Web-based software suite to start & grow your Amazon business
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A SaaS platform for global voice of customer and product research
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Selecting the right keywords is the fastest way to improve Amazon SEO, increase qualified impressions, and grow sales without wasting ad spend. This guide shows a repeatable, step-by-step keyword selection workflow using the SellerSprite keyword research tool, with practical thresholds, mini examples, and a clean way to build an Amazon keyword list you can reuse across listings and ads.
Keyword selection is not one-size-fits-all. The right keywords depend on what you are trying to achieve right now. Define your goal first, then choose the keyword type that matches the job.
A right keyword is a keyword you can win and monetize. Use these four checks before you add any keyword to your Amazon keyword list.
Seed keywords are the starting point for keyword research for Amazon. Your job is to collect a wide pool first, then filter hard in Step 2.
Open Keyword Research
This is where keyword selection becomes objective. Filters turn a messy keyword dump into a shortlist you can actually win.
Use these as starting points, then adjust for your category and budget. If you are exploring a trending niche, a common shortcut is to look for strong recent demand, such as Search Volume in the past 3 months above 10,000 and 3-month growth above 10 percent. For ranking keywords on a new listing, prioritize relevance and winnable SPR first.
Suppose you sell a premium non-slip yoga mat. Start with "yoga mat" as your seed keyword, then filter for long-tail phrases that match your product spec, such as thickness, material, and use case. Your first launch shortlist might include terms like "extra thick yoga mat non slip" or "non slip yoga mat for hot yoga" because they are more specific and usually convert better.
If you sell a floating wall shelf, start with "wall shelf" and expand with modifiers that change intent: room, mounting type, load capacity, and style. Then use No. of Listings and SPR to find winnable long-tail keywords like "floating wall shelf for bathroom" or "rustic floating shelves set of 2" that match your exact offer.
Keyword selection only works if you can reuse it. Your goal is one master Amazon keyword list that you update every week or two, not scattered spreadsheets and screenshots.
Open My Keyword List
The goal is not keyword stuffing. The goal is clean coverage: your listing reads naturally, and Amazon can clearly understand what you sell.
GEO matters. A keyword can be strong in Amazon US and weak in Amazon UK, or the intent can change across languages in Amazon Europe. Always choose the marketplace first in SellerSprite, then run keyword research inside that marketplace.
Join the SellerSprite community on the Facebook Group to share your sourcing journey, ask questions, and get support from fellow Amazon sellers.
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Start with 5 long-tail keywords for your initial ranking plan, then expand in batches of 5. For listing optimization, keep one master list, but only promote a small set to the title and top bullets to protect readability.
A simple cadence is every 1 to 2 weeks during launch and every 2 to 4 weeks once stable. Update faster if you change price, main image, or if the market shifts.
Long-tail keywords are usually better at the beginning because they are more specific and often more winnable. Once you build relevance and conversion history, expand into mid-tail and short-tail terms.
SPR is a SellerSprite metric that estimates how many natural sales are needed within a short time window to keep a keyword ranking on page 1. Lower SPR generally means the keyword is easier to sustain, which is especially important for new listings.
Do not copy blindly. Run separate keyword research for each marketplace and language, because search volume, competition, and buyer phrasing vary by country.
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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