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Two pages do the operational lifting for [Compete] repricing: Amazon Product Re-Pricing Status and Amazon Repricing Inventory. The first is the per-SKU live status. The second is the bulk-edit surface where you set Min and Max prices and the FBA Product flag at scale. This page covers both, and how to use them together.

Amazon Product Re-Pricing Status

How to open

Home > Compete > Amazon Product Re-Pricing Status. Or via the [Compete] services menu.

Top toolbar

  • Add New (purple) button to add a new SKU into repricing scope.
  • Apply Changes (0) (blue with a counter) commits any pending edits in the table. The counter shows pending edits.
  • Amazon Account dropdown, defaults to one of your configured Amazon accounts (e.g. Amazon - monogram-ama...).
  • Search input, button, and link.
  • Create Filter / Clear Search links on the right.
A volume caption sits below: e.g. “785 Products showing.”.

Pagination

Standard pagination strip across top and bottom of the table (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, …, 79, »), per-page selector (10, 25, 50, 100).

Columns

ColumnWhat it showsEditable
(checkbox)Selects the row for bulk action.n/a
Account NameThe Amazon account for this listing.No
SKUThe CloudHub SKU.No
ASINThe Amazon ASIN. Click to open the ASIN at Amazon.No
TitleThe product title.No
Min PriceThe repricing floor. Currency-symbol prefix (£ in the screenshot) plus a numeric input.Yes, inline edit
Max PriceThe repricing ceiling. Same format.Yes, inline edit
FBA ProductDropdown: Yes / No. Tells the repricer to use FBA Buy Box logic for this SKU.Yes
Sales 24 HrsUnit sales in the last 24 hours. Read from the orders pipeline.No
Sales 7 DaysUnit sales in the last 7 days.No
Sales 30 DaysUnit sales in the last 30 days.No

Editing Min and Max prices

  1. Click the inline input for the Min or Max cell.
  2. Type the new value.
  3. The Apply Changes (n) counter at the top increments.
  4. Repeat for additional rows.
  5. Click Apply Changes (n) to commit. The repricer picks up the new bounds on the next polling cycle.
The screenshot example shows every row at Min £1.20 and Max £1.50 with FBA Product No, a typical starter configuration before per-SKU tuning.

Sales context drives Min / Max decisions

The Sales 24 Hrs / 7 Days / 30 Days columns are not just informational; they are the variables you weigh when setting Min and Max. A SKU with high recent sales tolerates a higher Min (your conversion at higher prices is proven). A SKU with zero recent sales benefits from a lower Min (and possibly a Max reduction) because the repricer needs more headroom to chase the Buy Box.

Adding a new SKU into repricing

Click Add New to open a small inline form to add a SKU. You provide the SKU code, ASIN, Min Price, Max Price, and FBA flag. Once saved, the repricer picks it up.

Amazon Repricing Inventory

The Amazon Repricing Inventory page is the bulk-edit surface. Where Product Re-Pricing Status is one row per SKU per account, Repricing Inventory is the cross-account scope plus the Reprice History column.

How to open

Home > Compete > Amazon Repricing Inventory. Or via the [Compete] services menu.

Top toolbar

  • Import Inventory (blue) opens the bulk import flow scoped to the repricing fields.
  • Add New (cyan).
  • Apply Changes (0) (purple), with the same pending-edit counter behaviour.
  • Amazon Account dropdown defaulting to Select AccountName (you can scope to a single account or leave at “all”).
  • Search input plus icon button.
  • Create Filter / Clear Search links.
A volume caption: e.g. “1114 Products showing.” in the screenshot.

Sortable columns

Each column header has up / down arrows for sort:
ColumnWhat it shows
(checkbox)Bulk selection.
Account NameThe Amazon account.
SKUThe CloudHub SKU.
ASINThe ASIN.
TitleProduct title.
Min PriceRepricing floor (editable).
Max PriceRepricing ceiling (editable).
FBA ProductYes / No dropdown.
Sales 24 HrsRecent unit sales.
Sales 7 Days
Sales 30 Days
Reprice HistoryLink to the per-SKU repricing event log.

Reprice History

The Reprice History column is the audit trail of every price change the repricer has made for that SKU. Click to drill in:
  • Timestamp of the price change.
  • Old Price and New Price.
  • Trigger: which competitor moved, what Buy Box state changed, whether your stock state shifted.
  • Outcome: did you win the Buy Box after the change?
Use this when a stakeholder asks “why did we drop the price on SKU X yesterday at 14:00?”. The history answers the question with the trigger.

Bulk-edit workflow

  1. Filter to the SKUs you want to adjust (search by partial SKU, by account, by ASIN).
  2. Tick the rows.
  3. Edit Min, Max, or FBA Product on the visible rows. The pending-edit counter increments.
  4. Apply Changes (n).
  5. Verify the changes propagated by checking the Sales columns over the next 24 hours.

Importing repricing inventory

Click Import Inventory to open an import scoped to the repricing fields (SKU, ASIN, Min, Max, FBA). Use this to stage a large repricing programme in Excel, validate via Import Validation Only, and commit. See Import and Export for the full import flow.

Working both pages together

Day-to-day repricing operations look like this:
  1. Open the Repricing Dashboard to spot accounts with stalled timestamps or high Max-Price counts (pricing leaving margin on the table).
  2. Open Competition Analysis for the account, search a problematic SKU, identify whether the deficit is FBA / Feedback / Price.
  3. Open Amazon Product Re-Pricing Status for that account. Adjust Min, Max, and FBA Product on the affected rows. Apply Changes.
  4. Use Amazon Repricing Inventory for cross-account or bulk adjustments where the same Min / Max change applies to many SKUs.
  5. Watch the Reprice History on Amazon Repricing Inventory to confirm the repricer is reacting and to understand the trigger pattern.

Common questions

I edited Min Price but Apply Changes shows zero pending edits. Click into the inline cell and tab out, or click outside the cell, to commit the edit to the pending state. Some browsers do not flush the edit until you blur the input. Apply Changes is greyed out. The counter is at zero. Either no edits are pending, or your role does not include the repricing edit permission. Check with your CloudHub admin. The same SKU appears multiple times on Amazon Repricing Inventory. One row per (SKU, Account) combination. If you sell the same SKU on Amazon UK, DE, and FR, you will see three rows with three different Account Name values. The Min and Max are per-account because regional pricing differs. FBA Product is set to Yes but the repricer is using FBM Buy Box logic. The flag is a hint; the actual Buy Box logic is Amazon’s. Confirm in the FBA Orders queue that the SKU is genuinely sold via FBA. If FBA Product is Yes but you have no FBA stock, Amazon will treat the SKU as out-of-stock-FBA and your FBM stock will fulfil at FBM Buy Box rules. Reprice History is empty for a SKU I know was repriced. Either the repricing was an inbound poll (a competitor changed price, but no action on your side was triggered because you were already at the right price) or the history has not yet flushed. Wait a few minutes. Can I bulk-set FBA Product = Yes for many SKUs? Yes. Tick the rows, then use the column dropdown to set FBA Product on all selected. Apply Changes commits the bulk edit.

Next steps

  • Use the per-account view on the Repricing Dashboard.
  • Investigate competitors per SKU on Competition Analysis.
  • Configure repricing rule profiles in [Configure] > Compete Pricing Rules and Repricing Profiles (documented in a later batch).
  • Review margin impact in the [Analyse] sales reports.