Amazon Ads Reporting Advisor
The Amazon Ads console will show you a thousand numbers and tell you nothing about which ones deserve your attention today. This advisor cuts through that. Give it your goal, ad product, funnel focus, brand type, and monthly budget, and it returns the reports that actually change a decision — ranked most to least important, mapped to the exact report in the console or Brand Analytics, and slotted into a daily, weekly, monthly, or volume-gated rhythm so you spend your time where it pays.
The reports that matter on Amazon fall into a rhythm, not a pile. Every day, check budget pacing and your ACOS, TACOS, and ROAS — if a campaign is out of budget or running over target, nothing else counts. Every week, work the search term report (harvest converting terms, negate wasted ones), read targeting and placement, and close impression-share gaps on your priority terms. Every month, pull the segmented and strategic reports — new-to-brand, Search Query Performance, the purchased-product halo, geography, DSP, and AMC — once they carry enough volume to trust. Which reports rank highest depends on your goal: a profitability account leans on ACOS and TACOS, a launch leans on impression share and new-to-brand. This tool builds that ranked, cadenced plan for your exact setup.
Amazon Ads Reporting Advisor inputs and result
| # | Report | Stage | Where in the console | Cadence |
|---|
How to use this calculator
- Set your goal and ad productPick the outcome you are paid on and the Amazon ad product you lead with. The tool reweights every report to your goal and flags an ad product that does not match it.
- Choose your funnel focusKeep the full funnel, or zoom into discovery, consideration, or conversion. Zooming ranks that stage's reports to the top without hiding the others.
- Pick your brand type and budgetBrand type tailors the emphasis; budget sets your volume, which decides how granular your breakdowns can get before they turn into noise.
- Read your ranked planWork down the priority table: each row names the report, the funnel stage, the exact place to find it in the Amazon Ads console or Brand Analytics, and how often to pull it.
- Run the cadence and actFollow the daily, weekly, and monthly rotation below, watch for each report's signal, and take the action it points to. Export the plan and hand it to whoever runs the account.
RGM Expert Says
The most common way we see good Amazon budgets wasted is not bad targeting or weak listings; it is a media buyer drowning in the console, refreshing ACOS ten times a day and never pulling the search term report that would tell them what to fix. Amazon gives you a deep stack of reports across Sponsored Products, Sponsored Brands, Sponsored Display, and DSP, and almost none of them change a decision on any given day. The skill is knowing which three reports to read this morning and which can wait for the monthly review.
We run reporting as a rhythm, and that rhythm is built around volume. Budget pacing and ACOS get a daily glance because an out-of-budget campaign costs you sales the same afternoon. The search term report, targeting, and placement get a weekly working session because harvesting converting terms and negating wasted ones is where the real money moves. The segmented and strategic reads — new-to-brand, Search Query Performance, the purchased-product halo, geography, DSP, and AMC — wait for the monthly review, because reading them before each segment has cleared real click and conversion volume means optimizing against noise.
The metric almost no one weights correctly is TACOS, total advertising cost of sales. A low ACOS feels like a win, but if your ad spend is mostly capturing sales you would have won organically, TACOS exposes it and the account is not really growing. The teams that scale profitably watch ACOS for campaign efficiency and TACOS for whether the whole business is expanding, then use new-to-brand to confirm the spend is bringing genuinely new customers rather than renting demand. Getting that read right separates accounts that grow from accounts that just get more expensive.
How it works
The advisor scores a library of Amazon Ads reports against your goal, ad product, funnel focus, and budget. Goal sets how much each funnel stage matters; funnel focus ranks your chosen stage up; budget maps to a volume tier that decides whether a segmented breakdown carries enough data to trust. Reports that pass are sorted into daily, weekly, and monthly cadences; reports that need more volume than your budget produces are held in an unlock list until you scale. The big number is how many reports sit in your active rotation.
- Volume tier — how much click and conversion data your budget produces. It decides whether a segment-level breakdown is signal or noise.
- Cadence — how often a report earns a look. Pacing and ACOS are daily, the search term report is weekly, segmented breakdowns are monthly. Reading something more often than it changes wastes attention.
- Funnel focus — the stage you are optimizing. It reranks the list so a launch sees impression share and new-to-brand first and a profitability goal sees ACOS, TACOS, and the halo first.
The priorities and cadence bands are RGM analysis — an expert playbook, not an Amazon export. The report names, locations, and metric definitions follow Amazon Advertising and Brand Analytics documentation. Treat the plan as a strong default and let your own ACOS targets and results move the cadence.
Why a reporting rhythm beats a bigger dashboard
Almost every underperforming Amazon account we audit has the same problem in reverse: not too little data, but too much, read at the wrong frequency. Someone checks ACOS hourly and panics at normal variance, then never once pulls the search term report or the new-to-brand breakdown that would actually explain it. A dashboard with forty metrics on it feels rigorous and changes nothing. A short, ranked rotation that tells you what to look at today, this week, and this month is what turns reporting into decisions.
Cadence is really a volume question in disguise. A breakdown is only trustworthy once each segment inside it has cleared real click and conversion volume. On a thin budget, slicing yesterday's handful of orders by marketplace, hour of day, and audience produces cells of pure noise, and acting on them makes the account worse. That is why this tool holds segmented breakdowns — geography, dayparting, Sponsored Display audiences, DSP, and AMC — back until your budget produces the volume to read them, and pushes them to a monthly window even then.
The reports also map to who should act. Pacing, the search term report, targeting, and placement are the media buyer's daily and weekly terrain. Listing experiments and creative are the marketer's call. Search Query Performance, new-to-brand, the purchased-product halo, and AMC belong to whoever owns measurement, because they are decision-grade reads that reward patience and punish twitchy reactions. Naming the owner next to each report is how a plan survives contact with a real team instead of everyone watching the same ACOS number and no one fixing the leak.
Amazon Ads reporting cadence, at a glance
A quick reference for how often each kind of Amazon Ads report earns a look, and why. The cadence bands are RGM analysis; the report names and locations follow Amazon Advertising and Brand Analytics documentation. Your own volume and ACOS targets should fine-tune these.
| Report type | Recommended cadence | Why this rhythm |
|---|---|---|
| Budget pacing & time-in-budget | Daily | An out-of-budget campaign hands the afternoon and its sales to a competitor. |
| ACOS / TACOS / ROAS | Daily | ACOS tracks campaign efficiency; TACOS tells you the whole account is actually growing. |
| Search term report | Weekly | Harvesting converting terms and negating wasted ones is the highest-return weekly habit. |
| Targeting & placement | Weekly | Keyword vs ASIN and Top of Search vs rest are direct, weekly bid levers. |
| Impression share | Weekly (TOF) | Shows how visible you are against rivals on the terms that define the category. |
| New-to-brand & Search Query Performance | Monthly | Separate true acquisition from demand capture once segments carry volume. |
| Geography / DSP / AMC | Monthly / quarterly | Decision-grade reads that need scale and reward patience over reaction. |
What disciplined Amazon buyers emphasize
Watch TACOS, not just ACOS — a low ACOS can hide an account that is only capturing sales it would have won organically, while TACOS shows whether ad spend is actually growing the whole business.
New-to-brand metrics separate customer acquisition from demand capture; if non-branded campaigns produce sales but weak new-to-brand rates, the account is paying for shoppers already close to converting rather than expanding the base.