Click Through Rate (CTR): Most Underrated Amazon Ad Metric
Digital marketing on Amazon has one major goal: get sufficiently highly ranked, and Amazon will send you free Organic Traffic.
This starts a positive feedback loop: this traffic start to convert, your sales ranking gets higher, and you get more Organic Traffic. This "Amazon Flywheel" has been how many small businesses have grown meaningful sales on Amazon at a very reasonable cost.
With this in mind, enter ads: a way to drive up your ranking by paying to direct people to your pages. Simple logic would therefore suggest an ultimate goal of your ads: drive as many incremental units at as low of a cost as possible. Enter Click-Through Rate (CTR), our favorite metric for understanding advertising costs.
A great way to break down Amazon sales performance is by two components:
But once you start advertising, a third metric becomes particularly important: Click-Through Rate.
What is Click-Through Rate (CTR)?
CTR is what ultimately determines the cost of your ads, and also is a good leading indicator for whether traffic will ultimately convert.
In this article, we’re going to explain how CTR drives your long-term ad costs, the components that impact CTR, and how we can control and improve it.
Relevance is King - because it drives Amazon PPC Ad revenue
Another way to define CTR is relevance: is your ad relevant to the audience viewing it, enough to make them click on it? Not only does CTR measure relevance to your audience, it also effectively sets the price you're able to bid!
Amazon seeks to maximize the cost per impression on their ads. A higher CTR means more clicks, which means more revenue. Increase your CTR, and Amazon will serve you more traffic - for less.
Let's break down some numbers that show how CTR impacts how much you need to bid:
This example illustrates that ASIN B has to bid 5x higher in order to compete for traffic with ASIN A because its CTR is much lower. Because ASIN B is far less relevant on ASIN A's brand name, it will have to bid higher for Amazon to make the same revenue per impression and consider serving their ad.
Given this formula, we're always trying to improve CTR.
Five Elements that Impact CTR (+1 Bonus)
We now know that a better CTR allows you to not only bid less but also have Amazon serve your ad more, giving you more exposure at a lower cost.
Unlike DTC where you control full page creative, Amazon only provides you a tiny box to entice people to click. When someone makes an Amazon Search, your product tile - we call it our "product square" or "click square" - has to stand out amongst the hundreds of others. This product tile is our only small space to convey important information - all of which can impact CTR.
These elements add up to what we call “Click Square Conversion.”
1) Image
In addition to showcasing the product in a clear and attractive way, we can add to the image via post-image edits to convey the most important points or value propositions.
Some examples:
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While technically Amazon’s rules state the hero image needs to be exactly what the customer received, we believe generous interpretations that don't violate the spirit of the rule improves the shopping experience by giving customers important information.
Read our latest white paper for some more exclusive tips & tricks to ensure your main image is generating sales by signing up for our newsletter!
2) Star Rating & Volume
Reviews - not just the rating but also the volume of reviews - are arguably the next biggest driver of “click square conversion”. We rely on reviews online because it makes us feel more confident in our purchase decision, given we can physically inspect the product. Sometimes, adjusting messaging can help mitigate negative reviews, by adjusting descriptions or uses to be accurate.
While you can ask someone for a review, it’s against Amazon’s terms of service to compensate people for it. Amazon is really good at cracking down on this. Cartograph has developed a best practice program to help drive reviews through product inserts.
3) Title
Titles are important for explaining the product you’re getting. It’s a balance of SEO optimization and calling out key features. The overwhelming majority of people purchase from Amazon on mobile, so we need to make sure the most important details are put in the first 80 characters before it gets cut off.
4) Price (or deals)
Price can have a major impact on conversion. A higher priced item relative to its peers tends to have a lower CTR. If your price is higher than your competitors, it's especially important to call out your value propositions on images! Discounts or coupon also improves CTR - bonus if you get a badge like the screenshots on this page.
Amazon calculates the price per unit - whether it be count, ounce, fluid oz, etc. so it’s important to make sure you set the units on the back end to be favorably comparable to your competitors (and don't just hope your customer will do the math).
5) Shipping Speed (Prime Badge)
People have an expectation that an Amazon package will arrive at their doorstep in 2 days or less. If an item doesn’t have that Prime badge that guarantees 2-day shipping, they may opt for a substitute product. Inventory management does drive ad costs! Badge (Bonus) We recently published a white paper about the impact of a Best Seller Badge (BSB).
It's tough to win a #1 spot in your category, but if you do, it can have a significant increase in CTR. Below is data from an experiment we measured on Best Seller Badges. This implies over 25% lower ad costs from the badge alone!
Ultimately, all operators on Amazon should constantly be asking themselves the simple question:
If my product square was put next to this other product square, would it get clicked some of the time? And what could I do to improve that performance?
These questions uncover the ultimate "consumer mindset" which determines if you can sustain a viable CTR on every target in your ads. Shoppers are looking at your square versus others - if your product square stacks up, you can turn that target into a long term acquisition source.
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