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You absolutely must have your products on Amazon. Not doing so guarantees missing out on millions of potential customers.
Amazon Advertising: What You Need to Know in 2019
Shopping cart platforms serve as the foundation on which you will build, structure, and manage your online store. You can compare them to how important physical location and layout are for a brick-and-mortar store.
Once approved to participate in Google Shopping Actions, you’ll need to create a product data feed. This is virtually seamless if you’re already utilizing Google Shopping, as you can use your existing product data for Shopping ads. In fact, all of your existing Google Shopping products will be opted in by default—unless you manually exclude those products, which we’ll get to.
A lot goes into creating successful Google Shopping campaigns. It's easy to get caught up with campaign details that have high optimization caps, only to overlook important campaign elements that bottleneck performance if left ignored.
Using Negative Keywords in Google Shopping Campaigns
Amazon and eBay may seem similar at first glance, but their selling strategies couldn’t be more different. While Amazon prioritizes products and the Buy Box, eBay puts sellers in the spotlight. So, how do you optimize your listings, pricing, and marketing to succeed on both? In this guide, we break down the key differences and winning tactics to maximize your sales on each platform. Whether you’re an experienced seller or just getting started, these insights could make all the difference. Let’s dive in.
Google's AI Overview increasingly pulls from YouTube over traditional product pages, with video citations up 310% since the start of 2024. Learn why retail search visibility now depends on video content, and how to adapt your SEO strategy.