Merch by Amazon SEO Ultimate Guide

Selling shirts on Amazon with Merch can be super exciting! It can also make you question what you are doing with your life if you take the time and effort to design your shirts but they just are not moving. This can be extremely frustrating, and often times, the person ends up giving up for good before they even get out of the 25 tier (the hardest tier by far)! You could learn to drive outside traffic like I just wrote about with Pinterest, or you could learn to optimize your listings. A combination of both is ultimately the best but this article is going to focus on the later.’

Coming from an internet marketing background, I have noticed that for a lot of you, making money through Merch by Amazon is your first attempt to make it online. To that I say congratulations! This may mean that you are not as familiar with keywords (the base of good Amazon optimization) as I am. That is okay, we will be going through all the basics here and then towards the end moving into more advanced Merch SEO.

Optimizing A Merch Listing

In order to SEO your listing properly, there are a few key points we need to cover. These are: Price, Brand, Title, Bullet Points and of course competition.

Price

I know in most of the Facebook groups people preach to sell your designs for 19.99 and never go below that. I am just going to come out and say that I believe that is WRONG! Your price should not be based on what you think it is worth. Your price should be based on the market, and the competition you face.

So what does this mean for you? It means that the less competition you face, the higher price you will charge originally. The more competition, the lower the price (at first!). You see, reviews on Amazon are king! They are what really kick your earnings into overdrive. When was the last time you bought something off Amazon that was not a piece of clothing? I bet the first thing you did was read the reviews and based your purchase off of those right? Same goes with shirts. As soon as you get some good reviews, you can raise your prices and people will gladly pick your design over cheaper ones because you have reviews and they do not!

This does not mean that you should be pricing your design as the lowest. My suggestion is to take a look by searching Amazon for your general niche design before you upload. Find the average price, and price your shirt right in the middle. You will not be competing on price at first, but you WILL be competing on how much better your design is. If you have a moderately priced shirt with a design that is blowing the competition out of the water, you will sell more shirts every time. I go into more detail on how to create amazing designs in this article here.

This strategy that I outlined above is particularly important now that Amazon has released their 180 day policy. Following the above, you will have a much higher sell through of your shirts, and will be raising prices as soon as you get those much needed reviews. Think long term here! This is not a quick money grab. There is no “right” price. There is only the price that the market determines.

Brand Name

There are two ways to go about branding your shirts. You can put your shirts under different “niche” brands, or you can utilize the Merch platform to build yourself a brand with everything underneath it.

In the past each and every shirt I created was generally put under a different brand. This was so that someone cannot just come and copy everything I have created. When you come up with a brand name, this is your chance to grab the attention of someone scrolling through the Amazon results. They will see a title and a brand and then a thumbnail. If your brand is related to what they are searching for, this increases the probability that they will click through. This way, you can group like t-shirts together into little niche stores.

For this reason, I suggest adding a few keywords about your shirt. If you were to do a ghost shirt, something along the lines of “Scary Ghost Tees” or “Friendly Ghost Shirt Store” might make sense. Each of these has the keywords “Ghost Tees” and “Ghost Shirt” in them, something that a customer might be searching for. Not only do these have some keywords in the brand, but at the same time, they are niche enough where you can put multiple ghost shirts under a single brand. If someone gets to your scary ghost shirt and clicks on your brand, they will simply see your other ghost shirts. This works out great.

The other option you have is putting all your Merch shirts under a single brand. I am not against this practice but it does not make much sense. Think about putting your sassy girly shirts under the same brand as your hardcore motorcycle shirts. It really kind of changes the meaning behind your brand which is why I am a fan of niche stores.
Each one of these optimization sections is just an exercise in pretending you are a potential customer.

Title

This is where keywords come into play. In order to talk about keywords, we first need to talk about competition.

For an example, lets say that you just created a killer design about cats. You upload your shirt after looking at similar designs and price it accordingly. Now you get to the point where tou must select a title. What do you put? Do you just put “black cat t-shirt”? No, that is a big negative!
black-cat-t-shirt
If you were to do what I said above, you would be competing against almost 150 thousand other t shirts! How can you possibly expect to stand out or make any sales when you are swamped with competition? Chances are you probably will not, and get disappointed when you do not make any sales in the next 2 months.

You need to really take a look at your design and describe it to yourself. This description process is really just adding different keywords in the title.

Ask “What would a customer search for if they wanted to buy this shirt”. You need to niche down. Maybe your shirt has black cat ears on them. Black cat ears t-shirt might be a better fit. Check it on Amazon.

cat-ears
Three thousand results. That is better, but still a little too much competition. Now is where you might want to try some adjectives. How about Cute black cat ears t-shirt?
cute
1.3k results this time. What about adding one more thing to the title.
halloween
There we go! 64 results. This is called “niching down” and getting very specific. I like to describe my t-shirt titles like I would describe the shirt to a blind person who cannot see. This sounds silly, but it works! Eventually you will get comfortable describing your shirts in detail and will not need to spend the time searching amazon as that can be very time consuming. You can also use the advanced competition checker within Merch Informer to quickly find keywords that are worth exploring and putting in your titles to save you some time.

T-Shirt, Tee Shirt, Tees, Shirts

When I am searching on Amazon for a t-shirt I always type “t-shirt” at the end of my query. I have always done this, and I think most people do. For this reason, I end every single one of my titles with “t-shirt”. I think you should too and this only makes sense.

Some people may not search for t-shirt though, they may include operators in their search query such as “tee shirt” or something similar. What do you do with those? I personally include them in the description which we are about to go into. Since there is already “Shirt” in the title, the only other shirt variation I will include in the description is “Tee”. This is easy, and saves time.

Bullet Points

If the title is the first place to really catch your customers attention, then the bullet points are where you SELL them! This is where the majority of Merch sellers fail and I still do not understand this. There are 2 facets here.

On one hand, you want want to make more sales so you need to be putting keywords in your bullet points. On the other, you do NOT want to describe your t-shirt and sound like a brick wall. You are here to make sales right? Act like a salesman/woman. Sell your customers!
So how do you do this? You have 2 bullet points so you need to make the most of them. Let’s start with the first bullet point.

For an example, let’s just say that we ended up creating a shirt like we described above. A nice cute black cat ears Halloween t-shirt. You have set a brand name, the title of the product and the price. Now you need to come up with your first bullet point. To do this, you need to think of synonyms of your main keyword. Since there are really no decent synonyms of Halloween, we will be focusing on the main root of the keyword here: “Cat”.

If English is your first language, this should be super simple. If not, simply run the root keyword through a Thesaurus. You can do so by clicking that link. Synonyms here may include: kitty, kitten, the “type” of cat, and so on. Now that you have your synonyms, you want to include them in a sentence format.

Remember, you are not just describing your shirt here. They can see your shirt right there! Your potential customers already know what your shirt looks like, this is your one chance to sell them on purchasing it.

  • Staying home on Halloween this season and just want to snuggle up with your kitty in the covers? Sounds like you need to purchase this cute kitten tee for your Halloween costume today or purchase it as a gift for that lonely friend who is always home with their black cat.

See how that does not just say what was on our theoretical shirt but you are selling them? You included keywords such as “kitty” “cute kitten” “kitten tee” “Halloween costume”. You also included the “gift” keyword which really seems to help boost sales around the holiday.
first-bullet-point
Now that your first bullet point is done and looking good, time to move on to the second.

This is where I do things a little different from most people. I play damage control. Yes, you read that right. Amazon is not perfect and does a lot of weird printing mistakes. However the worst thing they do is use shirts that tend to run a size too small. This generally makes people ANGRY when their clothing does not fit when they first get it and often times will end up in a negative review because they had no idea it would turn out like that.

NOTE: You can not longer mention size in your bullets. Therefor, we have edited the second bullet as follows:
So what should you do? Tell them the shirt runs a size small and to order a size up! I will generally use this format: This “t-shirt title here” is designed and printed to be fitted. For a more loose fit, please order a size up.

  • This Cute Black Cat Ears Halloween T-Shirt makes a great gift for friends and family.

second-bullet-point
With this technique, you pack even MORE keywords in their by using the title, but it does not look spammy at all.

With the update to the Merch by Amazon content policy, you are no longer allowed to talk about the fit and size of the shirt. This is disappointing as their clothing currently does not fit true to size.

Since we are aiming to get the keywords in there a second time, we still use the name of the shirt, but instead fill out the second bullet point with the ending “makes a great gift for friends and family”.

Note On Product Description

From my time selling on Amazon through FBA and testing with Merch, it seems that the product description does not really affect where your shirt ends up in the results.

That being said, the product description DOES show up on Mobile (a huge growing segment of internet purchases) instead of the bullet points and it also shows up as the meta description in Google. Because of this, it is highly recommended you fill out the description. I do this by copy and pasting the first bullet point there.

Advanced Merch by Amazon SEO

Following the exact strategy that I laid out above, I was able to bring my Merch account to where it is today.
merchsales

So the above screenshot was taken in late 2016. This is all from organic traffic only using the proper keywords and bullet point strategy. In this advanced Merch SEO section, I want to go over how you can double these numbers.

You could always just add more shirts (and you can sure bet I will!). There were over 7000 empty slots. I admit I had been slacking. The real secret to increasing those numbers without putting up more shirts (which costs more money if you are outsourcing), is to actually do SEO outside of Amazon. Keep in mind that this is an advanced section and most people will probably not try or attempt this. The ones who DO though, will put themselves far ahead of the competition.

Google SEO (The secret no one is talking about)

Remember near the beginning of this article I mentioned that I was mainly involved in creating websites? Well, the entire point there is to rank a website in Google for a specific search term so that it shows up at the top of the results. The closer to the top you are, the more visitors you get, thus the more sales occur. Pretty easy concept right?

Well people search Google ALL THE TIME for clothing to buy. Millions of people are searching on Google rather than Amazon to find a certain t-shirt to wear. Up till this point, I am willing to guess you have completely ignored this outlet right?

To do this right, you will probably have to go read some SEO guides on how the entire process works, but this article should at least get you started and get those gears turning on how to increase sales.

Finding Keywords

The very first thing you want to do in this entire process is find something that is selling well on Amazon. You can do so with Merch Informer, or you can spend the time searching through the results to find niches with relatively low BSR. You should have that down by now. Now, you want to compare these niches to the same niches in Google. For example let’s just say that you have a “I love my pitbull t-shirt”. You know that pitbulls on Amazon are a good niche and you may be getting sales on that shirt. So you need to check it through Google.

To do this, you need to sign up for a Google adwards account. You can do so here: https://www.google.com/adwords. Keep in mind that you may need to enter a credit card. We are not looking to run any advertisements though, we just need a tool that is inside the adwords account called the Google Keyword Planner.
Once you are logged in, you should see it at the top, under Tools.
tools
Now, once you have navigated your way over to the Google Keyword Tool, you want to check the title of that shirt or keywords related to that shirt. This will toss back at you a range under the tab “keyword ideas”. If you are not running a campaign with them, they will just give you a range. It will look like this:
i-love-my-pitbull-t-shirt-keyword
This tells you a few things. It tells you that 10-100 people search “i love my pitbull t-shirt” each and every month. Those are potential customers for your Merch by Amazon shirts! It also shows you that if you were to set up ads for this keyword, each time someone clicked on your ad, you would probably be paying around 61 cents. Ouch! Probably not the best idea.

You could be getting this potential traffic for FREE though! Each one of your shirts could be getting a stream of free traffic from Google and literally no one is talking about this. Why? My guess is most people in Merch are not internet marketers, nor do they want to take the time to get these products ranked in Google for keywords. I can tell you from testing this out on a family members account that it is both easy and a fun way to make more sales in the process. Lets go over exactly how to do it.

NOTE: You can also take a look at search volume inside of Merch Informer with the keyword finder: https://merchinformer.com/merch-by-amazon-keyword-tool-search-volume-added/

Setting Up Your Merch Listing To Rank In Google

In order to rank your design in Google for specific keywords, you will need two things. On page SEO, and backlinks. Just these two things can give you the extra traffic you want. The on page SEO are the EXACT steps we went into above.

All you need to remember is to have the title of your t-shirt the exact same as the keyword you are looking to rank for in Google. That is it! As long as it has the exact title, it will be a lot easier to rank because Amazon is such a large website.
bottom-page-1
I went ahead and Googled the keyword. As you can see, near the bottom of the page, there is a Merch by Amazon listing ranking! Now, it is the bottom of page 1 and is probably not getting a lot of traffic, but as you can see, their title is not the exact same as the keyword. Simply by making this change, you give yourself a better chance at beating it! All this shows though, is that a Merch shirt is ranking in Google while yours is not! So now you need the other piece of the puzzle, backlinks.

Getting Backlinks/Making Sales Along The Way

So what you now need to do is get backlinks. Backlinks are hypertext that link back to your product on Amazon. The more of these that you get that are from niche relevant locations back to your site, the higher you will rank in Google (very simplistic explanation).

There are 2 easy ways to do this in my opinion. I have tested both of them and they have BOTH resulted in extra sales for my family members account while we wait for the rank increase in Google. Killing two birds with one stone here!

Option 1: Niche Relevant Forums

This is the option that I have been experimenting the most from lately, and trust me, if you do this correctly, you will make extra sales EASILY. You need to find forums related to your niche. In the example case, I did a shirt about pitbulls. So to make this work, I would search out forums about pitbulls or dogs in general.

Once you have found a forum that seems active, sign up for an account and get involved! No one likes someone coming into their community and instantly pushing products down their throats. Do you? Probably not. You need to get involved in the conversation, be helpful, and be friendly. After you seem to have a place in this forum and have built up a few posts and maybe some rep, it is not time to make a post! Forums are places that people hang out and talk about something they are passionate about. This makes the absolute best buyer out there!

Think outside the box for this one. You could make a post showing off your t-shirt that you are wearing! Show them how great your design is and give them a link (backlink cha ching!) to where you got it. If that is not your forte, maybe make a post about how you started a t-shirt business and one of the designs you just created just so happens to be about the niche of the forum. In this case pitbulls. Give them a link to your design (backlink cha ching!).

By giving out the links to your designs in niche relevant forums, you will make extra sales, as well as build links to be ranking in Google. While your friend is desperately out there waiting to tier up out of the 25 tier, you are doing something about it, and pocketing the money along the way.

Option 2: Purchase Your Shirt For Website Owners

Wouldn’t it be great if you could just approach someone who owns a website in your t-shirt niche and have them post a link to your shirt for you? After all they have an audience that could buy your designs!

The fact is, that very very rarely will anyone take time out of their day to help you out (a stranger), for nothing in return. It is just the truth. I run several large sites myself and ignore probably 99% of the email I get because people are begging.

Do you want to know how to stand out? Give them something in return! You could offer to give them a bit of money to post your design. That is a bit boring but it does work! Instead though, what about purchasing your own shirt and having it shipped to them? I can tell you the few times someone shipped me free things in the mail, I went out of my way to help them in return because they gave me some pretty great stuff!

To do this, first you need to find some websites in your t-shirt niche. As the example was laid out is pitbulls, I would find some good pitbull websites.

Remember, we only want to reach out to sites that get some traffic! If they do not have any traffic, giving or posting your shirt on that site is not going to help you out.

To find out if a site is getting any traffic, copy the URL of the website and put it into either Semrush, or SimilarWeb. Make sure they are getting a few thousand people a month as a starter. If they have just a few hundred or even less, move on. They are probably not worth your time.

So once you have found a website that you want your shirt to be seen on, you now need to reach out to the person who owns it! If they have a contact form, go ahead and send them an email and ask them if you could send them a shirt. Be creative with the email, you want to stand out. If there is no contact information listed on the website, you can still get it!

To find information on who owns a website, simply run their URL of their website through WHOIS. This will give you the name of the person as well as their email. You can then use this information to personalize the information and send them an email about your shirt and how you want to send it to them!

Make sure to ask for a link back to your Amazon page if they like the shirt and keep in touch. Making connections is the biggest part of this business and the people who take the time to do so are going to FAR outsell the ones who do not.

When you do get a website owner to post your shirt, chances are it will be send out to an email list the webmaster has, or their traffic will see it somehow. This will give you increased sales right away. You ALSO will get a backlink to your shirt on Amazon. Get enough of these backlinks and your shirt will start to show up for keywords you have in the listing and that people are searching for on Amazon. This in turn will give you even MORE sales.

Wrapping It Up

We are getting around to 4,000 words, so I think it is time to wrap this up. You can go ahead and follow the guide to optimizing your Merch by Amazon listings that I laid out in the beginning of this article. This works and works pretty well! If you happened to see my screenshot, then you can go ahead and say that the first half of this article is exactly how I build a $8,600 a month business without driving a single visitor to the page. For a lot of people, this sounds really great and would probably be satisfied if they hit those numbers. What is really going to set people apart the longer the Merch program goes on though are the people who are satisfied with their organic earnings, and those who are never satisfied and continue to push for more. These are the people who are going to follow the second half of the article and start driving outside traffic. As I laid out above, driving traffic can be absolutely free! You do not have to spend a dime in advertising if you really do not want to (it just makes it easier when getting those backlinks!).

You may pick whatever avenue you chose. Whichever you do go with though, make sure to give it your all!
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Comments
  • You said, “From my time selling on Amazon through FBA and testing with Merch, it seems that the product description does not really affect where your shirt ends up in the results. I actually skip the description on 99% of my shirts since I have so many slots open and it ends up slowing me down.”
    However, if someone shares the item via the Facebook sharer on Amazon, It displays the image, title and description! If it’s blank or has nonsense, it really looks bad.

  • So would a link from an Instagram account promoting the shirt be considered a linkback in Google’s algorithym? Does it take into account how many people click on the link?
    Thanks btw for all the information it has made getting starter substantially easier.

    • It would be considered a link, but not a very powerful one. The amount of people that click the link does not mean your product will be ranked higher in Google. That being said, driving traffic to your listings in any way (instagram), is a great way to make sales!

  • Valuable information. Lucky me I found your site unintentionally, and I’m stunned why this coincidence didn’t took place in advance!
    I bookmarked it.

  • So a backlink is considered a link that you share and people open?
    Also, I’m not clear as to how to set up the On Page SEO. Any other helpful link ?

    • A backlink is just a link on another website that someone can click on to bring you to the product page on Amazon. This is really as much in depth information as you will get with on page SEO on Amazon. What else are you looking for?

  • Hi – you said that following the exact strategy of only using “niche down” techniques with Amazon keywords was how you built your account. But for me it seems like there’s a gap, just because you typed “cute black cat ears halloween” and there was not a lot of competition, that doesn’t mean that people are actually searching for those keywords and that specific topic is popular, so that can’t be your only strategy. Other people recommend looking at best seller ranks (BSR) to look at what’s popular, do you do this as well? If not, how do you find low competition keywords that are actually things people are searching for?

    • We do recommend looking at BSR which is why Merch Informer shows BSR and sales estimates. The entire point of this niching down is to really get a lot of keyword into your listing to make it a lot more well rounded. For example, in the example I gave, even when you niche down the actual title, you might still rank for “black cat t-shirt”. Since you went through the trouble of niching down the title like we went over, you also stand the chance to rank for a LOT of other keywords/keyword combinations just by really going in depth. Using this strategy along with looking at BSR is the best bet.

  • This is a great guide. I’ve tried to follow it exactly with my first six t-shirts that are now live. How long does it take for your first shirt to sell? It’s only been a couple weeks, and there are no sales. Should I be concerned?

  • Wonderful article. I have started in this business a week ago and need to learn to make designs properly in Illustrator preferably. This article has clarified a number of key points I required to understand the best approach to making profit from this business model. The fact is this comes about because there are such a large market that you need to create keywords or as I define them ‘filter options’ for individuals to find your products.
    I am still waiting for my Amazon Merch account as I signed up a week ago, but I am going to utilise the tools available to understand my preferred method to create sales. As for the option to post on forums in your niche, it is a brilliant idea that I plan to take up as I progress. It doesn’t take much to post on a forum and then ‘indirectly’ sell your products through these methods. Great food for though, thanks!

  • Something I don’t understand…when you are creating your title, and “niching it it down” to “cute black cat ears halloween t-shirt” with 64 results, do the 64 results mean that 64 listing have that exact title and if so, what are the chances someone is going to input those exact words? As I understand it, that 64 number is not the number of times someone has searched on that phrase, it’s the number of titles that match it. So how does someone find you when it’s so specific? How do we know anyone is using that phrase to search? I appreciate help in understanding this!

    • It is the number of results in Amazon with that combination of keywords. Niching down like that is basically so you can try to pick up on long tail keyword traffic as well as the bigger keywords that you are including in the title during the process. You will rank for the most keywords doing it this way, not just hard keywords or easier keywords but a combination of them both.

  • In your article under “Title” in the first example you show 1-16 of 149,412 results for “black cat t-shirt”
    Where did that data come from?

    • Sorry for being a moron – I just didn’t look at the search results page close enough. I see the data.

    • After you search something on Amazon, right below the search bar you should see it in the left hand corner of the Amazon screen.

      • Amazon is no more showing this number looks like – it just shows ‘showing 10 or over 1000 results’…is there any other way to get the totals?

  • Thank you for this fabulous article! I only got started with Merch 2 months ago, and this will definitely be extremely helpful info! As someone who has done SEO and affiliate marketing for the last two decades, I can say that your SEO suggestions are spot on! What are your thoughts on Pinterest links as backlinks? Thanks again! Awesome article that I will likely be referring back to quite often.

    • Pinterest links really mean close to nothing. That being said, they drive GREAT traffic, which is the name of the game anyway!

  • Is it possible to edit the listing to optimize it or reduce the price once it’s been listed. I’ve looked through MBA, but can’t seem to find anything except to delete the listing and start over. Is that all we can do?

  • Wow!!! Neil I am absolutely blown away by your very helpful information. Thank you so much.
    Now please. I do not understand the concept and how to rotate my listing

  • I have been waiting for 7 months for my Amazon Merch account to be approved. So I am now digging into the other Print On Demand sites? The first one I am on prefers only 300 characters in the description but no more than 1500. Would you suggest still adding bullet points to those or just do a description with some synonyms?
    Also Thank you so much for all of this great information. One of the reasons I love this business model is because you don’t have to have capital to put into your business. And from what I have seen so far it’s not as simple as creating a design and throwing it up and waiting for it to sell. You have laid it out so plainly and easy to understand that it doesn’t have to be as complicated as others like to make it look. I can’t thank you enough for your time and devotion into this. YOU ROCK!!!!!

  • Thank you for this fabulous article!
    I would like to ask about getting backlinks.
    Do I need to give to the website owner Amazon´s direct link of the sale page?
    Or do I need to have my own website with links going to Amazon´s sale page and give my website link to the website owner?
    Thanks

  • Why do you repeat the Keyword 3 times in the listing example? cute and cat I thought Amazon doesn’t require that method

  • There is a huge difference between “Black cat t-shirt” and “Black cat ears Halloween T-shirt”.
    Difference according to the people intention to write on the search bar of Amazon. Say, out of 10000 people, 1 person might search according to the niching down. And sometimes may be not a single person would like to write “Cute Black Cat ear Halloween T-shirt”
    So, to play the game effectively?

    • Niching down essentially helps you get MORE keywords in the listing to rank for long tails. You will still end up ranking for “black cat t-shirt” but you will ALSO end up ranking for other keywords. That is the entire point of doing the niche down method.

  • Thank you for this. I wish you much success and much more blessings. You really helped me out understanding amazon and Etsy. Agai. Thank you!

  • QUESTION about “Setting Up Your Merch Listing To Rank In Google”
    Does the title of your shirt on Amazon need to be simple, I’m a little confused here, what if you bulked up your title in Amazon, but it won’t be so sexy for Google ad words as it contains extra word. Because its stated to my understanding that the Google ad words listing needs to be the same title as your amazon shirt…. or can you just contain keywords from your amazon title? I hope I conveyed my question clearly. THANKS!

    • They do not need to be the exact phrase, but that is why you want to build niched down titles on Amazon. These will rank in Google for similar phrases and get your listing even more traffic.

  • When launching a new design, when would you use the Sample – Direct Link Only vs. the Sell – Public on Amazon?
    Also, do you order your own shirts via the Sample link at full price?

    • If you want other people to be able to find your design on Amazon, then you want to sell it public on Amazon. If you want it to be available to ONLY people you share the link with, this is when you will want to pick direct link. I personally pick sell public on Amazon for all of my designs.

  • Hello,
    how do you create (if create) multiple listing with two colours of one shirt?
    Is allowed to merge e.g. 2 different pictures in one and set it as the main picture – one picture with two items?
    Regards

  • I’ve been doing SEO for 14 years and I have to say this was an excellent article, Neil! You are fantastic for helping people like this with Merch.

  • Really Nice Article Fro MBA. Here More Resources – low competitor Niches, Bullet Points, Marketing, I think full package Now and Wonderful article. Thank you!

  • Pricing, you say not to raise the price until you get a review. I have tried a few strategies with starting price, on a new design I will go with the average price and adjust up or down depending on the competition and the price of the top sellers. Once I get a sale I raise the price, not when I get a review, one reason is sometimes I will be pricing VERY low(re-uploads) to get that first sale then raise it to average. Do you only raise on a review? I rarely get reviews so to me I would be leaving money on the table if I waited, I understand if I’m making upwards of $1,000 a month or more this shouldn’t be an issue. Also, is there a strategy on max price, how much is too much, when do you know to stop raising your price? Great article, thanks Neil.

    • Yes, I typically wait for a review as I want to be in this for the long term. I never go over $19.99 on the upper end.

      • Hey Neil – I’ve sold about 10 shirts on Merch and no one has left a review. Haven’t had any complaints, either. Just wondered how to get reviews? Or is that beyond the scope here?
        Thanks for the advice – target multiple keywords by using long-tails. Never would have thought of that.

  • Thank you for sharing this important info. I never really understood how the keywords worked. When you do a brand name though and you want all of your pit bull shirts to show up when someone clicks that brand name, if you are nitching down and use baby pit bulls for the brand name how do you get the brand name to take someone to all of your pit bull shirts? Thanks.

      • Hi, I’m a different Anonymous poster,,, But I think what the first guy is referring to is if you niche down to use “Baby Pit Bulls” as your brand name, but you have lots of non-baby pit bull designs, too. If I understand you correctly, you’d have to put ALL of them under the “Baby Pit Bull” brand if you wanted a shopper to see “all your pit bull shirts” when they click through to the brand. That is, when publishing an adult pit bull shirt, you’d also have to give it the brand name “Baby Pit Bulls” in order for that to work. And that doesn’t make much niche sense. Am I missing something?

  • I followed your instructions and made these changes to shirts that were already approved that had been live for months hoping that I would sell more, and they came back “Design Rejected.”

    • NOTE: You can not longer mention size in your bullets. Therefor, we have edited the second bullet as follows:
      Did you mention size?

  • Hi Neil, if I use a URL shortener like Bitly, does that affect the ranking quality of backlinks or should I follow this strategy only using Amazon’s original links? I like the idea of being able to retrieve analytics data from Bitly however will my Amazon listing still eventually rank on Google?

    • A little bit yes, but having information on your traffic is also important. I do not think it would make that big of a difference.

  • Neil,
    Do you still follow the strategy of adding backlinks when you’re uploading 20-30 shirts per day? If so, are you outsourcing this or creating multiple accounts in multiple forums? I’m in the 1k tier, and was just curious if this is a strategy you still follow for each shirt you upload.

  • Hi Neil,
    Thank you for a fantastic article! Very helpful!
    You said that at first you gave each shirt a different brand name so that no one could rip off all of your designs. While a niche store may increase traffic and sales by holding your target audience’s attention, it also shows all of your designs for that niche in one place. Would it be better to have a niche store or not? If it’s better, when would be the time to switch from having each shirt assigned to a different brand, to grouping them into niche stores?
    Many thanks!

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