8.1 Placement Types Explained¶
What this page teaches: [[Sponsored Products]] placements include Top of Search, Rest of Search, and Product Pages.
Why this matters in real accounts: This topic affects money, visibility, campaign control, reporting clarity, or team execution. Understanding the business reason first makes the console steps much easier to learn.
Practical workflow: - Read the definition and linked glossary terms. - Identify what decision this topic affects. - Find the report, console screen, or input data required. - Make a small reversible change first when working in a live account. - Write down what changed and why.
Worked mini-example: Open the relevant report, check the key metric, make one small change, and note what you did and why.
Common beginner mistakes: - Skipping the context and copying tactics blindly. - Changing a live account without checking eligibility, budget, or data window. - Forgetting to log the reason behind the change.
Definition of done: - The learner can explain the topic without jargon. - The learner can name the report, console area, or data input used for this topic. - The learner can describe one safe action, one risky action, and one escalation trigger.
Merged from Complete Data-Filled Guide¶
Complete data-filled section notes¶
Placement optimization controls where your ads appear. The three main Sponsored Products placements are Top of Search, Rest of Search, and Product Detail Pages.
| Placement | Typical behavior | Operator note |
|---|---|---|
| Top of Search | High visibility, high CPC, often high CVR | Worth bidding up only when efficient |
| Rest of Search | Middle ground | Often stable and scalable |
| Product Detail Pages | Lower intent, cheaper clicks | Useful for conquesting and cross-sell |
Diagnosis workflow¶
- Pull the Placement Report.
- Compare ACOS, CTR, CVR, CPC, and sales by placement.
- Increase modifier where ACOS is below target and volume is limited.
- Reduce modifier where CPC is high and CVR is weak.
- Recheck after enough data, not the next morning.
Worked example¶
If Top of Search ACOS is 25%, Rest of Search is 35%, and Product Pages is 45%, increase Top of Search modestly, leave Rest alone, and reduce Product Pages or keep it conservative.
Operator checklist¶
- Explain the topic in plain English.
- Identify the report, console area, or input data needed.
- Make the smallest safe change first.
- Log the action, reason, and expected review date.
- Escalate if the issue touches policy, inventory, account health, or large budget changes.