index (IPI) as a metric for your inventory performance. It displays a performance bar to show areas of improvement for listing and stocking accuracy. It also looks at stranded listings that happen when you have an active listing, but it has not been in stock for some time.
Managing ratings and reviews
Amazon consumers make purchasing decisions based on price, shipping options, ratings, and reviews. We all know how important it is to have many good quality, positive reviews on Amazon because people believe other buyers are more transparent than the brands. Capturing and building a fleet of positive reviews takes time, but it’s worth it because it promotes more sales. Also, it flags your product to become a “choice” or “best-seller” on Amazon.
Focus on getting positive reviews and excellent ratings by ensuring customers get products in the condition and timeframe they expect. To control customer expectations, provide as much honest information about the product as possible on the product detail page in the images, bullets, description, and enhanced branded content.
It’s unlikely you’ll communicate with customers before them receiving the product. So, respond and listen to positive and negative feedback. Use the reviews to make improvements to your product or processes.
Working with an Amazon Agency
Mason Interactive is an Amazon PPC and programmatic advertising agency. We help CPG, beauty, and fashion brands grow on Amazon using tailored strategies according to their goals. We also help brands integrate Amazon into their existing media mix for a seamless marketing plan.
What to expect when working with Mason Interactive? We’ll guide you through a 3-step consultation to understand your goals, investigate your competitors, and create a go-to-market solution. To begin working with Mason Interactive as your Amazon advertising partner, schedule a free consultation with us.
Beauty Independent, a digital publication for entrepreneurs and marketers in the beauty industry, recently interviewed Brook Llewelyn Shepard, Founder and CEO of Mason Interactive. With years of industry experience, Brook shared his tips and insights on building a successful direct-to-consumer strategy.
Metrics That Really Drive Direct-To-Consumer Success
The interview begins with today’s hot topic; data privacy. The upcoming privacy changes, including Apple iOS 14 and cookie-less Chrome, are raising concerns in the advertising industry, in particular amongst small businesses. While this won’t be the end of digital advertising, targeting, reporting, and optimizing ad campaigns will become less effective. Brook anticipates that brands without “superpowers” are going to have a very hard time navigating the new landscape. “If your product really is better for the environment or it really is cheaper or it really does work with more skin colors and tones, it does have something actually unique, and we call that a superpower”, he explains.
Harvesting first-party data today can help brands prepare for the privacy changes and limitations in the use of third-party data. If you’re a brand looking to launch in the near future, Brook recommends you to start building first-party data immediately, while reaching out to micro-influencers and building relationships with people who can represent your brand.
During the interview, Brook discusses the leading indicators in the advertising industry, what metrics advertisers should focus on, and shares his thoughts about ROI. “I look at the cycle of the year. We have seasonality. Some of our beauty brands are bigger in early summer. Our women’s wear companies are bigger around Black Friday.” He suggests that brands that accept a negative ROI during the early months while building their brand and audience, can make more money in the long run.
Social media metrics, like followers, engagements, and likes, may be nice numbers to look at, but are less important to the advertising ecosystem. “They are proxies, but I don’t know that they directly translate into sales because the quality of the followers is a different issue”, Brook says.
Read the entire interview with Beauty Independent here. Interested in learning more about direct-to-consumer best practices? Book a free consultation with Mason Interactive’s digital experts.
Performance marketing is a type of digital marketing that involves statistics and math to generate measurable results like leads, sales, and clicks. A good definition for performance is the action behind your digital strategy outputs. Performance marketers use the full-marketing funnel to inspire desirable behavior from your customers.
How do you use Performance Marketing?
A big part of a marketing plan is to create a strong foundation for your brand. Beautiful creatives, tick. A fabulous website, tick. Attractive packaging, tick. Almost there! Now, how do you get people to find and interact with your brand and products online? Encouraging customers to provide their information, click a link, and purchase your product requires relevant and visible advertising.
Types of Performance Marketing
What are some ways to improve your brand’s online performance and compel customers to act?
Search Engine Marketing (SEM) and Search Engine Optimization (SEO) allow your relevant products and services to reach customers who need them most. Display advertising attracts attention and sends visible reminders to potential customers about the benefits of your products or services. Email marketing builds relationships with customers, so they become your lifelong brand advocates producing continuous revenue.
Depending on your goals, you can decide on a media mix strategy to meet the consumer whenever they’re ready. For example, here’s a glimpse at our media mix strategy:
Over time, you’ll accumulate historical data that shows you where people take action at each part of the marketing funnel. Then, you can turn that data into information to build smarter digital marketing strategies for your campaigns. Because of performance marketing, you’re able to better target segments, personalize your services, and increase sales while maximizing ad spend and resources. That’s how you’ll achieve growth.
Is Performance Marketing magic?
Full transparency – there is no magic button. Excelling at performance marketing requires creativity, data intelligence, analytics, and tracking. It also involves team communication, the right tech stack, and efficient campaign management.
As a performance marketing agency, brands come to us when they want to scale their marketing efforts and grow their business. Ourmagic is in our expertise, experience, and partnerships with leading technology vendors and platforms. Their magic is within a superpower-product, its offerings, and the desire to build their brand.
We’d be happy to share more about Mason Interactive’s growth-driven performance marketing solutions. Contact us to schedule a friendly, 15-minute Zoom call with Ashley and Dasia on our account strategy team.
We’re feeling “second-glass of wine” good about our newest client and partner, RGNY, a winery with curated experiences in the North Fork region of New York.
The winery began in 1998 when The Rivero González Family planted their first vines in Parras, Coahuila, Mexico. Their New York location opened in 2019 after acquiring Martha Clara Vineyards.
RGNY Wine creates high-quality wines and wine kits for enthusiasts, travelers, and locals using their “design-led approach.” The family-owned company celebrates its Mexican heritage, wine-making tradition, and legacy. RGNY Wine aims to “preserve and develop” a sweet, smooth relationship with its customers.
Our team will manage paid media for RGNY to increase sales and build brand awareness. Brook Llewyen Shepard, Mason Interactive Founder/CEO, exclaims, “We want everyone to know about the amazing wines and experiences at RGNY! We’re happy to partner with RGNY as they grow and welcome new visitors.”
Are you ready to start a new digital marketing campaign for more sales, wider reach, or a significant lift in brand awareness? Contact us for a free consultation with our team.
Inc. magazine today revealed that Mason Interactive is No. 114 on its second annual Inc. 5000 Regionals: New York City Metro list, the most prestigious ranking of the fastest-growing New York City area-based private companies. Born of the annual Inc. 5000 franchise, this regional list represents a unique look at the most successful companies within the NYC area economy’s most dynamic segment—its independent small businesses.
“We are honored to be on the Inc. 5000 list of the fastest-growing companies in the New York City Metro Region”, says Mason Interactive Founder and CEO Brook Llewellyn Shepard. “The digital ecosystem is moving super-fast, and I’m proud to be at the vanguard. While we experience steady growth year over year, we’ve stayed true to our core values, offering white-glove level of service, and growing a team that genuinely cares about its client partners.”
We are thankful to our team, our clients, and our partners for their support and making the growth possible. We’ll stay committed to delivering digital marketing solutions that are backed by data, regularly monitored and optimized, and tailored to client’s specific needs.
The companies on the 5000 Regionals: N.Y. Metro list show stunning rates of growth across all industries in the New York City area. Between 2017 and 2019, these 250 private companies had an average growth rate of 214 percent and, in 2019 alone, they employed more than 48,000 people and added nearly $9 billion to the NYC Metro area economy. Companies based in Stamford, Connecticut, New York City, and central New Jersey brought in the highest revenue overall.
Complete results of the Inc. 5000 Regionals: NYC Metro area, including company profiles and an interactive database that can be sorted by industry, metro area, and other criteria, can be found here.
“This list proves the power of companies in the New York City area no matter the industry,” says Inc. editor-in-chief Scott Omelianuk. “The impressive revenues and growth rates prove the insight and diligence of CEOs and that these businesses are here to stay.”
In 2020, Mason Interactive was recognized on Inc. 5000 list of America’s most successful companies. Contact us today to work with our team on your digital marketing strategy.