
Head of Marketing - Earned Media
Marketing | Software
Amazon Prime ads let brands reach viewers using real purchase...
By Narender Singh
Jan 28, 2026 | 5 Minutes | |
Amazon Prime Video isn't just where people binge-watch The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel anymore. It's become a legitimate advertising powerhouse, and honestly? Most brands are still sleeping on it.
The platform reaches over 200 million Prime subscribers globally. That's a massive audience. But here's what makes it different from throwing money at YouTube or Hulu: Amazon knows what these people actually buy. Not what they might buy. What they do buy. That shopping data changes everything when you're trying to run ads on Amazon Prime.
Getting started sounds simple enough. Reality? There's a learning curve that catches most advertisers off guard.
Think about how most video platforms work. They target based on demographics, interests, maybe some browsing behavior. Amazon Prime takes it further because they're sitting on years of purchase history. Someone who bought running shoes three times in the last year? That's not just someone interested in fitness. That's a runner who replaces their shoes regularly.
The ad formats themselves are pretty standard. In-stream video ads that play during shows. Display ads across the interface. Interactive formats where viewers can click through to product pages without leaving their couch. Nothing revolutionary there. What's revolutionary is who you can reach and how precisely you can reach them.
The catch? Amazon doesn't make this easy to figure out on your own.
You'll need an Amazon Ads account to run ads on Amazon Prime. The signup process is straightforward enough. Connect a payment method, verify your business details, and you're technically ready to go. But being able to log in and actually running profitable campaigns are two very different things.
The dashboard throws a lot at you right away. Campaign objectives, audience segments, bidding strategies, budget allocation. Most people click around for ten minutes, get overwhelmed, and either give up or just pick options that sound reasonable. Both approaches waste money.
Campaign setup starts with defining what you're actually trying to accomplish. Brand awareness campaigns run differently than direct response campaigns. You wouldn't use the same strategy to introduce a new product as you would to retarget people who've already visited your Amazon store. Seems obvious, but you'd be surprised how many advertisers skip this step.
Amazon has technical requirements for video ads. Resolution specs, file formats, duration limits. The usual stuff. Meeting those requirements is table stakes. What actually determines whether your campaign works is whether your creative can hold attention.
Prime viewers are engaged. They chose what they're watching, unlike linear TV where people channel surf. That means your ad is interrupting something they care about. You've got maybe three seconds before they mentally check out and reach for their phone.
Start strong. Not with a logo. Not with a slow build. With something visually arresting or emotionally compelling. Get to your point fast. If you're selling something, make it clear what problem you solve. Sounds basic, but look at most video ads and you'll see 15 seconds of setup before they get to anything meaningful.
Oh, and your call to action? Make it specific. "Shop now" works if you're driving to a product page. "Learn more" works if you need to educate first. "Add to cart" only makes sense if the viewer is already familiar with your product.
This is where Amazon Prime advertising gets interesting. The targeting options are frankly incredible if you know how to use them. You can target by what people have bought, what they've browsed, what's in their cart right now. You can layer demographics on top of shopping behavior. You can exclude people who already bought from you.
Most advertisers go too broad or too narrow. Too broad means you're showing ads to people who'll never buy from you. Too narrow means you're limiting your reach so much that you can't scale. Finding that sweet spot takes testing and honest analysis of who your actual customers are.
Custom audiences are powerful if you have decent customer data. Upload your email list, and Amazon will match it to Prime members. Build lookalike audiences based on your best customers. Retarget people who visited your product pages but didn't buy. These aren't revolutionary concepts, but the match rates and accuracy on Amazon tend to be better than other platforms because of how integrated everything is.
Amazon uses an auction system for ad placements. You're bidding against other advertisers for the same inventory. CPM bidding charges per thousand impressions. CPCV bidding charges per completed view. Which one you choose depends on your goals, but here's what nobody tells you: the default bid suggestions Amazon provides are almost always too high.
Start lower than recommended. See what happens. You can always bid up if you're not getting enough volume. But starting high and trying to optimize down means you've already blown budget learning what you should've tested first.
Budget management isn't a set-it-and-forget-it thing. Campaigns that perform well should get more budget. Underperforming segments should get cut or rebuilt. You need to check performance at least weekly, probably more often when you're starting out. Anyone telling you otherwise is either lying or has more money than sense.
Amazon's reporting gives you plenty of metrics. Impressions, completion rates, click-throughs, conversions. The hard part isn't getting the data. It's knowing what to do with it.
A high completion rate might look good, but if nobody's clicking through or buying, you've just created an expensive brand awareness exercise. Low completion rates with high conversion rates might actually be fine if you're efficiently finding your buyers. Context matters more than any single number.
Testing should be constant. Different video versions. Audience variations. New ad formats. Different times of day or days of week. But test one variable at a time, or you won't know what actually moved the needle. This is basic scientific method stuff, but plenty of campaigns ignore it and then wonder why they can't figure out what's working.
Learning to run ads on Amazon Prime effectively takes time and experimentation. The platform offers sophisticated targeting capabilities that most other video platforms can't match, but that power comes with complexity. You're not just learning a new interface. You're learning a completely different approach to video advertising that's built around shopping behavior rather than just viewing habits.
The biggest mistake brands make? Treating Amazon Prime ads like any other video platform. They take creative that worked on YouTube, upload it to Amazon, target broadly, and wonder why results disappoint. Amazon Prime requires a different strategy because the audience mindset is different and the available data is different.
Start with clear goals. Know exactly what success looks like before you spend a dollar. Build creative specifically for the platform and the audience. Test your targeting assumptions rather than trusting your gut. Monitor performance closely and be willing to kill what's not working. Scale what proves itself.
The platform isn't going to get less competitive. More brands figure out how to run ads on Amazon Prime every quarter. Getting in now, while there's still learning to do and opportunities to grab, makes more sense than waiting until best practices are established and costs have risen. But only if you approach it seriously and give yourself room to learn what works for your specific business.