At a glance
The search terms containing your brand name that shoppers actually type on Amazon, ranked by volume. These are demand signals: people already looking for you by name. Branded search is the cheapest, highest-converting traffic on Amazon, so this card tells an owner or marketing lead how strong brand pull is, whether competitors are bidding on your name, and which branded queries deserve defensive Sponsored Brands coverage. It draws on Amazon Brand Analytics search-term data, available to Brand Registry sellers.
| What it counts | The top customer search terms that include your brand name (or close variants), ranked by search frequency for the period. Sourced from Amazon’s Brand Analytics search-term reporting. |
| Branded vs non-branded | ”Branded” means the query contains your brand name or a recognisable variant. The non-branded counterpart, discovery queries that do not name you, is Top Non-Branded Search Terms. |
| Why it matters | Branded search converts far better than cold discovery because intent is already high. Rising branded volume means brand awareness is growing; falling volume can signal a brand-health problem before revenue shows it. |
| Defensive advertising | Competitors can bid on your branded terms. If a rival’s ad sits above your organic result on your own brand query, you lose sales you should own. This card is the input for deciding which branded terms to defend with Sponsored Brands. |
| Data source caveat | Requires Amazon Brand Registry. Brand Analytics provides aggregated search-term data, not exact per-shopper figures, and there is a reporting lag. |
| Chart | Horizontal bar, ranked by search volume. |
| Unit | Number (search frequency / rank). |
| Time window | 30D. |
| Alert trigger | None. Context and trend card. |
| Roles | owner, marketing |
Calculation
Calculated automatically from your Amazon Seller Central 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 UK skincare brand, “Lumora” (illustrative), enrolled in Brand Registry. Period: 01 Apr 26 to 30 Apr 26 (30D).| Rank | Branded search term | Relative volume | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | lumora | High | Core brand query |
| 2 | lumora vitamin c serum | High | Brand + hero product |
| 3 | lumora moisturiser | Medium | Brand + category |
| 4 | lumora retinol | Medium | Brand + ingredient |
| 5 | lumora skincare set | Lower | Brand + bundle intent |
- The hero product owns most branded intent. “lumora vitamin c serum” is nearly as searched as the bare brand name, which tells you the serum is the gateway product driving brand searches. Protect its Buy Box and stock cover hard; a stockout here suppresses branded demand for the whole brand.
- Defend the brand name first. If a competitor is running Sponsored Products on “lumora”, shoppers searching for you see a rival above your listing. A modest Sponsored Brands campaign on your own branded terms is cheap insurance, branded queries convert well and keep ad cost low. Use Search Query Share (Brand) to see how much of branded search you actually win.
- Branded volume is a brand-health leading indicator. A sustained fall in branded search often precedes a revenue fall, because it means fewer people are seeking you out. Watch the trend, not just the snapshot, and read it alongside Review Velocity (30d) and Star Rating Drift (top-50 revenue) for the wider brand picture.
Sibling cards merchants should reference together
Branded search is one half of the search picture. Read it with:| Card | Why pair it with Top Branded Search Terms |
|---|---|
| Top Non-Branded Search Terms | The discovery half. Branded is demand you have; non-branded is demand you are competing for. Together they show the full search funnel. |
| Search Query Share (Brand) | How much of your branded search you actually capture. High branded volume but low share means competitors are stealing your own-name traffic. |
| Organic vs Ad Sales Share | Tells you whether branded traffic is converting organically or being paid for through defensive ads. |
| Top ASINs by Revenue | The hero products driving branded search are usually your top-revenue ASINs. Protect them on Buy Box and stock. |
| Review Velocity (30d) | Rising reviews and rising branded search usually move together as brand momentum builds. |
Reconciling against Amazon Seller Central
Where to look in Seller Central: The closest Amazon-native view is:Seller Central → Brands → Brand Analytics → Amazon Search Terms (and the Search Query Performance dashboard for brand-level query data). Filter or search for terms containing your brand name to isolate the branded subset.Brand Analytics reports aggregated search-term rankings and metrics. This card lifts the branded subset and ranks it. The exact volumes Amazon shows are relative and aggregated, not raw shopper counts. Timing and reporting-lag table:
| Topic | Detail |
|---|---|
| Data lag | Brand Analytics search-term data is published on Amazon’s own schedule, typically with a reporting lag of days to a week or more depending on the report. This card reflects the most recent published data, not real-time search. |
| Aggregation | Amazon publishes relative metrics and ranks, not exact per-shopper search counts. The card preserves that relative shape. |
| Brand Registry required | Branded search-term data is only available to Brand Registry sellers. Without enrolment, this card has no source data. |
| Term matching | ”Branded” is determined by whether the term contains the brand name or a recognisable variant; unusual misspellings may not be captured as branded. |
| Reason | Direction | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Report period alignment | Edge differences | Brand Analytics reports come in weekly or other fixed windows; a 30D card window may not line up exactly with Amazon’s report boundaries. |
| Branded-term classification | Minor differences | Which terms count as “branded” depends on matching the brand name. Variant spellings or co-mingled terms can be classified differently. |
| Aggregation method | Relative, not absolute | Amazon’s figures are aggregated and relative; do not expect exact-count parity, expect the same ranking shape. |
| Card | Expected relationship | What causes legitimate divergence |
|---|---|---|
| Branded search on Google Search Console / GA4 | Correlated brand demand, different surface. Rising branded search on Amazon and on Google often move together as overall brand awareness grows, but the absolute figures are not comparable. | Off-Amazon marketing lifts Google branded search first and Amazon branded search shortly after; the two are related signals, not a reconciliation. |