The 90-day Amazon India launch playbook: listing live to first 1,000 reviews.
A successful Amazon India launch is not magic. It's a sequenced 90-day system across four phases: pre-launch (listing, Brand Registry, FBA inbound), weeks 1–4 (foundation: auto SP, first 30 reviews via Vine), weeks 5–8 (acceleration: manual SP, SB video, 100+ reviews), weeks 9–12 (defend & scale: full ad mix, BSR top 10). Skip a phase or run them out of order and you waste 60% of the launch budget on traffic that never converts.
Most Amazon India launches we audit have the same problem: founders run them like a website launch — ship it, drive traffic, hope it converts. Amazon doesn't work that way. The marketplace's algorithm rewards velocity in a specific sequence: listing readiness → review velocity → ad-driven sales → organic rank climb. Mess up the order and the algorithm filters you out before page one ever sees you.
We've run this 90-day system for new SKU launches across Quick Heal, Glenmark, CSS, Naaptol, Zartari and a dozen others. The phases below aren't theoretical — they're the actual scaffolding we copy-paste into every launch deck.
The four-phase shape
Before the detail, here's the whole 90 days on a single page:
| Phase | Duration | Goal | Target ACoS | Target reviews |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-launch | Day 0 (4–6 weeks prep) | Listing + ops ready | — | 0 → Vine in queue |
| Foundation | Weeks 1–4 | Conversion data + first reviews | 60–100% (intentional) | 0 → 30 |
| Acceleration | Weeks 5–8 | Velocity + BSR top 30 | 35–50% | 30 → 100+ |
| Defend & scale | Weeks 9–12 | BSR top 10 + brand defence | 20–35% | 100 → 1,000+ |
If you remember nothing else from this post, remember this: weeks 1–4 are supposed to be unprofitable. The brands that try to launch at a 25% ACoS in week 2 fail almost every time. You're buying data and ranking velocity, not revenue.
Pre-launch (Day 0 — 4 to 6 weeks of prep)
The most common reason an Amazon launch fails is not the launch itself — it's that pre-launch was rushed. The minimum bar to flip the listing live:
1. Keyword research
Use Helium 10, Jungle Scout, or Amazon's own search-term reports from a similar ASIN you already run. Build three keyword tiers:
- Hero keywords (3–5): the queries you absolutely must rank for. High volume, exact category-defining intent. Example for a kitchenware launch: "tongs steel," "kitchen tongs," "cooking tongs set."
- Supporting keywords (15–25): mid-volume long-tail. Where you'll first appear and earn velocity before climbing on hero terms.
- Defensive keywords (5–10): your brand name + variants, plus competitor brand names you might intercept.
2. Listing build (the part everyone underestimates)
Title, bullets, description, A+ content, backend search terms, attributes. Each of these moves search rank independently. Get all six right or you'll fix one a month for nine months.
- Title: brand → hero keyword → key attribute → variant. ~150 characters, include 1 hero keyword and 1 supporting keyword.
- Bullets: 5 bullets, lead with benefit (in caps), then specifics. Mention 8–12 supporting keywords across all 5 bullets without stuffing.
- A+ content: at least 5 modules. Comparison module + brand story + lifestyle imagery. Brand Registry required.
- Backend search terms: 250 bytes. Use synonyms, vernacular spellings (Hindi transliterations), competitor brand names where defensible, common misspellings.
- Photography: 7 images minimum — hero white background, lifestyle, infographic with key features, scale comparison, packaging shot, in-use shot, variant grid. Mobile-first composition: 80% of India shops Amazon on phone.
3. Operational readiness
- Brand Registry active (without it, you can't run SB ads, A+ content, or defend listings — non-negotiable).
- FBA inventory inbound, with at least 8–10 weeks of estimated demand on hand. The launch ranks die the day you go out of stock.
- Pricing modelled against the Amazon India fee calculator. Know your break-even ACoS, your contribution per order, and your floor price before going live.
- Vine enrolled (₹15,000 per ASIN — worth every rupee for the first 30 reviews; we'll come back to this).
- Inserts printed: a small package insert that politely asks for a review. Do not incentivise — Amazon ToS violation. Just well-designed, friendly, and signed by the founder if it's an early-stage brand.
Weeks 1–4: Foundation
Listing is live. Inventory is in. The clock starts. The only goal of this phase is to give Amazon's algorithm three things to learn from: ad clicks, conversions, and reviews. Whatever revenue you make is a side effect.
Ad strategy: pure auto SP, aggressive bids
Run 2–3 Sponsored Products auto campaigns at 1.5–2x your eventual target bid. Yes, that means a 60–100% ACoS in weeks 1–2. That's correct. You're paying Amazon to tell you which keywords actually convert for your listing — data you cannot get any other way.
- Daily budget: enough that the campaign doesn't run out of budget before noon. Usually ₹1,500–₹3,000/day per ASIN.
- Targeting: "close match" + "loose match" auto, separate campaigns. Skip "substitutes" and "complements" until week 3.
- Pull search-term reports daily. Bookmark every search term where ACoS is below 80% and at least one conversion has happened.
Reviews: Vine first, then organic flow
Enrol the ASIN in Amazon Vine the day inventory clears check-in. Vine reviews land at days 7–21 and are weighted heavily by the algorithm because they're verified. Target: 25–30 Vine reviews by end of week 4.
In parallel, the package insert kicks in for organic reviews from real buyers. Realistic conversion: 1.5–3% of buyers leave a review when politely asked. So 100 orders = 2–3 organic reviews per week. Don't chase numbers; chase a clean star average above 4.3.
What good looks like at end of week 4
- 30+ reviews, average rating ≥4.3
- BSR ranked in top 200 for primary category
- 20–40 search terms identified as converting (these become week 5 manual campaigns)
- Conversion rate stabilising around 8–14% on hero traffic
If you're materially below those numbers, don't move to Phase 2 yet. Either reviews are stuck, the listing isn't converting, or pricing is wrong. Diagnose first; accelerate later.
Weeks 5–8: Acceleration
You now have data Amazon's algorithm understands. This phase is about pouring fuel on what's working and stopping spend on what isn't.
Migrate auto winners to manual exact-match
Take every search term from Phase 1 with ACoS below 60% and at least 2 conversions. Build manual exact-match SP campaigns for those terms with bids 15–25% higher than the auto bid that won them. Add them as negatives in the auto campaigns so you stop competing with yourself.
Add a manual broad-match campaign on your hero keywords. Lower bids than exact, wider intent capture. Add a product-targeting campaign on 5–10 direct competitor ASINs.
Launch Sponsored Brands video
If you have Brand Registry and a brand store, launch one SB video on your top 3 hero keywords. SB video has 1.5–2x the CTR of SP banners and 30–50% lower CPCs on the same keyword. It also signals brand legitimacy to Amazon's ranking model.
Don't go heavy on SB yet — 15–20% of total ad spend is right for this phase. The full SP/SB/SD allocation framework is in our ad-mix post.
Listing optimisation pass #1
You now have 4 weeks of conversion data. Run an A/B test on your main image (Amazon's "Manage Your Experiments" if eligible, or a controlled price-and-image test). The image test alone typically lifts CR by 12–25% in our launches.
Update the title to lead with the highest-converting search term you discovered in Phase 1 (often not the one you originally guessed). Update bullets to address the top objections that appear in the first 30 reviews.
What good looks like at end of week 8
- 100+ reviews, rating ≥4.3
- BSR top 30 in primary category
- ACoS dropping toward 35–50%
- TACoS (total ads ÷ total revenue) entering 12–18% — a leading indicator that organic is starting to do work. Why TACoS matters more than ACoS →
- At least one supporting keyword now ranking on page 1 organically
Weeks 9–12: Defend & scale
The launch is almost over. This phase transitions you out of "launch mode" thinking and into "ongoing operation" thinking. Three jobs:
Add Sponsored Display retargeting and PDP defence
Now that you have ASIN traffic, SD earns its budget. Two campaigns to start:
- SD retargeting on viewers of your ASIN in the last 7 days who didn't buy. ROAS in our launches consistently runs 4–8x.
- SD PDP defence on your own product page. Stops competitors from showing ads to a customer already on your listing. Cheap, defensive, almost always positive.
Defend brand search
By week 9 you have meaningful brand search volume — people typing your brand name to find you. Run a defensive SB headline ad on your own brand name. If you don't, competitors will buy that traffic at a fraction of the cost they'd pay on a category keyword.
Keep brand-search ACoS in the 4–10% band. Anything below 4% means you're under-defending; anything above 12% means you're either over-bidding or being aggressively conquested by a competitor.
Listing optimisation pass #2
Refresh A+ content with the strongest customer benefits that emerged from real reviews. Update photography if a specific angle is mentioned repeatedly in negative reviews. Add an FAQ module if pre-purchase questions cluster around the same 3–5 themes.
What good looks like at end of week 12
- 1,000+ reviews (Vine + organic + steady velocity)
- BSR top 10 in primary category
- ACoS at 20–35%, TACoS at 8–12%
- Hero keywords ranking organically in top 5
- Steady-state daily revenue at or above target launch run-rate
The launch budget — illustrative numbers
For a single hero SKU at ₹999 selling price, a realistic launch P&L looks like this:
| Phase | Ad spend | Vine + ops | Total | Expected revenue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-launch | ₹0 | ₹40,000 | ₹40,000 | ₹0 |
| Weeks 1–4 (Foundation) | ₹1.2L | ₹15,000 | ₹1.35L | ₹1.5–₹2L |
| Weeks 5–8 (Acceleration) | ₹2.0L | — | ₹2.0L | ₹4–₹6L |
| Weeks 9–12 (Defend) | ₹2.5L | — | ₹2.5L | ₹8–₹12L |
| 90-day total | ₹5.7L | ₹55,000 | ₹6.25L | ₹13.5–₹20L |
Net cumulative result depends on your contribution per order. For most consumer goods at ₹999, this maths to a small launch loss in cash terms but a built ASIN that runs at 25–35% blended margin from month 4 onward. The "loss" is the cost of buying a defensible top-10 BSR position. The brands that try to skip the loss and launch at break-even ACoS almost always end up paying more total over 9 months.
Five things that kill launches in India specifically
- Going out of stock. Amazon will quietly demote you the moment you switch to "currently unavailable." Recovery takes 6–8 weeks. Plan for 10+ weeks of stock from day 1, not 4.
- Pricing above ₹1,000 unintentionally. Crossing the referral fee cliff at launch can drop your net by 8–15% per order — exactly when you can least afford it. More here →
- Skipping Vine. The first 30 reviews matter more than the next 300. Vine gets you there in 3 weeks; "wait for organic" takes 4 months.
- Cookie-cutter listing copy from D2C. Amazon search ranks on different signals than your D2C site. Copy-paste catalogues underperform on Amazon by 30–50%.
- Optimising ACoS in week 2. Lowering bids in Phase 1 to "improve efficiency" kills the data Amazon needs to give you ranking velocity. The biggest mistake we see new agencies make.
What to do this week
- If you're pre-launch: use the pre-launch checklist above and don't go live until every box is ticked. The temptation to launch early costs more than it saves.
- If you're in week 1–4: stop optimising for ACoS. Optimise for search-term coverage and Vine velocity. Tighten ACoS in week 5.
- If you're in week 5–8: migrate every winning auto search term to manual exact match this week. Launch your first SB video. Run an image A/B test.
- If you're in week 9–12: turn on SD retargeting + brand search defence. Plan the listing optimisation pass for week 11. Decide your steady-state ad allocation now.
- If your launch is past 90 days and not at top 30 BSR: the issue is almost always one of (a) stock-outs, (b) pricing, (c) ad allocation, or (d) listing CR. Audit those four in that order.
An Amazon India launch isn't hard if you run it as a system. It's hard when you run it as a series of isolated decisions. The 90-day frame above is what turns it into the former.
Want this run for your launch?
We'll run the full 90-day playbook for one or more SKUs end-to-end — listing, ads, reviews, BSR climb. Send us your product and we'll come back with a launch plan and a target P&L on day 1.
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