Marketplace advertising is not the same as D2C website advertising.
On Meta, you create demand. On Google, you capture intent. On marketplaces like Amazon, Flipkart, and Myntra, you compete inside an active shopping environment where customers are already comparing products, prices, delivery timelines, reviews, discounts, and alternatives.
That means marketplace marketing is not only about running ads. It is about winning the digital shelf.
A marketplace shopper has higher purchase intent but lower brand patience. They may compare five similar products in under a minute. If your product has weak images, poor title, low reviews, wrong pricing, unavailable sizes, or unclear delivery promise, paid ads will only send more traffic to a page that does not convert.
This is why marketplace marketing has three layers:
Most brands jump to layer two and ignore layers one and three.
Amazon India offers multiple advertising options. Sponsored Products help promote individual listings, Sponsored Brands help showcase brand logo, headline, and product selection, Stores allow brands to build a brand destination, and Sponsored Display helps engage shoppers across the purchase journey.
For fashion brands, the practical use is:
Sponsored Products: Push high-intent SKUs such as sneakers, shirts, kurtas, sandals, bags, watches, and accessories.
Sponsored Brands: Build category visibility and send users to a Store or curated collection.
Sponsored Display: Retarget viewers, cross-sell related products, and defend product detail pages.
Amazon Store: Tell the brand story and organise the catalog by occasion, category, and collection.
Flipkart says its advertising platform helps sellers promote products to 45 crore+ users.
For fashion brands, Flipkart is important during high-intensity sale periods such as Big Billion Days, festive shopping, end-of-season sales, and category campaigns. However, sale visibility can become expensive unless the brand has strong product readiness.
Before scaling Flipkart ads, check:
Myntra is particularly relevant for fashion, footwear, beauty, and lifestyle positioning. Brands should treat Myntra differently from Amazon. The user expectation is more fashion-led, trend-led, and style-led.
For Myntra, optimise:
Before spending aggressively, score each SKU from 1 to 5 across these parameters:
Only products scoring well should get meaningful ad spend.
Promote proven SKUs with ratings, inventory, and margin.
Find converting search terms.
Protect your own category and brand search visibility.
Use carefully where allowed and commercially viable.
Give new SKUs enough visibility to generate early sales and reviews.
Separate budgets for marketplace events so they do not distort always-on performance.
Marketplace teams often chase sales rank without watching ACOS. That is dangerous.
A product with 35% ACOS may be fine if margins are high. The same ACOS may be unprofitable for discounted products. Always compare ACOS with product-level gross margin, marketplace commission, logistics cost, returns, and discount funding.
AdYogi’s marketplace product page highlights the need for campaign, targeting, ads, search term optimisation, and product performance management for Amazon ad decisions, including product-level profitability data.
It depends on brand stage. Marketplaces provide intent and distribution, while D2C websites provide better customer ownership, storytelling, and margin control.
Running ads before the listing is ready. Weak images, poor ratings, bad titles, and poor inventory will waste spend.
ACOS is often easier for marketplace teams because it directly shows ad cost as a percentage of attributed sales. But it should always be compared with margin.