Skip to main content
Card class: Cross-ChannelCategory: Catalogue Health
ASINs whose price, title or image diverge from your DTC siblings. Brand consistency, MAP and SEO impact.

At a glance

Where your Amazon listing has drifted away from how the same product is presented on your own (DTC) store. The card matches Amazon ASINs to their DTC siblings by GTIN / EAN / SKU and flags the ones where price, title, or image materially diverge. Drift is rarely deliberate: it is usually a stale Amazon listing, a DTC reprice that never reached Amazon, or a third party editing your detail page. The cost shows up as brand inconsistency, MAP-policy exposure, lost cross-channel SEO equity, and customer confusion when a buyer sees one price on Amazon and another on your site.
What it countsThe number of ASINs whose price, title, or main image differs from the matched DTC product by more than the configured drift threshold (default around 20% on price, plus title / image mismatch flags). SKUs are matched by GTIN / EAN / SKU where available, falling back to exact title-and-brand match.
Price driftFlags when the Amazon selling price and the DTC price diverge beyond the threshold, in either direction. Under-pricing on Amazon invites arbitrage; over-pricing loses sales and confuses buyers who comparison-shop.
Title / image driftFlags when the Amazon title or main image no longer matches the DTC canonical content, often because a third party edited the detail page or because DTC was rebranded and Amazon was not updated.
MAP exposureIf you are a brand with a Minimum Advertised Price policy (or you sell brands that impose one), drift below the floor on Amazon is a MAP-violation candidate that resellers and brand owners actively monitor.
SEO / brand impactInconsistent titles and images split brand recognition across channels and weaken the cross-channel content equity that helps customers trust the brand wherever they find it.
FBA vs FBMFulfilment method is irrelevant to drift; the card compares displayed content and price regardless of how the ASIN is fulfilled.
MatchingGTIN / EAN / SKU is the gold standard. Title-and-brand fallback can produce occasional false matches; workspace settings allow GTIN-only matching for higher precision.
Time window30D (rolling). The card refreshes regularly and surfaces ASINs that have drifted at any point in the window, so a transient reprice is still caught.
Alert trigger>10 ASINs drifting >20%
Rolesowner, marketing

Calculation

Calculated automatically from your Amazon Seller Central and DTC data. See the At a glance summary above for what the metric tracks and the worked example below for a typical reading.

Worked example

A skincare brand running Amazon UK alongside a Shopify DTC store on a shared 600-SKU catalogue. Snapshot 28 Apr 26. All numbers illustrative.
SKUAmazon priceDTC pricePrice driftTitle / imageLikely cause
Vitamin C serum 30ml£18.00£28.00-35.7%MatchAmazon listing never updated after DTC price rise
Night cream 50ml£32.00£30.00+6.7%MatchBelow threshold, no flag
Cleanser 200ml£12.00£19.00-36.8%MatchOld Amazon promo never reverted
Eye gel 15ml£24.00£24.000%Image differsThird party changed the main image
SPF moisturiser 50ml£40.00£26.00+53.8%Title differsStale Amazon title + price after DTC repositioning
ASINs flagged (>20% or content mismatch)4 flagged
Five things to notice:
  1. Two ASINs are under-priced on Amazon, which is the dangerous direction. The serum and the cleanser sit 35 to 37% below DTC. Buyers who comparison-shop will buy on Amazon, eroding your DTC margin, and arbitrageurs can buy your Amazon stock to resell. Under-pricing on Amazon is usually a stale listing, not a strategy.
  2. One ASIN is over-priced on Amazon and quietly losing sales. The SPF moisturiser is 54% above DTC. Amazon shoppers see it as expensive and skip it; the Buy Box and conversion both suffer. This is a stale Amazon price that was never brought down after a DTC repositioning.
  3. The image-mismatch row is a hijack signal. Eye gel has identical pricing but a changed main image. On a brand-registered ASIN, an unexpected image edit often means a third party touched your detail page. Investigate and, if you are Brand Registry enrolled, report it.
  4. The night cream is correctly not flagged. A 6.7% gap is below the 20% threshold and is normal channel variation. The card deliberately ignores small, intentional differences so the worklist stays meaningful.
  5. Four flagged ASINs is below the alert. The >10 ASINs drifting >20% threshold has not fired, but the under-priced serum and cleanser are high-velocity, so they still deserve a same-week fix. Sort by velocity, not just by drift size.

Sibling cards merchants should reference together

Drift is a symptom; these cards give it consequence and context:
CardWhy pair it with Catalogue Drift vs DTC
Catalogue Drift Revenue at RiskTurns the count of drifting ASINs into a pounds-at-risk figure so you can prioritise.
MAP Violation Risk (vs DTC)The compliance lens: which drifts cross a MAP floor and create brand-policy exposure.
Channel Mix (Amazon vs DTC)Context for whether drift is shifting demand between your channels.
Brand Registry CoverageBrand-registered ASINs are protected against unauthorised content edits; gaps here explain image / title drift.
Top ASINs by RevenueIdentifies which drifting ASINs matter most so you fix the high-velocity ones first.
Amazon Share of Total RevenueThe portfolio backdrop: how much of your business the drifting channel represents.

Reconciling against Amazon Seller Central

Where to look on the Amazon side:
Seller Central → Inventory → Manage Inventory (or Manage All Inventory). Shows the current Amazon selling price per ASIN. For title and image, open the live detail page or the listing in Manage Inventory → Edit.
Amazon alone cannot show drift versus your DTC store; this is a Vortex IQ cross-channel composite. To reconcile by hand, pull the Amazon price / title / image from Manage Inventory and the DTC equivalent from your store admin per SKU. Where to look on the DTC side:
Your storefront admin (for example Shopify → Products) for the canonical DTC price, title, and image.
Timing, settlement, and reporting-lag table:
TopicDetail
TimezoneBoth sides are point-in-time snapshots; there is no order-window timezone effect. The card refreshes on its regular scan cadence.
Buy Box price vs your priceIf you do not hold the Buy Box, the publicly displayed Amazon price may be a competitor’s. The card compares against the displayed (Buy Box) price by default; a workspace toggle lets you compare against your own offer price.
Scan cadenceBoth Amazon and DTC content are scanned regularly; an intraday reprice can lag the card until the next scan.
SKU-match rebuildThe matching index (GTIN / EAN / SKU, fallback title-and-brand) rebuilds periodically. New SKUs added to either side appear in the comparison after the next rebuild.
Why our number may legitimately differ from a manual cross-channel audit:
ReasonDirectionWhy
SKU-match imperfectionsEitherTitle-and-brand fallback can produce false positives or negatives. Enforce GTIN-only matching for higher precision at the cost of coverage.
Buy Box vs own priceEitherIf you are not the Buy Box winner, the displayed Amazon price is someone else’s; toggle to compare against your own price.
Promo / sale timingEitherA short DTC flash sale creates transient drift the 30D window may or may not surface depending on duration.
Scan latencyUp to a refresh cycleIntraday price or content edits lag the card until the next scan.
Cross-connector reconciliation against other connectors the same seller may run:
CardExpected relationshipWhat causes legitimate divergence
shopify.total_revenueIf the DTC store is Shopify, its product data is the canonical source for this comparison. Treat DTC as the source of truth and align Amazon to it.Shopify variants and Amazon child ASINs do not always map one-to-one; bundle and multipack SKUs can mismatch.
ebay.catalogue-drift-vs-amazonSister composite. That card compares eBay vs Amazon; this one compares Amazon vs DTC. A multi-channel seller should run all the drift cards to keep pricing consistent everywhere.Each pairs different channels, so the flagged-SKU sets differ. A SKU can drift on one pair but not another.

Known limitations / merchant FAQs

What is the right drift threshold for my business? The default is around 20% on price. Tune it lower if you are a MAP-policy brand where small drifts are violations, or higher if you intentionally run different prices per channel. The threshold is workspace-configurable. Drift goes both ways, which direction is worse? Under-pricing on Amazon (Amazon cheaper than DTC) is usually the bigger risk: it cannibalises your higher-margin DTC sales and invites arbitrage. Over-pricing on Amazon quietly loses sales and Buy Box. Both are worth fixing; prioritise under-priced high-velocity ASINs first. The card flagged an image change I did not make. What does that mean? On a brand-registered ASIN, an unexpected title or image change usually means a third party edited your detail page or a parent-child relationship changed. If you are enrolled in Brand Registry, report it; otherwise open a case with Seller Support. Check Brand Registry Coverage to see whether the ASIN is protected. My Amazon price looks wrong because I am not winning the Buy Box. Is that the card’s fault? The card compares against the displayed (Buy Box) price by default, which may be a competitor’s offer if you are not winning. Toggle the workspace setting to compare against your own offer price for a cleaner read. Does FBA versus FBM affect drift detection? No. Drift is about displayed price and content, not fulfilment method. Both FBA and FBM listings are compared the same way. Action playbook when this card alerts (>10 ASINs drifting >20%):
  1. Sort flagged ASINs by velocity descending, fix the high-velocity ones first.
  2. For each price drift, decide the canonical price (usually DTC) and reprice the other channel to match.
  3. For each title / image mismatch on a brand-registered ASIN, report the unauthorised change and restore canonical content.
  4. If you are a MAP-policy brand or reseller, route below-floor drifts to the brand-management team via MAP Violation Risk (vs DTC).
  5. Add this card as a regularly-checked dashboard tile so new drift is caught within a scan cycle.

Tracked live in Vortex IQ Nerve Centre

Catalogue Drift vs DTC is one of hundreds of KPI pulses Vortex IQ tracks across Amazon Seller Central and 70+ other ecommerce connectors. Nerve Centre runs the detection layer; Vortex Mind investigates the cause when something moves; Ask Viq lets you interrogate any number in plain English. Start for free or book a demo to see this metric running on your own data.