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Sponsored Brands and Sponsored Display

Layer brand and display formats onto a Sponsored Products base that already converts.

Why these formats come later

Both Sponsored Brands and Sponsored Display require Brand Registry, so they arrive after your enrollment clears and after Sponsored Products is doing real work. That timing is a feature, not a delay. These formats spend upstream of the click that closes a sale, and upstream spend only pays back when the destination converts.

The prerequisite is the base covered in the earlier advertising guides: a Sponsored Products program that already turns clicks into orders at an efficiency you can defend. Layering upper-funnel budget onto a listing that does not convert does not fix the listing — it amplifies a leak by paying to send more traffic to it. Fix conversion first, then reach for reach.

Reach amplifies whatever it points at
If the detail page does not convert, more visibility buys more bounces, not more orders.

Sponsored Brands occupies upper-funnel real estate — the banner-style placements a shopper meets early, before they have chosen a product. Its job is discovery and recall: putting your brand and a set of products in front of people who are still deciding what to buy, not just which listing to click.

Because the format works early in the journey, judging it on last-click efficiency alone understates it. A shopper who first meets your brand through a Sponsored Brands placement may return later through an organic search or a Sponsored Products click and convert there. The brand impression did work that the closing click gets credited for.

Running Sponsored Brands
  • Group products that share a theme or use case, so the placement reads as a range.
  • Point traffic at a coherent destination rather than a single thin listing.
  • Lead with the products that already convert under Sponsored Products.
  • Test video creative as its own campaign — its placements and economics differ from the static banner.
  • Read its contribution alongside organic rank, not in isolation.

Sponsored Display works the other end of the funnel. It retargets shoppers who viewed a product but did not buy, following them with a reminder after they leave the page. It also defends your own detail page: competitor placements can appear on a listing you own, and a display campaign lets you occupy that space rather than cede it.

Retargeting and defense are different goals, so keep them in separate campaigns. Mixing them makes reporting dishonest, the same way mixing intents did in the earlier campaign-strategy guidance. Separate goals stay separately measurable.

Measuring upstream formats

Last-click efficiency is the wrong lens here, because these formats rarely win the last click — they set up the click someone else closes. Measure them on new-to-brand metrics and on total advertising cost of sales, which capture contribution across the funnel rather than crediting only the final touch.

1

Start from a converting base

Confirm Sponsored Products converts at a defensible efficiency before adding either format.

2

Isolate the goal

Give each campaign its own objective — reach, retargeting, or defense — so each stays readable.

3

Judge on brand-level signals

Weigh contribution by new-to-brand metrics and total advertising cost of sales, not by last-click return alone.

Upstream spend, downstream credit

A brand or display placement can be pulling its weight even when its own last-click return looks thin.

If total advertising cost of sales holds and organic rank improves while these formats run, they are usually earning their place, even when a last-click view would cut them. Read the whole funnel before you judge the top of it.

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