DiscoverEcommerce Braintrust
Ecommerce Braintrust
Claim Ownership

Ecommerce Braintrust

Author: Julie Spear

Subscribed: 115Played: 2,878
Share

Description

Get access to the world's best brains when it comes to building momentum online for established consumer brands. Join our hosts and their expert guests for conversations about ecommerce strategies, trends, and innovations. Access our brain trust and boost your brand's ecommerce potential.

Ecommerce Braintrust
392 Episodes
Reverse
🎙️News Review with Armin Alispahic and Ross Walker DESCRIPTION Welcome to another edition of The Retail Round Up: your monthly recap of the biggest headlines and developments in the retail world. Today, we're joined by Pat Petriello, Director of Retail Marketplace Strategy, who will be co-hosting this week. As always, we have Armin Alispahic here to dive deep into operations and organic industry trends, and Ross Walker to walk us through everything Media. This marks our final Retail Round Up episode of 2026, but we're not slowing down. There's no shortage of major industry developments to unpack, so let's dive right in. Quote: "It's a reward system in a way—if you're compliant and doing well, your score will be up, and you'll be AHA eligible." Armin Alispahic KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Jordan, Pat, Ross, and Armin discuss: Amazon's Seller Challenge: Amazon's new "Seller Challenge" allows eligible sellers to request enhanced reviews for enforcement decisions, offering a better shot at resolving account and ASIN-level issues. Account Health Assurance (AHA) Eligibility: Discussion around Amazon's scoring system for compliance, how sellers become AHA-eligible, and the limit of three seller challenges per six months. Latest Updates in Amazon Fulfillment: Changes to Seller Fulfilled Prime eligibility by size tier, the rollout of FBM Ship Plus, and improved delivery date visibility for customers. Vendor Side Enhancements: Early dispute options for vendor shortage invoices—the team shares both excitement and current issues with the new dashboard. Amazon Media Upgrades: Deep dive into Amazon's partnership with Nielsen for DSP advertisers, increasing measurement transparency and making programmatic media buys more competitive and accessible. Sponsored Prompts & AI in Retail Advertising: Discussion on the emergence of AI-powered ad placements like Amazon's sponsored Rufus prompts, the larger landscape of chatbot monetization, and how other retailers (Walmart's Sparky, Instacart's ChatGPT partnership) are responding. Looking Forward: Reflections on how advertising and ecommerce are shifting toward streaming, AI integration, and better data measurement.  
🎙️Interview with Ross Walker & Danilo Alvares of Acadia DESCRIPTION Welcome to The Ecommerce Braintrust podcast, brought to you by Julie Spear, Head of Retail Marketplace Services, and Jordan Ripley, Director of Retail Account Management. We're diving into a big topic this week: programmatic media buying through Amazon DSP, and the many different ways brands can leverage it. If you've been wondering how to get started with ADSP or how to access the right inventory to drive real results, this episode has you covered. To help us unpack it all, we've invited two of our in-house experts: Ross Walker, Director of Retail Media, and Danilo Alvares, Senior Retail Media Manager. Tune in to find out more!   Quote: "The key, I would say, is balancing scale and transparency depending on what the brand is trying to learn and achieve." Danilo Alvares   KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Jordan, Ross, and Danilo discuss: Ways to Access Amazon DSP: The difference between the traditional Amazon Managed Service, agency/tech partner "seats," and brands owning and operating their DSP seat in-house. Evolution of DSP Access: How Amazon has opened up the DSP ecosystem, making it more user-friendly and accessible for agencies and self-service buyers. Buying Models - Crawl, Walk, Run: The progression from open auction (crawl) to private auctions (walk) to preferred deals and programmatic guarantees (run), describing the level of control, complexity, and inventory at each stage. Aligning Deal Types with Brand Goals: How brands should approach DSP deals based on their growth stage, goals (reach vs. efficiency), and market maturity. Custom Deals & Working with Amazon Supply Desk: Insights on negotiating custom inventory deals that align closely with brand audiences, often requiring a strong relationship with Amazon's supply desk team. Latest Updates – Project Deal Builder: The team discusses Amazon's new (beta) Project Deal Builder, which aims to democratize custom deal-making for DSP buyers further. Transparency and Measurement: Examination of how transparency, reporting, and measurement vary across different buying models—and how tools like AMC (Amazon Marketing Cloud) help unify data analysis. Favorite Types of Buys: Both Danilo Alvares and Ross Walker share their excitement around mixing precise audience targeting with creative formats and leveraging new inventory opportunities like streaming TV.
🎙️Black Friday & Cyber Monday Data Breakdown With the Acadia Team   DESCRIPTION Welcome to The Ecommerce Braintrust podcast, brought to you by Julie Spear, Head of Retail Marketplace Services, and Jordan Ripley, Director of Retail Account Management. We're coming to you late in the day on December 3rd, less than 48 hours after the whirlwind of Cyber Monday has wrapped up. The dust is barely settling, and we're diving straight into what really went down. To help us make sense of it all, we've gathered a powerhouse panel. From the operations and organic side of the action, we have Gavin Farnan and Celina Arbelaez from our Account Management team, two people who've been in the trenches all weekend. And bringing the media perspective, we're joined by Hyunsoo Park and Ross Walker, ready to unpack the wins, surprises, and standout trends of the season. Let's dive in. Quote: Over the BFCM weekend, we saw a 1.5x lift in sales, and then over the 12 days, a 1.6x multiple compared to last year's BFCM. Gavin Farnan   KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, the team discusses: Personal Recaps: The group shares what they bought during the sales Shift in Shopping Patterns: The panel discusses how consumers are increasingly buying earlier in these tentpole events, with a higher share of sales happening in the initial days of Turkey 12, and why waiting for bigger deals later doesn't always pay off. Data & Sales Insights: Client data showing a 50–60% year-over-year lift in sales, and the group explores trends in daily sales spikes and the spreading out of purchases across event days. Cross-Channel Promotions: The challenges and strategies around promo consistency across Amazon, D2C, and other retailers like Target and Ulta, and the importance of deal badging on Amazon for visibility. Event Differences & Glitches: Insights into new Amazon features like improved deal badging, the impact of glitches (like PPD discount badge issues), and increases in category discount depth. AI & Discovery: The growing importance of AI-driven discovery with Amazon's Rufus and how brands must optimize content to be surfaced by these tools, despite the limited data currently available from Amazon. New Ad Tech & Sponsored Content: The rollout and mixed success of product video ads, sponsored brand video priorities, and ongoing Amazon ad platform updates leading right up to the event. Q4 Holiday Advice: Practical tips for brands to close out the quarter strong, like maintaining bestseller rank, doubling down on winning products, leveraging creator campaigns and off-Amazon traffic, and keeping content fresh and responsive to new search behaviors. Team Takeaways: Encouragement to focus budget and effort on high-performing keywords and channels, and reminders not to slack off as shipping cutoffs approach.  
DESCRIPTION Welcome to The Ecommerce Braintrust podcast, brought to you by Julie Spear, Head of Retail Marketplace Services, and Jordan Ripley, Director of Retail Account Management. Today, we're excited to welcome back two familiar voices: Ross Walker, Director of Retail Media, and Pat Petriello, Director of Retail Marketplace Strategy.  They're here to help us unpack the wave of announcements that came out of unBoxed 2025 and break down what they really mean for brands. Let's dive in.   Quote: It's a trap! Every single one of our brands that has said, 'Forget about it—go upper funnel. Go conquest new territory. Go get new customers.' That's been the more effective use of dollars.   Ross Walker   KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Jordan, Ross, and Pat discuss: Overarching themes from Unboxed: democratization and simplification of Amazon's ad products and tools Unified reporting: Merging Sponsored Ads and DSP platforms for easier campaign management and deeper, cross-platform insights Creative Agent: Amazon's advanced AI tool for quickly generating and testing high-quality video and creative assets—especially impactful for brands without in-house creative teams AMC Agent: Making Amazon Marketing Cloud more accessible with natural language queries and easier data exploration, streamlining technical work for agencies The evolving role of agencies and partners: How AI-powered solutions shift agency focus from tactical execution to strategic guidance and validation New ad formats: Sponsored Product Video and other SERP-based innovations, plus the impact on conversion and brand visibility Sponsored Brand Reserve Share of Voice: Its potential uses, strategies, and when it makes sense to invest Upcoming and lesser-discussed features: Project Complete TV for streamlined top-funnel investments and new full-funnel campaign capabilities  
🎙️Live at unBoxed With Chris Conetta of Amazon    DESCRIPTION Welcome to The Ecommerce Braintrust podcast, brought to you by Julie Spear, Head of Retail Marketplace Services, and Jordan Ripley, Director of Retail Account Management. In this special episode, we're coming to you live from Amazon unBoxed in Nashville, where we're sitting down with Chris Conetta, Director of Amazon DSP Supply.  Together, we dig into Amazon's latest investments and breakthrough product updates within its Demand-Side Platform (DSP). From new integrations and measurement innovations to tools designed to make programmatic advertising more accessible and effective for brands and agencies. Let's dive in. Quote: It goes back to this theme of democratizing the ad experience, 100%. With Creative Agent, we're now democratizing the ability to create video assets at scale. Chris Conetta   KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Jordan, and Chris discuss: Amazon's journey in expanding DSP from a closed beta to an integrated, open internet solution with recent high-profile partnerships (Roku, Disney, Netflix, Spotify, Sirius, etc.). Comparison of Amazon DSP's differentiation against other legacy programmatic platforms, focusing on authenticated reach, authenticated signals, and lower programmatic fees. The pivotal role of Amazon Marketing Cloud (AMC) in providing holistic, transparent measurement. The new Ads Agent, which leverages AI to make AMC data more accessible for all users. Announcement and impact of unifying Sponsored Products and DSP into a single ads console, making campaign management and measurement across channels simpler and more unified. Introduction of the "full funnel campaign" product, designed to easily map and optimize brand touchpoints along the customer journey from streaming to conversion. The debut of Creative Agent, a tool that democratizes and streamlines creative production for video assets, empowering AB testing and campaign agility for brands. Discussion of Deal Builder and Inventory Hub, new solutions aiming to make the selection and bundling of media inventory more efficient and tailored to campaign goals. Greater theme of democratizing access to advanced advertising tools, enabling brands and agencies of all sizes to maximize their Amazon and open internet advertising results.
🎙️Interview With Adam French of Acadia   DESCRIPTION   Welcome to The Ecommerce Braintrust podcast, brought to you by Julie Spear, Head of Retail Marketplace Services, and Jordan Ripley, Director of Retail Account Management. Today, we're diving into one of the most quietly powerful and still widely underutilized growth levers on Amazon: Creator Connections. To help us unpack how brands can tap into this channel effectively, we're joined by first-time guest Adam French from our Account Management team. Adam has been deep in the trenches running the Creator Connections program across dozens of consumer brands, and he's bringing a ton of hands-on insight to today's conversation. Let's dive in.   Quote: We always recommend starting with a 10% baseline commission and running that for 30 days. That gives a great indication of who's engaging and what kind of traction the content gets before adjusting upward. Adam French    KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Jordan, and Adam discuss: The history and evolution of Amazon's creator and affiliate programs, including the Associates Program, Influencer Program, and now Creator Connections. Limitations of earlier programs and how Creator Connections offers new opportunities for brands to proactively collaborate with creators. The difference between Affiliate Plus campaigns and the new Sponsored Content Requests, and how each fits into broader marketing strategies. Guidance on setting commission rates for campaigns, testing performance, and optimizing investment. Tips for brands on managing selection and content quality control when working with Amazon creators. Real-life success stories of brands in categories like home & kitchen and premium beauty using Creator Connections to drive sales and brand awareness. Key limitations and current challenges of the platform, particularly in terms of granular reporting of campaign results. How Amazon could improve Creator Connections to better meet brand needs in the future.
🎙️News Review with Armin Alispahic and Pat Petriello DESCRIPTION Welcome to another edition of The Retail Round Up: your monthly recap of the biggest headlines and developments in the retail world.   This week, Pat Petriello is here to unpack everything happening in the world of ads, and Armin Alispahic will take us through the latest in operations and organic trends.   First up: Amazon fees. What changed, what's next, and how to respond, followed by rapid-fire industry updates.   Let's dive in.   Quote: Search is not dead. I think in two years, 90+ percent of product discovery will still be going to happen through the search bar.  Pat Petriello   KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Jordan, Pat, and Armin discuss: Amazon FBA Fee Changes: The latest fee updates, how they compare to previous years, and what they really mean for brands, from operational efficiency to punitive costs for poor fulfillment practices. Survival of the Fittest: How increased complexity and tighter margins are pushing sellers to optimize their operations or risk falling behind, with commentary from Pat Patriello on treating SKUs as individual P&Ls. Big Retail Media Announcements: Amazon's new partnerships and platform updates, including shoppable ads on Twitch and audio/video ad placements on Spotify, and what these mean for near- and long-term media buying strategies. AI Tools and Storefronts: Amazon's rollout of its Storefront Page Builder powered by AI, its current limitations, and predictions for what's coming next. The Rise of ChatGPT in Commerce: Recent announcements about the Agentic Commerce Protocol and integrations with platforms like Walmart, Shopify, and Etsy, reflecting on how conversational AI could transform (but not immediately replace) traditional search-driven product discovery. Fee Updates and Pricing Transparency: New Prime Exclusive Deal structures for the holidays, plus a potentially game-changing test of displaying historical price data in the Amazon mobile app, and what that could mean for brands and consumers.  
🎙️Interview With Shahrez Anjum and Laurie Tovo of Acadia DESCRIPTION Welcome to The Ecommerce Braintrust podcast, brought to you by Julie Spear, Head of Retail Marketplace Services, and Jordan Ripley, Director of Retail Account Management. Today we're joined by two fantastic guests from Acadia: Shahrez Anjum from our Account Management team and Laurie Tovo from our Retail Media team.  They're here to break down what's unique about this year's Q4: what's changing, what you should be watching, and why this holiday season won't look like the last one. Quote: The vibe has definitely changed. Brands are less aggressive than last year. There's more selectivity, more intention, less 'go all-in on everything for 12 days straight. Shahrez Anjum   KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Jordan, Laurie, and Shahrez discuss: How Q4 2025 compares to recent years: From aggressive, catalog-wide deals to more selective and targeted promotional strategies, especially following tariff changes and economic uncertainty. The influence of macroeconomic factors: Brands are feeling the effects of inflation, volatility, and changing consumer stamina for deals, which is shaping a more cautious approach to sales periods and media investment. AI's growing role in ecommerce: How AI, like Amazon's Rufus chatbot, is changing the way shoppers search for and discover products, shifting the focus from keywords to behavioral signals and personalized content. Amazon merchandising and promo capabilities: Updates like changes to promotional fees, expanded Subscribe & Save funding, and automated multipacks are reshaping organic and paid strategies for brands. Advanced advertising strategies: The power of AMC Audiences and behavioral targeting, enabling brands to deliver more segmented and effective messaging across the customer journey. Amazon's evolving fulfillment landscape: Insights on multi-channel fulfillment and the logistical complexities brands face as they consider programs like AWD and adapt to new fulfillment fee structures. Key changes to watch for in 2026: Anticipated shifts include the end of commingled inventory, further customization of deals and shopping experiences, and the need for brands to collect and leverage more customer data. Predictions for the future of search: We may be seeing the end of the traditional search bar in favor of more AI-driven, personalized shopping experiences.  
🎙️Interview With Pat Petriello of Acadia   DESCRIPTION Welcome to The Ecommerce Braintrust podcast, brought to you by Julie Spear, Head of Retail Marketplace Services, and Jordan Ripley, Director of Retail Account Management. Today, we're digging into how Amazon's DSP has expanded its streaming and connected TV media buying footprint through strategic partnerships with Netflix, Disney+, and Roku.  To help unpack it all, we're joined by Pat Petriello, our Director of Retail Marketplace Strategy, who's been tracking all these updates and what they mean for brands. Quote: "The era of cheap clicks and free audience access across Google Meta and Amazon is largely over."   Pat Petriello KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Jordan, and Pat discuss: Amazon DSP Expansion: Overview of Amazon's new integrations with Netflix, Disney, and Roku, and what they signal about Amazon's push into streaming and connected TV media buying. Media Landscape Trends: Discussion of the decline of linear TV and the rise of streaming—backed by Nielsen data showing streaming TV viewership surpassing broadcast and cable in the US. What This Means for Brands: How Amazon DSP acts as a nearly one-stop shop for reaching streaming audiences, including the value of authenticated reach and new inventory across multiple premium publishers. Amazon's Unique Differentiators: Universal frequency capping, access to first-party data for closed-loop attribution with Amazon Marketing Cloud, and lower programmatic guaranteed rates compared to industry averages. Differences in Partnerships: Breakdown of the depth and reach of the Roku integration versus publisher deals with Disney and Netflix, with Roku offering the largest authenticated footprint currently. Early Learnings from Roku Beta Tests: Surprising conversion upticks in early trials, successful audience retargeting, and encouraging initial results prompting more brands to dive in. Actionable Advice for Brands: What's needed to confidently test Amazon DSP, why expertise is required, and encouragement that it's still early days for streaming media buying. Looking Ahead: What's on the horizon, like Amazon's entrance into audio and podcast ad supply (e.g., SiriusXM, Spotify), brand safety, and predictions about Amazon's future in major sports broadcasting rights.  
🎙️Prime Big Deal Days Data Breakdown With the Acadia Team   DESCRIPTION Welcome to The Ecommerce Braintrust podcast! In this episode, Director of Retail Media at Acadia, Ross Walker, is joined by cohost and retail roundup resident expert, Armin Alispahic, stepping in for the show's regular hosts, Julie Spear and Jordan Ripley. Today's discussion dives into all the trends, data, and hot takes from this week's Prime Big Deal Days event. Recorded midday on Friday, October 10th, just 48 hours after Prime Day wrapped, the episode captures early insights and fresh perspectives on what really happened. Joining Ross and Armin are four Acadia team members:  From the Account Management team, Gavin Farnan and Michael Childers cover the operations and organic performance side of the event, while Spencer Selden and Carlos Sastre bring their expertise from the media side. The data may still be settling, but that's never stopped this team from sharing their verdict on Prime Day's success.  Let's jump into the conversation.   Quote: "This is a year when widespread use of AMC, not just for analysis, but for audience building, would allow for a lot of unlocks during the lead-in, during the day of, and for lead-out strategies." Ross Walker   KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, the team discusses: Event Overview: Amazon's October Prime Big Deal Days 2025 was shorter, sharper, and strategically focused, reflecting a more disciplined retail environment. Two-Day Format: Amazon scaled back from four days to two, addressing buyer fatigue, fulfillment constraints, and profitability for sellers. Sales Performance: Net sales rose 72% year-over-year, with balanced performance across both days and increasing importance ahead of Q4. Top Performer Strategies: Leading brands combined strong deal depth, off-Amazon traffic, and unbranded campaigns to outperform despite rising CPCs. Profitability Focus: Brands prioritized margin protection, promoting fewer SKUs and using data to guide selective discounting. Consumer Behavior: Demand remained steady across both days; shoppers responded best to targeted, value-driven offers over blanket discounts. Brand Building: Sustained awareness and off-Amazon visibility proved essential — major event success began long before the sale. Platform Challenges: Some sellers faced real-time PED eligibility changes, pricing inconsistencies, and temporary reporting delays. Amazon Marketing Cloud (AMC): AMC emerged as a key differentiator, powering smarter targeting, lookalike modeling, and cross-sell opportunities. Inventory & Merchandising: Brands took a selective, profit-first approach — focusing on hero products and navigating new Best Deal cost structures. Pricing & Visibility: Inconsistencies in Amazon's badging rules persisted, but overall visibility improved thanks to fewer, higher-quality deals. Post-Event Strategy: The lead-out period is crucial — retargeting, brand-tailored promotions, and consistent visibility bridge into Q4 success. Core Lesson: Prime Big Deal Days wasn't just a sales event — it was a test run for Q4, revealing that focus and flexibility now define winning brands.
🎙️News Review with Armin Alispahic and Ross Walker DESCRIPTION Welcome to another edition of The Retail Round Up: your monthly recap of the biggest headlines and developments in the retail world. As always, Ross Walker is here to unpack everything happening in the world of ads, and Armin Alispahic will take us through the latest in operations and organic trends. This month's lineup is packed: from fresh product updates out of Accelerate, to the ongoing rise of AMC, plus a whole assortment of operational and merchandising developments. Let's dive in. Quote: The workflow to create AMC audiences, the workflow to see insights, and the UI for creating queries have all been massively improved. So the barriers to entry from a technical standpoint have probably never been lower.  Ross Walker   KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Jordan, Ross, and Armin discuss: Amazon Accelerate Announcements: End of commingled inventory and its implications for brands and resellers. Introduction of AI-powered agentic assistance within Seller Central: potential and early impressions. Overhaul of seller and vendor reporting, including launch of native profit analytics and scenario modeling tools. Amazon Marketing Cloud (AMC) for All: Major update enabling direct access to AMC from the ad console: what this change unlocks for brands and agencies. Limitations for connecting with third-party software and practical applications like audience targeting for Prime Day. Merchandising and Assortment Management: Increase in maximum seller-funded discounts for Subscribe & Save (from 15% to 20%) and the business strategy behind it. Introduction of virtual multi-packs, including hands-off automated creation and improved placement in product variations. Creator Connections Program Update: Shift from an affiliate-only model to allowing upfront sponsorships for creators and publishers. Implications for brand awareness strategy, influencer selection, content ownership, and budget lines. Supply Chain and Inventory Updates: Changes to FBA liquidation and donations programs: what sellers need to watch out for. New partial refunds capability and its pros and cons for brands. Multi-Channel Fulfillment (MCF) is now expanding direct integrations with Shopify and Shein (joining Walmart), and new MCF dashboards for improved cross-channel fulfillment visibility.  
🎙️Interview with Kelsey Knight of Slumberkins DESCRIPTION Welcome to The Ecommerce Braintrust podcast, brought to you by Julie Spear, Head of Retail Marketplace Services, and Jordan Ripley, Director of Retail Account Management. Today, we're excited to be joined by Kelsey Knight, Chief Commercial Officer at Slumberkins, an emotional learning brand dedicated to helping children grow into caring, confident, and resilient individuals. We first connected with Kelsey at eTail East, where she led an engaging session on the evolution of influencer marketing. Her perspective was both insightful and inspiring, and we're thrilled to bring that conversation to our listeners today.  Tune in to find out more! Quote: "Our top-performing content is coming from our influencer or influencer affiliates. We really can see what's working organically and then lean into that from a paid perspective." Kelsey Knight   KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Jordan, and Kelsey discuss: Kelsey Knight's career path and her motivation to join Slumberkins Slumberkins' mission & growth: A brand teaching kids emotional skills through plush "creatures," books, and media. Kelsey Knight's career in social and DTC led her to join for its mission-driven focus. Influencer as a growth engine: The brand began with grassroots social efforts and now uses the Siral platform to scale influencer programs. UGC from parents and teachers drives strong engagement and fuels paid ads more effectively than traditional creative. Paid media rebalancing: After reaching efficiency limits on Meta, Slumberkins cut spend to invest in organic channels (influencer, email, SEO). Once healthier, they returned to Meta profitably, keeping first-purchase profitability as a non-negotiable metric. Loyalty & community: Their Radium-powered loyalty program goes beyond points, running challenges (reading, seasonal, routines) to foster parent/teacher engagement, generate UGC, and deepen brand loyalty. Amazon as a channel: Amazon sales are steady and profitable, but treated as part of a wider ecosystem. Off-Amazon marketing efforts (ads, influencer, organic) consistently lift Amazon sales within days. Search everywhere optimization: With AI disrupting discovery, Slumberkins invests in SEO, PR, and organic content to surface in LLMs and new search tools. Early results show AI-driven traffic is small but far more engaged.
🎙️Interview with Ross Walker & Damiano Ciarrocchi of Acadia DESCRIPTION Welcome to The Ecommerce Braintrust podcast, brought to you by Julie Spear, Head of Retail Marketplace Services, and Jordan Ripley, Director of Retail Account Management.   Today, we're joined by our resident masters of media, Ross Walker and Damiano Ciarrocchi, to dig into the often-fraught world of cross-channel budget allocation.    They'll share insights, strategies, and hard-won lessons to help brands navigate this complex challenge with more confidence.   Tune in to find out more! Quote: "You don't get to control how the consumer buys. I can put my ads in front of the consumer, and they can choose to pick up in store because that's the most convenient for them. We've had brands say, "My online sales are not doing anything". Yes, but store sales are growing fantastically. Maybe it's time to change your goal."   Ross Walker KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Jordan, Ross, and Damiano discuss: Evolution of Retail Media Networks: The initial expectations versus the reality of how retail media networks have developed. Challenges emerging as not all retailers are equipped for all marketing goals or funnel stages. Strategic Approaches to Channel Selection: How brands should assess retailers based on sales potential, data capabilities, and unique opportunities. Importance of evaluating both hard metrics and business strategy when onboarding new brands. Metrics that Matter (and Vanity Metrics to Watch For): Breakdown of crucial KPIs: impressions, CPC, CPM, conversion rate, and new-to-brand rate. Caution against over-relying on vanity metrics like ROAS without understanding calculation differences across platforms. Assortment vs. Media Strategy: Navigating the "chicken or egg" dilemma between assortment planning and media activation. How exclusive or differentiated products for retailers can drive performance and avoid channel conflicts. Understanding Shopper Behavior Across Channels: The need to recognize that it's often the same shopper moving between channels. The value of creating a cohesive brand experience, no matter where the purchase occurs. Media Mix Modeling (MMM) and the Future of Budget Allocation: The growing role of MMM in omnichannel strategy. Current limitations and evolving needs for MMM to provide actionable guidance for retail media investments. Practical Scenarios & Recommendations  
Welcome to The Ecommerce Braintrust podcast, brought to you by Julie Spear, Head of Retail Marketplace Services, and Jordan Ripley, Director of Retail Account Management. Today, we're thrilled to be joined by Scott Lester, Senior Manager of Digital & E-commerce at eos: the brand behind the beloved Evolution of Smooth products, from body lotions and lip balms to shaving creams. We first connected with Scott at eTail East, where he spoke on marketplace optimization and strategy. His insights really stood out, and we're excited to dive deeper into those ideas with him today. Tune in to find out more! KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Jordan, and Scott discuss: Scott Lester's Nontraditional Career Path: Scott shares how he went from a Spanish literature degree and pharmaceutical sales to a thriving career in ecommerce, emphasizing the value of curiosity and adaptability. Translating Brand Ethos Across Channels: The eos team maintains consistency in their brand voice across digital marketplaces, retail media, and in-store experiences. Marketplace Growth Framework: Scott walks through eos's approach to marketplace growth by breaking it into four stages: market anticipation, leveraging reviews, discover & rank, and platform optimization. Nimbleness in Product Innovation: Insights on how eos uses social and market trends (such as their "Flavor Lab" launches inspired by viral secret menu hacks) to quickly develop and release new products, benefiting from the agility that comes with being a relatively small company. The Power of Customer Reviews: Discussion on how reviews are being repurposed into user-generated content and ad creative, and why customer sentiment is now essential, especially with the rise of AI such as Amazon's Rufus and Walmart's Sparky. Shifting Optimization Strategies: The evolution from keyword-stuffing to a more nuanced approach focused on consumer language, mobile relevance, and content that appeals both to customers and marketplace algorithms. Paid vs. Organic in Digital Shelf Strategy: Scott explains balancing organic and paid tactics, and why he no longer believes in strict "upper/mid/lower-funnel" strategies. Instead, eos seeks to create memorable, shareable moments across multiple touchpoints. The Rise of AMC and Measurement: How Amazon Marketing Cloud (AMC) has moved from "nice to have" to essential for tracking incremental impact and optimizing media spend effectively. AI: Both Exciting and Alarming: Scott offers candid thoughts on the double-edged sword of AI in ecommerce, from helping with data analysis to concerns over generative imagery and deepfakes.
🎙️Interview With Lauren Livak Gilbert of Digital Shelf Institute DESCRIPTION Welcome to The Ecommerce Braintrust podcast, brought to you by Julie Spear, Head of Retail Marketplace Services, and Jordan Ripley, Director of Retail Operations.   Today, we're excited to welcome back a returning guest:  Lauren Livak Gilbert, Executive Director of the Digital Shelf Institute and co-host of the Unpacking the Digital Shelf podcast.    With over 10 years of experience in digital commerce and design, Lauren is a sought-after commerce strategist for hundreds of global omnichannel brands.    Today, Lauren joins us to share insights from a recent DSI report, Reinventing the Organization for Omnichannel Success: Beyond 'Where Ecommerce Sits'.   Tune in to find out more! 📚 RESOURCES Reinventing the Organization for Omnichannel Success: Beyond 'Where Ecommerce Sits'   Quote: "A lot of the traditional brands, some of the older brands that have been around for a long time, are realizing that if they don't pivot, they're going to be beaten out by these 15, 20 new digitally native brands that started yesterday."   Lauren Livak Gilbert KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Jordan, and Lauren discuss: Purpose of the DSI Report: The motivation behind the report, highlighting the persistent struggle brands face in truly restructuring for omnichannel, rather than simply treating symptoms of digital change. The Pace of Change in Ecommerce: How the rapid evolution of digital retail—fueled by factors like AI, frequent platform updates, and new competition—demands a more agile and adaptable organizational model than legacy in-store structures allow. Crawl-Walk-Run-Sprint Model: Lauren outlined a maturity framework for organizational evolution, ranging from the "sidecar" approach (a small, dedicated digital team) to full organizational reinvention that integrates ecommerce thinking across all functions. Training and Continuous Education: Why continuous upskilling and cross-functional training are essential. Cross-Functional Alignment: The need for breaking down silos—ensuring supply chain, R&D, sales, marketing, and other departments work seamlessly together for a unified consumer experience. Mindset Shifts for the Future: Lauren highlighted her recommended mindset shifts for building a future-ready brand, with practical steps for prioritizing the most impactful ones. Practical Outcomes of Reinvention: A successful, reinvented organization is defined by agility, frictionless decision-making, consumer-centricity, and strong cross-team collaboration. Leadership Structure Evolution: The rise of titles like Chief Growth Officer, and why unifying sales and marketing under a single leader can remove internal competition and align teams around shared targets. Start Now, but Pace Yourself: Lauren stressed both the urgency and the patience required: start making small changes now, but recognize organizational reinvention is a long-term process.  
🎙️News Review with Armin Alispahic and Ross Walker DESCRIPTION Welcome to another edition of The Retail Round Up: your monthly recap of the biggest headlines and developments in the retail world. This edition covers Amazon's evolving AI shopping assistant, Rufus; key operational changes for sellers; tech stack shakeups among major retailers; and TikTok's move into streamlined commerce and tracking.  Whether you're a brand operator, advertiser, or just keeping a close eye on the e-commerce landscape, this episode packs actionable insights with plenty of wit. Let's dive in.   Quote: As Rufus starts remembering your browsing and purchase history, it becomes easier for it to surface exactly the type of product you're looking for. And that means the shopping journey is getting way more focused. Armin Alispahic   KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Jordan, Ross, and Armin discuss: Amazon Rufus & Personalization: The growing impact of Amazon's Rufus AI, which remembers user shopping behaviors, and the implications for brands needing to optimize content and strategies for increasingly personalized searches. Seller Feedback & Prep Service Changes: Updates to Amazon seller feedback (now ratings-only with limited appeals), the discontinuation of Amazon's FBA prep services starting January 2025, and new policies for handling damaged inventory are highlighted, including tips for brands to retain control and mitigate risk. Variation Themes Deprecation: The recent confusion around Amazon's update to variation themes, initially perceived as disruptive, but later clarified to mainly affect rarely used themes with no sales in the past year. Retail Media Partnerships: Analysis of Walmart's move away from The Trade Desk exclusivity to potentially develop its own DSP, and Macy's adoption of Amazon's Retail Ad Service, with thoughtful discussion on what these shifts signal for the future of retail media networks. TikTok E-commerce Integration: TikTok's new Buy with Prime checkout option and cross-channel measurement solutions are debated, with insights on how these changes may impact the platform's e-commerce role moving forward.  
Today, we're joined by a familiar voice and a musically inclined CPG thought leader: Chris Perry of firstmovr. He's spent the last several months educating brands on how to prepare for a new age of product discovery and conversion paths with the dawn of AI-enabled search.  We're thrilled to have him back to share key insights and practical takeaways from his recent trainings. Tune in to find out more! KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Jordan, and Chris discuss: The Changing Digital Shelf: How the digital shelf continues to evolve rapidly and the growing importance of frictionless and personalized shopping experiences driven by AI. Personal Experiences with AI Search: How tools like Rufus and ChatGPT are influencing their own shopping behaviors. Choice Paralysis and AI Solutions: Choice overload for consumers and how agentic AI tools can curate and simplify decision-making, much like a "Costco experience" for endless online assortments. Training and Transition for Brands: Chris details the challenge of bringing legacy organizations up to speed, highlighting the need to expand skillsets from basic e-commerce "math" to effectively leveraging AI "calculator" tools. Brand Case Studies and Shopper Journeys: Through real shopping scenarios (e.g., searching for whitening toothpaste for sensitive teeth), Chris explains how AI-driven search results can differ from traditional ones, urging brands to rethink content strategy and optimization. Prompting and Shopper-Centric Content: Tips for brands to analyze and adapt to AI tools' pre-filled questions and dynamic prompts, which often reveal emerging shopper concerns and influence purchase considerations. Practical Optimization Insights: Actionable steps brands can take, such as focusing on clear, shopper-centric product content and continually testing how products show up in AI-influenced search environments. Looking Ahead: The future convergence of search and AI, predicting that the lines between "search bar" and "AI assistant" will soon blur, fundamentally changing shopper expectations. Tips for Brands: Brands are encouraged to treat the digital shelf as an ongoing process, not a project, and to use practical experimentation, shopper empathy, and iterative optimization to stay ahead.   MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE Connect with Chris Perry Learn more about firstmovr Connect with our host, Julie Spear Connect with our host, Jordan Ripley Learn more about Acadia
Welcome to The Ecommerce Braintrust podcast, brought to you by Julie Spear, Head of Retail Marketplace Services, and Jordan Ripley, Director of Retail Operations. Today, we're excited to welcome Mike Black, Chief Growth Officer at Profitero+. We'll be diving into their latest report, "The Digitally Influenced Shopper", which reveals how shoppers are navigating today's fractured path to purchase, how they evaluate value, and its implications for brands and retailers. Tune in to find out more!   📚 RESOURCES The 2025 Digitally Influenced Shopper Report   Quote: "Discovery, as much as we are very search-centric in the way we think about the digital shelf, is way more fragmented than that. Search is becoming very crowded. Everybody's trying to win it. We should be just as aware that there's a lot more real estate for us to capitalize on." Mike Black   KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Jordan, and Mike discuss: Purpose of the Digitally Influenced Shopper Report: Mike explains the motivation behind the report: to shift executive thinking beyond just tracking online transactions, and to provide e-commerce and retail media leaders with ammunition to drive internal change. Defining the Digitally Influenced Shopper: The team discusses how Profitero+ measures digital influence, including which behaviors and digital touchpoints (such as search, reviews, and social media) classify someone as digitally influenced. Generational and Geographic Trends: The report highlights how the US leads in digital adoption and how digital influence accelerates significantly among younger generations (with over 75% of Gen Z being digitally influenced, compared to fewer than half of Boomers). The Evolving Shopper Path: Shoppers are increasingly using digital resources for product discovery, decision-making, and even in-store purchases—with stats like 57% discovering new brands online and nearly half checking reviews or content while in-store. Implications for Brands: The group talks about the need for brands to rethink organizational processes, align internal teams, and focus on key digital shelf fundamentals like product availability, price, and reviews. Category Variances & Benchmarking: Advice on how brands can analyze their specific category to understand digital influence, customize their strategies, and use this research as a tool to strengthen retailer partnerships. Future Research Directions: Upcoming Profitero+ research on the ROI of digital shelf investments and the growing impact of AI-powered search, hinting at fact-based validation of AI optimization strategies.
DESCRIPTION Welcome to The Ecommerce Braintrust podcast, brought to you by Julie Spear, Head of Retail Marketplace Services, and Jordan Ripley, Director of Retail Operations. Today, we're tackling what might be the least glamourously named ad product out there: OLV, short for "Online Video." But don't let the name fool you. Behind that bland acronym lies a powerful tool that's been driving some seriously impressive results. To help us unpack the magic of OLV, we're joined by two of the masterminds making it happen on the front lines: Ross Walker and Carel van Rooyen from our retail media team.   "It's getting more and more expensive to buy incremental traffic on Amazon itself. This is true especially for brands competing in premium beauty categories or even CPG grocery categories. It's tough to get an edge." Ross Walker   KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Jordan, Carel, and Ross discuss: Clarification of OLV as Online Video, distinct from sponsored brand video and streaming TV. Where OLV ads run (off Amazon, across the open web and apps via Amazon's publisher network). How OLV has helped overcome challenges like declining traffic or flat sales on Amazon. OLV's impact on increasing glance views, revenue, and generating a "halo effect" across product catalogs. The importance of keeping creatives fresh to avoid stagnation. Best-performing audience types so far: in-market and lifestyle audiences drive awareness and new-to-brand purchases. Early success testing retargeting and AMC (Amazon Marketing Cloud) lookalike audiences for higher click-through and page view rates. Value of demographic layering, even though it narrows reach, it lowers cost per action and improves efficiency. Lower costs and less competition compared to streaming/connected TV ads. Easier creative requirements: Repurposing existing sponsored brand videos can minimize barriers to entry. OLV fills a vital role in the funnel, driving external traffic before consumers start their Amazon search, improving overall channel performance. How to fund OLV: Testing with incremental budgets where possible, or reallocating spend from less efficient campaign buckets. Examples of positive results even from modest testing budgets (as low as $2,000/month). Why focusing solely on ROAS is limiting; OLV's bigger impact shows up in incremental lifts in overall traffic and sales. Utilizing AMC Path to Purchase reports to demonstrate OLV's role in the customer journey. Rising success with vertical video formats and Amazon's support for new creative options in OLV.  
🎙️News Review with Scott Ohsman, Armin Alispahic, and Ross Walker DESCRIPTION Welcome to another edition of The Retail Round Up: your monthly recap of the biggest headlines and developments in the retail world. Today, we're joined by a very special returning guest: Scott Ohsman from the Always Off Brand podcast. We're also bringing back our go-to experts: Armin Alispahic and Ross Walker, who always bring sharp insights and fresh perspective. This is The Ecommerce Braintrust podcast, brought to you by Julie Spear, Head of Retail Marketplace Services, and Jordan Ripley, Director of Retail Operations. Let's dive in.   Amazon is trying to evolve their platform, they're trying to go up to the next level. And if Walmart is there to scoop up, the scrappier brands that like need more flexibility, then then so be it. Ross Walker   KEY TAKEAWAYS In this episode, Julie, Scott, Jordan, Ross, and Armin discuss: Amazon pulls Google Shopping ads, potentially to cut costs, protect data, or prep for AI strategies — brands reliant on co-op traffic should review their agreements. Brand Tailored Promotions coming to vendors in 2026, bringing powerful seller tools to vendor central; brands should prepare to integrate these into their merchandising playbooks. New Competitive Summary API provides location-aware pricing data and programmatic repricing options — a game-changer for Buy Box and pricing strategies. Amazon expands video measurement and retargeting, including deeper insights for Amazon Live and video ad engagement, offering more precision in campaign targeting. Early Vine Reviews program launched, enabling reviews before FBA inventory goes live — helping brands launch products with social proof from day one. Amazon fulfillment delays and fee hikes continue to strain brands, especially seasonal sellers, highlighting the need to evaluate AWD, 3PLs, and packaging strategies.
loading
Comments (1)

Kiri Masters

hi, I'm the co host of this show! season one focuses on the Amazon platform. hosted by myself and the Head of Operations, Julie Spear, at retail consulting agency Bobsled Marketing.

Jan 26th
Reply
loading