simple but effective on Amazon


Hey Reader,

Traffic without conversions is just expensive window shopping.

If you want to increase conversions on Amazon, follow these 5 strategies:

1. Make a clear hero image

Show your portable blender in action - someone actually using it to make a smoothie. Not just the product sitting on a white background.

Buyers need to see themselves using your product. Clear usage images give them that reason to click.

2. Create urgency

"Limited stock - Only 15 left" or "Amazon's Choice bestseller" makes people act faster.

Without urgency, customers add to wishlist and forget. With urgency, they buy today.

3. Keep your title short and clear

First two lines should solve the customer's problem immediately.

Bad: "Premium Quality Bluetooth Speaker with Amazing Sound"

Good: "Waterproof Bluetooth Speaker - 20 Hour Battery Life for Outdoor Adventures"

Second one tells exactly what problem it solves.

4. Use bundles strategically

Show your electric kettle alone for ₹3,500, then offer kettle + tea infuser bundle for ₹4,200.

The premium option makes the regular price look reasonable. More customers choose the bundle, increasing your order value.

5. Focus on getting reviews early

You need 25-30 quality reviews before your listing looks trustworthy.

Without reviews, even great products look risky. Would you buy a ₹8,000 air purifier with zero reviews?

If you want to make money on Amazon, don't just chase traffic. Build a strong listing foundation first.

Because once your conversion rate increases from 5% to 12%, the same ad spend generates double the sales.

Traffic is expensive. Conversions are profitable.

If you want to learn the right way to do the Amazon business, checkout the free training:

Happy building!

Ali Lokhandwala, India’s Top Amazon Expert

Once a champion, always a champion.


Sometimes I wonder if anyone ever scrolls to the bottom of an email like this. You’d think people have better things to do, but then again, I’ve been known to read cereal boxes, shampoo bottles, and the back of spice jars just because they were in front of me. Maybe this is that kind of moment for ya. I’m sitting with a cup of tea, watching the steam twist and fade before it reaches the kitchen light. It’s strange how many small things go unnoticed in the middle of daily routines. The sound of a ceiling fan wobbling just slightly. The way the air smells different after it rains, almost like the ground itself is breathing.

This week, I noticed a tree near my place had grown tiny, stubborn shoots from the base. They looked like they’d decided to become trees of their own, no matter what the original trunk thought about it. It made me think about how we grow in unexpected directions, even when things seems to have a set plan for us. Some days that’s exciting. Other days, it feels like too much work just to keep standing.

I’ve been spending a little more time walking without a destination. It’s good how the mind clears when you’re not rushing anywhere in particular. I passed an elderly man feeding crumbs to a group of crows. He didn’t look at me, and I didn’t look at him for long, but the scene stayed in my head. Maybe because it felt like a quiet agreement between species—no fuss, no big meaning, just a habit they both liked.

Speaking of habits, I’ve been trying to notice the difference between the ones I chose and the ones that just happened to me. Drinking water in the morning was a choice. Checking my mobile before bed? That one sort of snuck in when I wasn’t paying attention. It’s funny how certain patterns can run your zindagi without ever asking permission.

Anyway, if you’ve made it this far, I guess you and I share an interest in wandering thoughts. That’s nice. Most people rush through messages, scanning for the part they think matters most. But maybe this part matters too. The quiet part. The part without urgency. The part that’s just… .

I could keep going about the small details of the day, like the sound of a neighbor practicing guitar, or the way the last bit of sunlight falls in an uneven rectangle across the floor. But maybe I’ll keep that for another time. Or maybe you’ll go notice your own rectangle of light, and that’ll be better than reading mine.

Either way, thanks for keeping me company at the bottom of the page.

You aren’t meant to read the following. You certainly can, it’s in your inbox and it’s yours to ignore or pore over, whichever’s your thing—but this tiny-print section is merely to see if I can acquire this email to stay in the primary tab. (Just using the title of said sad tab can send it there, apparently.) It’s a struggle lately, figuring out which words the ol’ gmail bots are sniffing for, to put these much-loved emails in that collection of unloved, low-priority, too-commercial messages. I don’t want these ending up there where you have permission to ignore them. I don’t want to be among the silly billies you signed up for just to acquire fifteen percent on the jeans you didn’t end up buying after. I’m totally babbling. I don’t know if it’ll make an iota of difference but my biz lives or dies by how many people them, and that depends on where I end up. I don’t want to be in Unread Jail. I’m not built for prison. I’m a delicate sleeper, for one. I have to take sleep aids, which I will not specify because that will probably land me in the trash folder. Are you actually reading this? I know you probably want to see what I’m doing in this mysterious box. Usually, I put it in a light color that makes it easy to miss, which is what I want. Someone said I should put it in black so it’s readable, because they wanted to read it. Maybe they knew there were tidbits about my college in this section. Wanna know one of those interesting people who was there at the same time, whom I met because I hung out with people who came talking about how much they lifted at the gym? Mike White, that’s who. Most recently, he made White Lotus, which I just realized has his last word in the title. Genius. Or accident. Who knows? As for this weird paragraph, if you’re reading to see what tricks I’m up to in my emails, I’ll tell you, it doesn’t work every time. The algo has started to hate me? I don’t know what’s happening. I still stand by email day long. I like social fine but it’s rented land, and you don’t want to build your whole platform on that. You want to build it on land you own, which is your subscriber list. The percentage of people who see and interact with any post on Insta, for instance, is minuscule compared with that of your email subscribers who will see a message that goes to their inbox. So there’s that. Still. WTF with this p---o tab stuff? I don’t it. Do me a favor and move this to primary? If you’re reading this, that is. And this went to a different folder. The following is more gobbledygook, trust me not worth reading. It’s a copy-paste and there’s nothing fun or smart within, trust me. And when I say we, I mean me. OK, the blablabla.

Ali Lokhandwala

India's Top Amazon Expert | Generated over 50 Crore Revenue | Trained 15,000+ Entrepreneurs | I help businesses and entrepreneurs start and scale a profitable Amazon business.

Read more from Ali Lokhandwala

Hey Reader, Planning to start Amazon with low investment? You're making the wrong decision. Everyone thinks playing safe with less money is smart. Actually, it's the biggest mistake in Amazon business. Here are 3 major benefits of higher investment that change the game: First - Product diversification With ₹3 lakh investment, you're stuck with one massage gun. If it fails, everything's over. With ₹10 lakh investment, you can launch better high-ticket low risk product. Risk gets spread across...

Hey Reader, Ignore these red flags during product research and you could lose everything. Most sellers think finding good demand with low competition is enough. Reality is very different. Here are 5 red flags you should never ignore: 1. Top seller suddenly disappears If the #1 ranking premium rice cooker seller vanishes overnight, something serious happened. Could be patent issues, legal problems, or major quality disasters. When successful sellers exit quickly, there's usually a hidden...

Hey Reader, People often ask: "Why Amazon FBA? And how did you succeed so young?" Amazon FBA wasn't my first choice. I tried multiple things before discovering it. But when I found FBA, two things clicked: It was still early in India with massive untapped potential. While others chased saturated offline markets, I saw opportunity in e-commerce. Everything could be data-driven. No more guessing or gut feelings about what customers wanted. Was it smooth? Hell no. I failed 5-6 times before...