Amazon Success
How the Right Amazon Keywords Can Turn Your Listing Into a Bestseller
June 8, 2026 · 8 min read · TagReveal Editorial
Amazon is the world's largest product search engine. Every day, hundreds of millions of buyers search for products on Amazon — and the listings that appear on page one capture the vast majority of those sales. The difference between a product that sells thousands of units per month and one that sits on page ten with no sales? Keywords.
This guide explains how strategic Amazon keyword research — using tools like TagReveal — can transform your listing from invisible to bestseller.
The Amazon A9 Algorithm and Why Keywords Drive It
Amazon's search algorithm — called A9 — has one goal: show buyers the products most likely to result in a purchase. It determines relevance primarily through keywords. When a buyer searches "wireless earbuds for running waterproof", Amazon scans every listing for those exact words. Listings that contain them rank higher. Listings that don't are invisible.
This means your product's quality, your photos, and your price all matter — but none of it matters if buyers can never find your listing in the first place. Keywords are the gateway to everything else.
Where Amazon Reads Keywords
Amazon indexes keywords from five places:
- Product title — most important. Your primary keyword must appear here.
- Bullet points — five bullet points, each an opportunity to include important keywords naturally.
- Product description — longer form, reinforces keyword relevance.
- Backend search terms — hidden from buyers, up to 250 bytes of additional keywords.
- Subject matter fields — category-specific fields in Seller Central.
Most sellers only think about the title. The sellers who dominate their category optimise all five.
How TagReveal Reveals Competitor Keyword Strategies
The fastest path to a page-one ranking is to learn from products already there. TagReveal lets you paste any Amazon product URL and instantly see the keyword strategy embedded in that listing. The tool detects the product category — electronics, kitchen, fashion, health, baby — and generates relevant keyword sets including:
- Primary buyer-intent keywords (what people search when ready to buy)
- Long-tail keywords (specific phrases with less competition and higher conversion)
- Related keywords (supporting terms that broaden your listing's reach)
Example: For a silicone baby feeding set, TagReveal generates keywords like "baby led weaning set", "silicone bowl suction cup baby", "BPA free baby feeding supplies", "baby shower gift registry amazon" — real searches that ready-to-buy parents type every day.
The Page One Strategy
Getting to page one of Amazon search is a process, not an event. Here is the strategy that works:
Phase 1 — Target low competition long-tail keywords first
New listings cannot immediately rank for broad keywords like "wireless earbuds" — there is too much competition. Instead, target specific long-tail keywords like "wireless earbuds for small ears women running" where competition is lower and intent is higher. Use TagReveal to find these specific phrases from top listings in your niche.
Phase 2 — Generate initial sales velocity
Amazon's algorithm rewards listings that sell. Early sales — even at a slight discount or through promotions — tell Amazon that buyers want your product, which causes Amazon to show it to more buyers. This creates an upward spiral.
Phase 3 — Expand to broader keywords as reviews accumulate
Once you have 20-50 reviews and a sales history, begin targeting broader, higher-volume keywords. Your conversion rate will have been proven, making Amazon more willing to show you for competitive terms.
Phase 4 — Optimise backend search terms
Use TagReveal on your top 5 competitors and collect every keyword you find. Load the best ones into your backend search terms field — 250 bytes of hidden keyword power that competitors cannot see or copy.
🏆 The bestseller formula: Right keywords + competitive price + quality photos + strong reviews = page one ranking. Keywords come first because without them, no one ever sees your product to buy it. Start with TagReveal today.
📚 Related guides on TagReveal:
The Page One Mindset — Why Position Determines Everything
Data from multiple Amazon seller research studies consistently shows that products on page one of Amazon search results receive approximately 70-80% of all clicks for that search. Page two receives around 10-15%. Everything beyond page two receives the remaining scraps. This dramatic attention cliff makes page one ranking not just desirable but essentially necessary for sustainable Amazon sales.
The implication is clear: a product that ranks on page one for a moderate-volume keyword will consistently outsell a product with better reviews and pricing that ranks on page three for a high-volume keyword. Position multiplies everything else — your photos, your price, your reviews, your copy. Without position, none of those other elements get seen.
Keyword Placement — Where and How Amazon Reads Your Listing
Amazon's algorithm does not treat all keyword placements equally. Understanding the hierarchy of keyword placement allows you to maximise your relevance signals strategically:
Product Title — Maximum Weight
Your product title carries the most weight in Amazon's ranking algorithm. Keywords in your title generate more relevance signal than the same keywords anywhere else in your listing. The first 80 characters of your title are most important because they appear in search results — after that, the title is truncated on most devices.
A well-structured Amazon title format for most categories: [Brand] + [Main Keyword] + [Key Feature] + [Secondary Feature] + [Quantity/Size] + [Colour/Variant]. Not every element applies to every product, but this framework ensures you include your most important keyword early in the title.
Bullet Points — High Weight, Reader-Focused
Your five bullet points serve a dual purpose: they communicate value to potential buyers AND they provide keyword signals to Amazon's algorithm. The first sentence of each bullet receives more algorithmic weight than subsequent sentences. Use this structure: lead each bullet with your secondary keyword phrase, then follow with the feature/benefit explanation in natural language.
Product Description — Moderate Weight
The product description is read more by Amazon's algorithm for context and confirmation than as a primary keyword signal. Use it to include long-tail keyword variations naturally within readable prose. If you have A+ Content access (Brand Registry), the description is replaced by visual content modules — which have different SEO implications.
Backend Search Terms — Lower Weight, Strategic Value
Backend search terms give you 249 bytes of hidden keyword space that competitors cannot see or analyse. This is your opportunity to include: common misspellings of your product name, foreign language equivalents if relevant, competitor product names (allowed by Amazon), and keyword variations that do not fit naturally in your visible listing content.
The New Listing Launch Strategy — Getting Your First Keywords to Rank
New Amazon listings face a fundamental challenge: they have no sales history, no reviews, and no ranking — which means they get little organic visibility, which means few sales, which means no ranking improvement. Breaking this cycle requires a deliberate launch strategy.
Phase 1 — Target low-competition long-tail keywords first (Days 1-30)
New listings can rank quickly for very specific, low-competition long-tail keywords because there are few established competitors optimised for those exact phrases. Use TagReveal and Amazon autocomplete to identify 5-10 highly specific long-tail keywords where the current top results have fewer than 100 reviews. Focus your title and PPC budget entirely on these terms initially.
Phase 2 — Build sales velocity with PPC (Days 1-60)
Run automatic PPC campaigns from day one at a break-even or slightly negative ACoS (Advertising Cost of Sale). The goal at launch is not profit — it is sales velocity. Amazon's algorithm heavily weights recent sales history, and every PPC-generated sale contributes to your organic ranking momentum. Review Search Term Reports weekly and add high-converting terms as manual exact-match keywords.
Phase 3 — Harvest and expand (Days 60-90)
After 60 days you have meaningful PPC data. Your Search Term Reports show which keywords are converting buyers. Migrate your top 10-20 converting search terms to manual campaigns with higher bids. Add poor performers as negative keywords. Begin targeting slightly broader keywords as your listing accumulates reviews and sales history.
Phase 4 — Competitive keywords (Days 90+)
With 30+ reviews and a proven sales history, your listing has the authority to compete for more competitive keywords. Gradually introduce medium-competition keywords into your title and campaigns. Monitor organic rank weekly and continue optimising based on performance data.
Reviewing and Updating Your Keywords Regularly
Keyword optimisation is not a one-time event. The Amazon search landscape shifts constantly as new competitors enter, seasonal trends change, and buyer language evolves. A quarterly keyword audit is the minimum recommended frequency for active listings:
- Check your Search Term Report for new high-converting terms that you are not yet targeting in your title
- Use TagReveal to analyse new bestsellers that have entered your category since your last audit
- Review your backend search terms and replace any poor performers with freshly researched alternatives
- Check seasonal keyword opportunity — are there holiday or event-specific terms you should add temporarily?
🏆 The single best thing you can do right now: Find the #1 bestselling product in your Amazon category. Paste its URL into TagReveal. Compare the keywords it targets with the keywords in your own listing. The gaps you find are your ranking opportunities. Fill them and watch your ranking improve.
TR
TagReveal Editorial Team
Keyword Research Specialists
The TagReveal team has analysed thousands of top-ranking product listings and videos across Amazon, Etsy, and YouTube to understand exactly which keywords drive real sales and views. Our guides are based on data from bestselling listings — not guesswork.
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