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SQP Insight for Content Manager

Author: Kadence Leung

 Last Update: 2026-05-03

 

Who This Guide Is For

You write and optimize Amazon listing copy — titles, bullet points, A+ content, and backend search terms. You make decisions about how to name products and which keywords to incorporate. This guide shows how SQP Insight gives you first-party data to replace guesswork with evidence.

 

The Core Problem SQP Solves for Content Teams

Most listing optimization relies on keyword tools that estimate search volume from click data — which can diverge significantly from Amazon's actual search counts. SQP Insight uses Amazon's first-party data, giving you the authoritative source on what shoppers are actually searching for.

More importantly, SQP goes beyond volume: it shows whether shoppers who find your listing through a given search term are clicking, adding to cart, and buying — or dropping off. This makes it a diagnostic tool, not just a keyword discovery tool.

 

Key Scenarios

Scenarios
How to find these
What to look for 

1. Audit Your Title and Copy Against Real Search Behavior

  • Confirm your listing uses the words shoppers actually type — not the words your product team uses internally.

     

 
  1. Open ASIN Analysis → click into the ASIN you want to audit
  2. Sort the Search Term list by Search Query Volume descending
  3. Compare the top 10–20 terms to your current title and bullet points
  4. Identify terms in the top search list that do not appear in your listing copy
 
 

 

An oregano oil product uses "oregano oil" in its title — but SQP shows "oil of oregano" gets 853K searches per week vs. 604K for "oregano oil". Same product, different word order, but Amazon indexes and ranks them separately. Swapping to the higher-volume phrasing in the title can meaningfully improve organic visibility.

Update title and bullet points to match the vocabulary shoppers use. How aggressively you target high-volume terms depends on your ASIN's maturity:

  • New ASIN: High-volume terms are highly competitive and hard to rank for. Start with niche keywords where your brand's Click Share or Purchase Share already exceeds the market average — these are terms shoppers are already choosing you for, and they're easier to win. Build organic rank there first.
  • Mature ASIN: Once your listing has established conversion history, shifting title keywords toward higher Search Query Volume terms is an effective way to expand reach and boost organic rank. Use Search Query Volume × Purchase Share to prioritize which terms deserve a spot in the title.

2. Benchmark Your Price Against Market Expectations

  • Consistently below-market ATC Rate or CVR on a high-impression, high-click ASIN

  •  

    When CTR is strong but ATC and CVR are weak, the detail page isn't closing the sale. Price is the most common culprit. 

 
  1. Open ASIN detail page → check Median Purchase Price (Market) for your top-volume search terms
  2. Compare to your current price
  3. If your price is significantly above the market median, shoppers are likely choosing lower-priced alternatives after landing on your page
 
 
 

 

Evaluate whether a price adjustment, bundle, or coupon changes the competitive position. Validate with a Custom Comparison after any pricing change.

 

3. Prioritize Which ASINs to Optimize First

  • Consistently below-market ATC Rate or CVR on a high-impression, high-click ASIN

  •  

    When CTR is strong but ATC and CVR are weak, the detail page isn't closing the sale. Price is the most common culprit. 

 

When you have a large catalog and limited bandwidth:

  1. Open ASIN Analysis → apply High Click, Low Cart filter
  2. These ASINs are attracting clicks (main image and title are working) but losing shoppers on the detail page — the content fix has the highest expected ROI because you already have qualified traffic
 
 
 

 

Avoid starting with Under-Exposed Top Performer ASINs for content work — their primary issue is visibility, not content quality. Increase ad bids first for those.

 

 

Key Metrics for Content Teams

Start with Purchase Share % (Brand) and Click Share % (Brand) — these are your strongest signals.

Metric

What to look for

Why it matters

Purchase Share % (Brand)

Terms where your brand's share is higher than average

You're already winning purchases on these terms — double down with stronger copy and keyword inclusion to protect and grow organic rank

Click Share % (Brand)

Terms where click share outperforms your impression share

Shoppers prefer your listing when they see it — improve visibility via keyword optimization and ad coverage

Search Query Volume

High-volume terms with low Purchase or Click Share

Size of the opportunity you're missing

Impression Share % (Brand)

Near-zero on high-volume terms

Listing isn't indexed or ranked for these terms — prioritize in title and bullets

CTR Delta

Negative = below-market click rate

Main image or title underperforming vs. competitors on this term

CVR Delta

Negative = below-market conversion rate

PDP content or pricing issue for shoppers arriving on this term

 

FAQ

Q: Should I write my listing titles around the keywords with the highest Search Query Volume?

A: It depends on how established your ASIN is. For new ASINs, high-volume terms are fiercely competitive — ranking for them organically takes time and authority you haven't built yet. Instead, use SQP to find niche terms where your Click Share or Purchase Share already beats the market average; these are your early wins, and they're where title optimization pays off fastest. For mature ASINs with a proven conversion history, incorporating higher Search Query Volume keywords into the title is an effective lever to expand visibility and climb organic rank. In both cases, pair volume with Market CVR — a high-volume term where nobody in the market converts well is a browse term, not a buying term.

Q: My ASIN has a high BSR in the category, but CTR and Purchase Share in SQP look average. Why?

A: BSR reflects aggregate sales across the full category. SQP metrics are scoped to individual search terms. A 15–20% Purchase Share on a specific keyword is already a strong result — it means your brand captures roughly one in five to six purchases from that specific search. BSR and keyword-level SQP metrics measure different things and won't always align.

Q: The Search Term Analysis view shows my CTR close to market average, but I know our product converts well. Why doesn't it show up?

A: Search Term Analysis aggregates performance across all ASINs (including variants) that interact with that term. If only one or two products convert well but others interact with the same keyword at lower rates, the store-level result gets pulled toward the market average. Open the ASIN detail page for your best-performing ASIN to see its isolated metrics — they will typically look quite different from the store-level summary.

Q: A search term has high Search Query Volume but my Impression Share is near zero. Does that mean my listing copy is missing that term?

A: It's a strong indicator, but not the only cause. Near-zero Impression Share can also mean your ads don't target that term, your organic ranking is very low, or the term is outside your product's relevance zone entirely. Check whether the term appears in your title, bullets, and backend fields first. If it does and Impression Share is still near zero, the issue is likely ad coverage or organic rank rather than copy.

Q: How long should I wait before measuring the impact of a content change?

A: Wait at least 2–3 complete weeks after a change before running a Custom Comparison. One week of data can be affected by external factors (promotions, competitor changes, demand fluctuations). Two to three weeks gives a more stable signal. For major changes like a title rewrite, 4 weeks is preferable to account for indexing lag. That said, the timeline also depends on your ad investment on the updated terms. If you're actively running campaigns on those keywords, SQP will pick up the impact faster as paid impressions accumulate quickly. If you're relying purely on organic — no ad coverage on the updated terms — it will take longer for Amazon to re-index and re-rank your listing, so expect a slower signal and extend your measurement window accordingly.

Q: Why does my CTR in SQP look much lower than in my ad reporting?

A: SQP captures impressions from all placements — paid and organic — including lower-ranked organic positions where shoppers rarely scroll. Ad reporting only tracks your campaigns, which run in high-visibility positions. The gap is structural, not a sign of a listing problem. Focus on CTR Delta (your CTR vs. market average) rather than the absolute CTR number.

 

 

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