
9 Mar 2026
ANavigator Weekly Amazon Digest | Week 10
Each week, we break down the most important Amazon updates and explain what they mean for brands and sellers – across advertising, AI, catalog control, pricing, and profitability.
Week 10 focuses on automation.
Amazon is making account management more visual and more AI-driven.
Advertising tools are becoming less manual.
Product comparison, promotions, and cross-platform commerce are getting easier, faster, and more connected.
Here’s what changed.
Weekly Highlights
- Seller Central gets an AI Canvas for live business analysis
- Sponsored Brands moves deeper into automation
- Amazon expands AWS infrastructure in Spain
- Rufus raises the bar for product comparison
- Amazon puts all promotion tools in one place
- TikTok Shop makes Amazon’s expansion faster
- ChatGPT shopping signals become more important for brands
1. Seller Central gets an AI Canvas for live business analysis
Amazon has introduced a new Canvas experience inside Seller Central for sellers in the US and UK.
It turns Seller Assistant into a more interactive workspace, where sellers can ask questions and see business data, trends, and recommendations in one visual view.
This matters because Amazon is moving from static reports to AI-guided decision support. Instead of only checking dashboards manually, sellers can now explore performance in a more flexible way and get faster answers inside Seller Central.
For brands, this can affect:
– Marketing decisions
– Inventory planning
– Launch preparation
– Daily account analysis
Teams that learn how to use these tools early may move faster than competitors still relying only on standard reports.
Read more here by Oleksandr Kovalov
2. Sponsored Brands moves deeper into automation
Amazon has started rolling out Automatic Product Collections for Sponsored Brands.
Instead of selecting products manually, advertisers can now let Amazon choose the most relevant products based on keyword targets, shopper queries, and relevance signals. The update also expands collection ads from 3 products to as many as 10.
This can help larger catalogs scale faster, especially when manual product selection takes too much time.
But it also means advertisers may lose some control over which products get pushed more often.
Brands should watch:
– Which ASINs does Amazon selects
– Whether those ASINs match margin goals
– CTR and conversion performance
– Budget efficiency across collections
Automation can save time, but it still needs supervision.
Read more here by Harshita Rohilla
3. Amazon expands AWS infrastructure in Spain
Amazon announced plans to invest €33.7 billion in Aragón, Spain, to expand its data center infrastructure.
According to the announcement, the AWS Europe (Spain) Region is expected to contribute €31.7 billion to Spain’s GDP through 2035 and support thousands of jobs across direct and indirect roles.
For brands, this is not only an infrastructure story.
It is another signal that Amazon continues to invest heavily in the systems behind its cloud and AI ecosystem. More infrastructure supports faster development of AI products, analytics tools, automation, and larger-scale computing across Amazon’s platforms.
This points to one direction clearly:
Amazon is building more capacity for the next wave of AI-driven commerce.
Read more here by Andy Davis
4. Rufus raises the bar for product comparison
Rufus is now being positioned more strongly as a tool that can benchmark products against the best options in the market.
This makes listing quality, backend attributes, and product detail completeness even more important. If Amazon does not fully understand your product, it may compare it in the wrong way or let competitors define the category standard.
For brands, this means product pages now need to work not only for shoppers, but also for Amazon’s AI.
Brands should review:
– Titles and bullets
– Product attributes
– Comparison clarity
– Use-case explanation
– Category-specific details
The better Amazon understands your product, the better chance you have to appear correctly in AI-led comparisons.
Read more here by Blenda Luta
5. Amazon puts all promotion tools in one place
Amazon is bringing Deals, Coupons, Price Discounts, Promotions, and related tools into one location in Seller Central.
This is not a major headline update, but it can reduce daily friction for teams managing many promotional actions across products and events.
A cleaner workflow means:
– Fewer mistakes
– Faster execution
– Less time switching between tabs
– Better visibility over promotion setup
For agencies and in-house teams, small workflow improvements like this can make campaign management more efficient, especially during peak periods and event preparation.
Operational simplicity often matters more than it seems.
Read more here by Steven Pope
6. TikTok Shop makes Amazon’s expansion faster
TikTok Shop now allows sellers to paste an Amazon product URL and auto-create a TikTok listing using existing product information.
This lowers one of the biggest operational barriers for brands that want to test TikTok Shop without building listings from zero.
The bigger message is that cross-platform commerce is getting easier.
Brands can now connect discovery on TikTok with conversion pathways built from existing Amazon content much faster than before.
This matters because growth is no longer about one platform only. Brands that move faster across channels may get more reach without rebuilding every asset from scratch.
It also increases the value of having strong product content from the start.
Read more here by Beatriz Nahuz
7. ChatGPT shopping signals become more important for brands
A recent discussion around ChatGPT’s “product rationale” feature shows how product comparisons may be shaped by summaries of reviews and external web content.
That means shopping decisions in AI environments may depend not only on your Amazon listing, but also on how your product appears across the wider web.
Even one negative external source may influence how a product is presented in AI-driven shopping experiences.
For brands, this creates a new layer of visibility to manage:
– External reviews
– Third-party mentions
– Product descriptions outside Amazon
– Consistency of claims across channels
Product perception is starting to depend more on how AI systems collect and summarize information, not only on what is written on the product page.
Read more here by Juozas Kaziukenas
Amazon continues to move toward a more automated commerce environment.
Seller tools are becoming more visual.
Advertising is becoming more system-driven.
Product comparison is becoming more AI-led.
And cross-platform selling is becoming easier to activate.
Brands that keep control over product data, catalog quality, promotions, and cross-channel visibility will be in a stronger position as these systems keep evolving.
If you want to stay updated on Amazon changes, subscribe to our blog.
If you need support with PPC, DSP, AMC, analytics, or a long-term growth strategy, contact the ANavigator team at info@anavigator.co
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— The ANavigator Team
Author: Oleksandr Kovalov
Role: Founder & CEO @ ANavigator









