
9 Jun 2026
ANavigator Weekly Amazon Digest — Week 23
A busy week on Amazon. Nine updates across ads, data tools, seller policies, and platform features — several of which require attention before Prime Day in late June.
📌 Contents:
- Amazon Prime Day confirmed for June 23-26
- AMC paid tables are unlocked for free until December 31
- Amazon removes the “Contact Customer” button from the review dashboard
- Full Funnel Campaigns rolling out
- AI auto-assembled videos for Sponsored Products Video
- Amazon AI campaign suggestions now include actionable steps
- New Vendor Central homepage dashboard rolling out
- “Discover” brand module appears in search without a sponsored label
- ACoS “between” filter added in Campaign Manager
1. Amazon Prime Day confirmed: June 23-26
Amazon has officially confirmed Prime Day will run for four days this year, from June 23 to June 26. That puts it roughly three weeks earlier than last year’s event. The shift compresses the preparation window for brands planning promotions, inventory positioning, and ad budgets. Earlier in the year could also mean different buyer behavior — whether conversion rates and average order values shift compared to July remains to be seen. Brands that wait until June to start planning will be behind. Budget decisions, inventory signals, and campaign structure changes need to happen now. The earlier date also means less overlap with back-to-school spending patterns, which may affect certain categories more than others.
Read more here by Mattew Higgins

2. AMC paid tables now free until December 31
Amazon has removed the paywall on its paid AMC feature tables, including Amazon Insights, through December 31. Third-party data sources like Experian remain behind a paywall. The free tables cover the organic side of the customer journey — data that most brands have never been able to query because it required a paid subscription. That includes: repeat purchase behavior after an ad-driven first sale, subscription conversion timing, LTV by customer cohort, and how much of retargeting spend is going to customers already won. The default 7-day attribution window may also be hiding real sales, and AMC lets you expand that window. For seven months, all of this costs nothing. Brands that have never run AMC queries should treat this window as a reason to start.
Read more here by Mansour Norouzi

3. Amazon removes the “Contact Customer” button from the review dashboard
Amazon has removed the ability for sellers to initiate contact from the Customer Reviews dashboard — the button is already gone. This is not yet fully official, but it appears to be live and active. The stated intent is to reduce review manipulation. The practical outcome is that legitimate brands can no longer reach a real customer who had a real problem — a shipping issue, a damaged product, or a simple misunderstanding — to resolve it. Fake review farms and coordinated review swaps are unaffected by this change. Brands that relied on this as a customer service recovery tool will need to find other paths, such as proactively building post-purchase communication through Buyer-Seller Messaging before a review is posted.
Read more here by Cameron McAnulty

4. Full Funnel Campaigns rolling out
Amazon appears to be testing a new AI-powered campaign type called Full Funnel Campaigns, which manages Sponsored Products, Sponsored Brands, and Sponsored Display under a single strategy. Rather than allocating budgets manually across campaign types, Amazon’s AI would decide where to spend based on where it estimates the biggest impact across the customer journey. AI-generated creative is also part of the feature. It is early, and the level of control advertisers retain is not yet clear. The implications for brands with established, well-optimized structures are worth watching carefully before making any moves.

5. AI auto-assembled videos for Sponsored Products Video
Amazon has launched an option to auto-generate product videos for Sponsored Products Video ads. The system pulls images and assets from an existing listing and assembles a video automatically — no filming or editing required. The feature is currently in beta, and early reports indicate impressions are limited at this stage. The barrier to running video ads has dropped significantly for brands that previously lacked video creative. Testing it now, while competition is low and the feature is in beta, makes sense for brands with strong listing images.

6. Amazon AI campaign suggestions now include actionable steps
Amazon’s AI Campaign Overviews have moved from surfacing observations to surfacing specific, actionable suggestions — with an Apply button to act on them directly. The overviews flag things like impression drops, placement distribution changes, and underperforming targets with zero conversions. One reported suggestion correctly identified a target spending $300 with no conversions and recommended negating it. Another suggestion recommended increasing a PDP placement modifier that was already running at 200% ACoS — the wrong call. The feature is a step forward for visibility, but Amazon’s optimization incentives are not identical to an advertiser’s. Review each suggestion individually before applying anything.
Read more here by Alexander Wade

7. New Vendor Central homepage dashboard rolling out
Amazon is rolling out a redesigned homepage dashboard for Vendor Central, currently visible in accounts in the US and Australia. The UK and most EU marketplaces have not yet received the update. The redesign is being described as cleaner and more logically organized than the previous version — a navigation update that appears to actually improve usability rather than just change it. Vendors in eligible markets should check their accounts.
Read more here by Nikolai Tahmin

8. “Discover” brand module appears in search without a sponsored label
A branded discovery module has been spotted in Amazon search results, placing category tiles and a store link for a specific brand above the main product listings — with no visible “Sponsored” label. The module appeared in a search for Flamin’ Hot Cheetos. What triggers it remains unconfirmed: strong brand recognition, brand store content, or an Amazon test are all possible explanations. If the module rolls out broadly, it could serve as an organic visibility layer for well-known brands in search — beyond standard paid placements.
Read more here by Destaney Wishon

9. ACoS “between” filter added in Campaign Manager
Amazon Campaign Manager now supports a “between” operator when filtering by ACoS. This makes it faster to isolate campaigns within a defined ACoS range — without sorting through the full list manually. A small but practical improvement for day-to-day campaign management.

Nine updates this week, several of them with real timing pressure given Prime Day on June 23. Subscribe to the ANavigator Weekly Amazon Digest on LinkedIn to get this every Tuesday, and visit anavigator.co/blog for deeper breakdowns.
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