Your PPC Allocation on Amazon Is WRONG: What We Learned Managing Ads Across 400 Brands

If you’ve ever felt like Amazon PPC is unpredictable, expensive, or impossible to scale… you’re not alone.

But after managing PPC across hundreds of brands, we’ve found something surprising:

Most Amazon ad accounts don’t fail because bids are wrong.
They fail because allocation is wrong.

Sellers obsess over:

  • “What should my bid be?”
  • “Should I raise budgets?”
  • “Which keywords should I target?”

But the real lever that determines profitability and stability is:
How your PPC budget is allocated across the right campaign buckets.

When allocation is wrong:

  • you overspend on discovery
  • underfund what actually converts
  • spread budgets too thin across too many SKUs
  • and your performance swings wildly week to week

In this guide, we’ll break down:

  • the most common PPC allocation mistakes we see across many brands
  • the 4 essential PPC buckets every Amazon account needs
  • the budget ranges that tend to perform best (and why)
  • and a step-by-step plan to fix your allocation this week

The Hidden Problem: Most Sellers Run PPC Like a Slot Machine

Here’s what “wrong allocation” typically looks like in real life:

  • Auto campaigns run with huge budgets indefinitely
  • Broad match eats spend because “it might discover something”
  • Brand and non-brand are mixed, so you can’t see truth
  • Multiple SKUs compete internally for the same traffic
  • Campaigns overlap and cannibalize each other
  • Winners don’t get enough budget to scale
  • Losers aren’t cut fast enough

The result:
You’re not running a strategy.
You’re running a collection of campaigns.

The fix is to build a system.


The 4 PPC Buckets Every Amazon Account Needs

If you want stability, your PPC should be organized into four functional buckets:

Bucket 1: Defense (Protect what already works)

Purpose:

  • protect hero keywords
  • maintain rank on converting terms
  • defend branded traffic
  • prevent competitors from stealing high-intent shoppers

This is the “keep the lights on” bucket.

Bucket 2: Discovery (Find new winners)

Purpose:

  • discover search terms and product targets that convert
  • expand reach without wasting money
  • build a pipeline of new winners

This is your research and learning bucket.

Bucket 3: Scale (Winners only)

Purpose:

  • allocate budget to the targets already proven to convert profitably
  • expand volume while staying efficient

This is where growth happens.

Bucket 4: Conquest (Competitors and category share)

Purpose:

  • win competitor placements
  • steal market share on rival listings
  • capture shoppers in comparison mode

This is optional depending on category, but powerful when done right.

Most sellers only run Discovery and a messy mix of Scale/Defense.
That’s why results swing.


The Allocation Problem We See Over and Over

Across many accounts, the most common issue is this:

Too much money in Discovery.

Not enough money in Defense and Scale.

Discovery is seductive because it feels like growth.
But discovery is inherently less efficient because you’re paying to learn.

If discovery becomes your main spend, you’re always paying “tuition.”
You never graduate.

Meanwhile, your best-performing targets get starved, so:

  • you lose rank
  • competitors outbid you
  • and your blended ACOS rises

The PPC Allocation Framework That Performs Better

There’s no perfect universal split—but in general, these ranges are a strong starting point for many established brands:

✅ Defense: 35–55%

Includes:

  • hero exact match keywords
  • branded terms
  • top-of-search defense for critical terms

Why so much?
Because defense stabilizes revenue and rank.

✅ Discovery: 15–25%

Includes:

  • auto campaigns
  • phrase/broad research
  • category tests
  • new product target tests

Why capped?
Because discovery needs to exist—but it should not eat the account.

✅ Scale: 20–40%

Includes:

  • exact match winners
  • proven product targets
  • proven category segments

This is where you put money once something proves itself.

✅ Conquest: 5–15%

Includes:

  • competitor ASIN targeting
  • category conquesting
  • comparison placement strategies

This depends on category competitiveness and your differentiation.

Important note:
If you’re a brand-new product with no history, discovery will be higher early.
But mature accounts should not live in discovery forever.


The Brand vs Non-Brand Trap (That Skews Everything)

Another issue we see constantly:

Brand and non-brand traffic are mixed.

This causes two problems:

  1. you can’t see how efficient true prospecting is
  2. you over-credit PPC because brand searches convert easily

If you separate campaigns into:

  • brand defense
  • non-brand defense
  • non-brand discovery
  • non-brand scale

…you get clarity.

Clarity leads to better decisions.


The SKU Spread Problem: Too Many Products, Too Little Momentum

The third big pattern:

Brands try to run PPC on too many SKUs equally.

That’s almost always wrong.

Because Amazon rewards momentum:

  • velocity
  • conversion
  • relevance

If you spread spend across 30 products, you never build dominance.

Instead:

  • pick 1–5 hero SKUs
  • concentrate scale budget there
  • use supporting SKUs selectively for upsells, bundles, and retention

When you concentrate spend, winners become bigger winners.


How to Fix Your PPC Allocation in 30 Minutes (Step-by-Step)

Here’s a simple reallocation plan you can implement quickly.

Step 1: Pull last 30 days spend by campaign

Export:

  • spend
  • sales
  • ACOS
  • impressions
  • clicks
  • orders

Step 2: Label every campaign by bucket

For each campaign, mark:

  • Defense
  • Discovery
  • Scale
  • Conquest

If a campaign does multiple jobs, that’s a red flag.

Step 3: Calculate spend share by bucket

What % of spend is in each?

Most sellers discover:

  • discovery is way too high
  • defense is too low
  • scale is underfunded

Step 4: Move budget from discovery losers to scale winners

Actions:

  • cap discovery budgets
  • pause wasteful targets
  • move budgets to proven converting campaigns

The goal:
Stop paying tuition forever.

Step 5: Create (or fix) a defense layer

If you don’t have clear defense campaigns:

  • build an exact match defense campaign for hero keywords
  • build a brand defense campaign for branded searches

This protects your base.

Step 6: Tighten conquest to proven targets

Don’t target 1,000 competitor ASINs.
Target 20–100 that match your positioning and convert.

Step 7: Monitor weekly, restructure monthly

  • weekly: harvest winners, add negatives, adjust bids
  • monthly: restructure buckets and allocate budgets

The KPI That Matters Most: TACoS

If you want sustainable growth, don’t optimize for ACOS alone.

ACOS can look “bad” while you’re growing organic rank.
TACoS shows the truth:
Is PPC driving profitable overall growth?

A mature allocation strategy improves TACoS by:

  • defending high-converting terms efficiently
  • scaling proven winners
  • limiting discovery waste
  • keeping the account stable

Final Takeaway

If your Amazon PPC feels expensive and unpredictable, don’t start by changing bids.

Start by fixing allocation.

The brands that win consistently:

  • defend what already works
  • discover intentionally (with caps)
  • scale only winners
  • and conquest strategically

That’s how PPC stops being chaos and becomes a growth system.