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Amazon PPC gets easier when each campaign has a job, each metric has a meaning, and each optimization decision follows a repeatable rule. This playbook is built for sellers who already run Sponsored Products ads and want a more disciplined system for budget allocation, auto campaign bid management, and weekly optimization inside SellerSprite.
Instead of treating every campaign the same, this guide separates ranking-focused exact match traffic from support traffic, shows how to review auto targets with simple thresholds, and turns PPC management into a weekly operating rhythm your team can actually sustain.
Best for: Sellers already running Sponsored Products campaigns, familiar with ACOS and CPC basics, and ready to optimize with a more structured workflow.
Not ideal for: Complete beginners setting up Amazon PPC for the first time.
New to PPC? Start with Amazon PPC Fundamentals: A Beginner-Friendly Course Guide (2026), then come back to this playbook once your campaigns are live.
Before you optimize anything, make sure your team uses the same metric definitions. Most PPC confusion starts when sellers mix a profitability metric, a growth metric, and a traffic metric into one decision.
Ready for the next step? Open the SellerSprite Academy course directory to continue building your Amazon FBA skills chapter by chapter.
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The short version is simple: exact match Sponsored Products campaigns usually deserve separate treatment because they concentrate spend on a specific keyword and often play a stronger ranking role than mixed discovery traffic. The goal is not to raise total spend blindly. The goal is to redistribute aggressiveness while keeping your blended account target grounded in profitability.
Break-even ACOS is your boundary line. If your contribution margin is about 30 percent, your break-even ACOS is roughly 30 percent. That does not mean every campaign should target 30 percent. It means you now know the edge of what your business can absorb.
Quick planning rule:
Break-even ACOS = contribution margin percentage after product cost, Amazon fees, shipping, prep, and other direct per-order costs.
For practical management, group your PPC activity into two buckets. This makes budget discussions, monthly review, and weekly action much cleaner.
Do not guess target ACOS in isolation. First look at how spending is actually distributed. If exact match takes 35 percent of spend and support campaigns take 65 percent, your ACOS plan should reflect that reality. The more you spend exactly, the closer its target may need to sit to your account average. The less spend it absorbs, the more room you may have to push it.
This example shows the type of before-and-after pattern sellers often want from an exact match reallocation strategy. The point is not the exact number. The point is the operating logic.
Works best when: the listing already converts reasonably well, inventory is stable, the target keyword is highly relevant, and your main issue is underexposure rather than poor conversion.
Can fail when: the listing is weak, the product has review or price problems, stock is unstable, or you push exact match before your keyword targeting is tight enough.
Auto campaigns should not be managed casually. They deserve the same rule-based discipline you would use for manual keyword or ASIN targeting. The key is to stop thinking of an auto campaign as one blended unit and start reviewing each targeting group as its own traffic source.
This workflow works because it forces a clean order of operations. First confirm there is enough data. Then remove obvious waste. Only after that should you model a bid change against the target ACOS.
This pattern is common when sellers finally stop managing auto campaigns as a single blended budget line.
Do not change bids when: impressions are too low, the date range is too short, inventory was unstable, the listing changed recently, or seasonality distorted the baseline.
Do change bids when: the target has enough traffic to judge, your margin assumptions are current, and the conversion pattern is strong enough to support a real decision.
Once you manage more than one or two ASINs, the problem is no longer knowing one optimization trick. The real problem is consistency. A weekly workflow gives your team the same review rhythm, the same threshold logic, and the same upload process every time.
A documented workflow reduces decision fatigue, keeps rule application consistent, and makes account handoffs less messy. It also frees more time for higher-value work like listing improvement, keyword mapping, and launch planning.
If you are also working on missed keyword coverage, pair this workflow with Competitor Keyword Gap Analysis: Finding Missed Opportunities so your PPC decisions and keyword expansion strategy stay connected.
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No. Exact match deserves separate review, not automatic protection. A higher ACOS target only makes sense when the keyword is strategically important, the listing converts well, and your blended account economics can support the push.
Weekly review works well for most active accounts. In slower categories, a 30 to 60-day data window can still be the basis for the decision, even if you check the account every week.
That can happen when ads are supporting keyword rank and organic growth. Do not ignore ACOS, but do not read it in isolation. Check whether the campaign is strategic, whether organic sales are rising, and whether the keyword matters enough to justify the spend.
Leave it alone when impressions, clicks, or orders are too low for a reliable read, or when recent stock issues, listing edits, or seasonality make the data unstable.
Not always. In many cases, moving them to a defensive bid is more useful than pausing them outright. That keeps optional discovery alive at lower risk while you keep control of wasted spend.
Look for a pattern where exact campaigns have strong conversion quality, low impression share relative to your priority keywords, and a smaller spend share than their strategic importance would suggest.
Yes, but launch-stage tolerance is usually different. Many sellers can justify a temporarily higher ACOS during launch as long as margins, inventory, and ranking goals are clear before the push begins.
This framework is built for active Sponsored Products advertisers who already review Amazon Ads data regularly. The operating logic combines break-even ACOS planning, campaign-role segmentation, target-level auto campaign review, and weekly PPC workflow discipline inside SellerSprite.
The semi-anonymized examples in this article are simplified operating snapshots designed to show decision logic clearly. They are not a promise that every account will respond the same way. Results depend on margin structure, category pressure, listing quality, inventory position, review profile, and the relevance of the keywords you choose to push.
Before applying any bid or budget rule, confirm your contribution margin, launch stage, and inventory reality. Good PPC optimization is never just a spreadsheet exercise. It is a business decision tied to your unit economics and your growth goal.
SellerSprite Success Team. SellerSprite publishes practical playbooks for Amazon sellers who want clearer decisions across product research, keyword strategy, listing optimization, and PPC management. Our content focuses on turning noisy marketplace data into workflows that are easier to execute at the ASIN level and at the account level.
For PPC topics, we prioritize frameworks that are operational, measurable, and easy to audit later. That means fewer vague tips, more threshold-based decisions, and more emphasis on how budget allocation, search term quality, and weekly process design work together.
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