At a glance
SKUs Priced Differently vs Walmart / Amazon is a Cross-Channel: Revenue at Risk metric. It joins your Target Plus prices against the same SKUs on Walmart and Amazon, matching on the shared identifier, and counts the SKUs whose Target Plus price diverges by more than a set spread. Target Plus traditionally tolerates higher pricing than Walmart and Amazon because of its curated, premium brand positioning, but extreme spreads erode buyer trust and invite scrutiny. The card surfaces the offending SKUs as a table so you can see exactly where the premium has stretched too far.
| What it counts | The number of SKUs whose Target Plus price diverges from the same SKU on Walmart or Amazon by more than the configured spread. |
| Sample type | Backend API data from Target Plus, refreshed on the standard data refresh. |
| Why it matters | A modest premium is expected on Target Plus, but extreme price spreads against sister marketplaces erode buyer trust and can draw curation scrutiny. |
| Reading the value | Read it as a count of off-parity SKUs, backed by a table of offenders. Lower is better, and clustered spreads point to a pricing-rule gap. |
| Currency | number |
| Time window | 30D |
| Alert trigger | >5 SKUs price-spread >10% |
| Sentiment key | tgt_xc_price_parity |
| Roles | owner, finance, marketing |
Calculation
Vortex IQ matches each Target Plus listing to the same product on Walmart and Amazon by the shared SKU identifier, drawing the authoritative item definition from BigCommerce as the catalogue source of truth. For each matched SKU it compares the Target Plus price against the sister-marketplace price and computes the spread as a percentage of difference over the 30-day window. A SKU counts toward the value when its spread exceeds the configured tolerance, which respects that Target Plus is allowed a premium while still flagging divergence that has run too wide. SKUs not listed on Walmart or Amazon are excluded, since there is nothing to compare against. The worked example below shows how a typical reading breaks down.Worked example
A representative reading of SKUs Priced Differently vs Walmart / Amazon for a typical Target Plus partner. On 14 Jun 26 a home-fragrance partner ran a clearance promotion on Amazon and Walmart but left Target Plus prices untouched, in line with its premium positioning. By the 30-day reading on 23 Jun 26 the card showed 8 SKUs with a price spread above 10%, over the alert line of 5. The table listed each SKU with its Target Plus price beside the Amazon and Walmart figure, and the widest spread sat near 22% on a discounted candle range. Vortex Mind traced the upstream cause to the promotion repricing the sister marketplaces while no matching rule covered Target Plus, and Ask Viq returned the 8 off-parity SKUs in plain English so the finance team could decide which to bring back inside tolerance and which to keep at the premium.Sibling cards merchants should reference together
| Card | Why merchants reach for it |
|---|---|
listings-drifting-from-bc-source-of-truth | Price is one field among several that can drift between channels and erode the curated premium. |
active-target-plus-listings-for-oos-skus-on-bc | Both are cross-channel parity gaps where one channel falls out of step with the others. |
listings-failing-feedonomics-target-mirakl-validation | A price field that fails to map in the feed can both reject a listing and leave it off parity. |
average-order-value | Pricing changes that close a spread move average order value, so watch them together. |
target-plus-fee-of-revenue | Margin math behind any repricing decision depends on the fee share Target takes. |
Reconciling against Target Plus Partners
Where to look in the Target Plus Partners portal: The Partners portal shows the price Target currently holds for each listing, but it shows only the Target Plus side and has no awareness of what the same SKU sells for elsewhere. To reconcile a flagged spread you compare against the other source, opening Walmart Seller Center and Amazon Seller Central to read the live sister-marketplace price for that SKU. The portal confirms the Target Plus figure, while Seller Central confirms the comparison price that produced the spread. Why the Vortex IQ value may legitimately differ:| Reason | Direction | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| A promotion reprices Walmart or Amazon mid-window before Target Plus updates, so the two sides disagree until parity catches up (period boundary / sync lag). | Vortex IQ may flag a spread that closes once Target Plus reprices. | Confirm whether a sister-marketplace promotion is active before treating the spread as permanent. |
| Marketplace price-change timestamps and the Target Plus refresh use different time zones. | A same-day reprice can land inside or outside the 30-day window. | Compare using UTC-aligned timestamps when a SKU sits near the window edge. |
| The card compares list price within the configured tolerance, not shipping, coupons, or per-marketplace promotions. | Vortex IQ may count more or fewer SKUs than a full landed-cost comparison. | Scope your reconciliation to list price to match the card, and note promotions separately. |