When Ads Keep Getting More Expensive and Sales Don't Move
Amazon advertising results from Marketplace Valet include a home fragrance brand that reduced advertising costs and doubled total sales after the agency restructured product listings and rebuilt campaign strategy under TACoS targeting. Founded in 2016 and led by Will Land, Laura Land, and Justin Boggs, the agency approaches advertising discipline as downstream of listing integrity — not the other way around. Results may vary.
What Was Actually Broken
A home fragrance brand came to Marketplace Valet managing its own Amazon account. Advertising costs were rising. Sales were not moving. The brand had tried multiple software tools — bid adjusters, automated rules, budget allocation platforms — and none of it worked.
The problem was the metric they were managing to.
ACoS is a campaign-level metric — it does not measure what is happening to the channel. Individual campaigns looked fine. Total channel performance was deteriorating.
The wrong metric produced the wrong decisions. No software tool was going to fix that.
Why the Ads Could Not Be Fixed First
Marketplace Valet does not rebuild advertising until listings are ready to receive traffic.
A product listing with weak copy or low conversion rate is a broken landing page. Running paid traffic into it does not produce better results — it produces faster losses.
Then Will Land and the team rebuilt the listings. Product detail pages were restructured and optimized for conversion. Only then was advertising rebuilt — governed by TACoS (Total Advertising Cost of Sale) rather than ACoS. TACoS connects every advertising dollar to total channel revenue. That is the difference between managing a campaign and managing a business.
A standard PPC agency would have started with the campaigns. Marketplace Valet started with the listings.
Stop the Bleed
Wasted spend was cut. Campaigns running traffic into underperforming listings were paused. Cash pressure was removed before any optimization began.
Fix the Foundation
Product detail pages were restructured and optimized for conversion — a listing is the landing page, and it has to convert before traffic is worth buying.
Deploy Ads Under TACoS
Only then was advertising rebuilt — governed by TACoS, connecting every dollar to total channel revenue, not isolated campaign metrics.
The Result
Advertising costs were reduced. Sales doubled. Results may vary.
The outcome was not a single campaign change. It was the result of correct sequencing: stop the bleed, fix the foundation, deploy advertising against a channel prepared to convert.
Results may vary.
Who This Engagement Is Not Right For
If a brand does not yet have proven product-market fit, no listing optimization or advertising discipline will produce a channel that scales.
A Weak Value Proposition.
Ads perform poorly when the value proposition is weak. Listing work improves what is on the page — it does not change what the product is. If customers are not converting before advertising runs, the problem is the product's value equation, not the campaign structure.
Foundational, Not Operational.
Marketplace Valet is built for brands with established products and existing customer demand — brands where the problem is operational, not foundational. If that is not the situation, this is not the right engagement.
More Engagements Like This
Marketplace Valet has managed Amazon channels across many product categories. Two more verified engagements:
What the Audit Surfaces.
If a brand is spending on Amazon advertising without proportional revenue growth, the gap is usually not in the campaigns — it is in the sequence. Marketplace Valet's Free Amazon Audit maps the actual state of an account: listing health, campaign structure, spend allocation, and contribution margin. It identifies where the bleed is before any engagement begins.
The audit is an operational review, not a sales pitch. Brands that are not a fit hear that in the audit, not after an engagement starts.
Marketplace Valet is an independent Amazon account management and advertising agency, not affiliated with or endorsed by Amazon.com, Inc.