Your Amazon PPC campaigns are only as good as the keywords behind them. Bid on the wrong terms and you burn budget; find the right ones and your ads convert at a profit. This guide walks through how to do Amazon PPC keyword research properly, where to find keywords, how to judge them, and how to turn research into a campaign structure that performs.
Quick Answer
Amazon PPC keyword research means finding the search terms shoppers use to buy products like yours, then judging each by relevance, search volume, and competition. Pull keywords from your listing, competitors, keyword tools, and your own automatic campaign data, then prioritize the relevant, high-intent terms to bid on.
Key Takeaways
- Relevance matters more than raw search volume.
- Your automatic campaigns are a goldmine of proven keywords.
- Use multiple sources, not just one keyword tool.
- High-intent, specific terms often convert best.
- Research feeds both your campaigns and your listing.
Table of Contents
- Where to Find Keywords
- Mining Your Auto Campaigns
- How to Judge a Keyword
- Why Intent Beats Volume
- Turning Research Into Campaigns
- FAQs
Where to Find PPC Keywords
Good research pulls from several sources, not one. The main ones:
- Your own listing, the terms you already target.
- Competitor listings, the words they rank and advertise for.
- Keyword tools like Helium 10 or Jungle Scout, which show search volume and related terms.
- Amazon’s own search bar, whose autocomplete suggestions reveal real shopper phrasing.
- Your automatic campaign data, the single best source, covered next.
Mining Your Automatic Campaigns
If you are already running ads, your automatic campaigns are doing keyword research for you. Amazon shows your product for searches it thinks are relevant, and the search term report tells you exactly which of those led to sales. Those proven converting terms are the highest-confidence keywords you can find, because they have already worked for your specific product. Pull them and move them into manual campaigns for tighter control. The full method is in our guide on manual campaigns.
How to Judge a Keyword
Not every keyword is worth bidding on. Judge each by three things:
| Factor | Question to Ask |
|---|---|
| Relevance | Does my product genuinely match this search? |
| Search volume | Do enough people search this to matter? |
| Competition | Can I compete here at a sensible bid? |
Relevance comes first. A high-volume keyword that does not truly match your product brings clicks that never convert, which wastes budget and can even hurt your organic ranking.
Why Intent Beats Raw Volume
A broad term like “headphones” has huge volume but vague intent, the searcher could want anything. A specific term like “wireless running headphones waterproof” has less volume but clear intent, and someone searching it is closer to buying exactly your product. These specific, high-intent keywords often convert far better and cost less, because fewer advertisers chase them. Do not be seduced by big volume alone.
Turning Research Into Campaigns
Once you have your keyword list, organize it. Put your proven, high-intent terms into exact-match campaigns with deliberate bids. Use phrase and broad match, or auto campaigns, to keep discovering new terms. And feed your best keywords back into your listing copy and backend, since the same research powers both your ads and your organic ranking.
If thorough keyword research across a full catalog is more than you have time for, that is what we do. Our Amazon PPC management service handles research and campaign building, and you can see the results on our client results page.
Related Reading
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I do Amazon PPC keyword research?
Find the terms shoppers use by pulling from your listing, competitors, keyword tools, Amazon’s search bar, and especially your automatic campaign data. Then judge each keyword by relevance, search volume, and competition, and prioritize the relevant, high-intent terms.
What’s the best source of PPC keywords?
Your own automatic campaign search term report, because it shows the exact searches that already led to sales for your product. Those proven terms are the highest-confidence keywords you can find.
Should I target high-volume keywords?
Not automatically. High-volume terms are often broad, expensive, and less targeted. Specific, high-intent keywords usually convert better at a lower cost, even with less search volume. Prioritize relevance and intent over raw volume.
Which keyword tools should I use?
Tools like Helium 10 and Jungle Scout are popular for search volume and related terms. They are useful, but combine them with your own automatic campaign data and Amazon’s autocomplete, since real conversion data beats estimated volume.
Do PPC keywords help my organic ranking?
Indirectly, yes. The converting keywords you discover through PPC should go into your listing copy and backend terms, which supports organic ranking. The same research powers both your ads and your organic visibility.
Written by the AMZ Scaler Team
Amazon advertising and listing specialists with 5+ years managing PPC and listing optimization for brands across the US, UK, and Canada. We publish what we apply in real seller accounts every day.
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