Amazon PPC
Amazon Portfolio Bidding Strategy Guide
Global bid changes often create hidden conflicts: defense terms lose coverage, growth terms stall, and high-margin products get overbid. A portfolio-layered bidding system fixes this by assigning different bid logic to different business goals.
Define bid ranges by portfolio objective
- Defense layer: branded and high-conversion terms with low bid volatility to protect ranking stability.
- Growth layer: discovery and expansion terms with wider bid flexibility but strict stop-loss boundaries.
- Profit layer: high-margin SKU campaigns where contribution margin quality overrides traffic volume.
Turn bid edits into a fixed operating cadence
- Weekly baseline reset: calibrate starting bids using search-term quality and conversion rate.
- 48-hour micro-adjustments: apply 5%-10% changes only when minimum click samples are met.
- Trigger-based protection: auto-reduce bids when ACOS remains above thresholds.
- Promotion windows: use temporary bid multipliers and roll back after campaign events.
Sync bids with budget rules to avoid throttling
- When efficient terms scale and hit budget limits, pair bid increases with budget-rule expansions.
- Confirm inventory cover before aggressive bid scaling to avoid stockout-driven inefficiency.
- Use the dayparting workflow to concentrate stronger bids in higher-conversion windows.
Metrics that validate bidding quality
- CPC growth should stay below order-growth velocity.
- Budget-limited pressure should align with intended portfolio priority.
- TACOS and net-margin quality should improve together.
- Recheck break-even ACOS weekly with the profit calculator.
Takeaway
Effective Amazon bidding is not universal up/down edits. It is layered control where each portfolio serves a distinct goal, enabling budget rules, dayparting, and term optimization to compound instead of conflict.