Amazon app on a phone

How to Find High-Converting Long-Tail Keywords on Amazon

If you want to drive consistent sales on Amazon, the fastest and most reliable way is to target high-converting long-tail keywords—specific, low-competition search terms that buyers use when they’re ready to make a purchase. In simple terms: you find high-converting long-tail keywords on Amazon by researching buyer-intent search phrases using Amazon auto-suggest, competitor reverse ASIN tools, keyword research software, product reviews, and real marketplace behavior—then validating them through search volume, relevancy, and conversion probability. Once you understand how to identify these hidden gems, ranking becomes easier, ads become cheaper, and your listings convert at a much higher rate.

If you want experts to handle this for you, check out our Amazon Listing Optimization Services

In this guide, you’ll learn the exact step-by-step process seasoned 7-figure sellers use to uncover long-tail keywords that your competitors are ignoring—yet your buyers are actively searching for. Let’s dive in.

 

What Are Long-Tail Keywords on Amazon? (And Why They Convert Better)

Long-tail keywords are detailed search phrases typically consisting of three or more words, such as:

  • “stainless steel garlic press for arthritic hands”

  • “baby night light rechargeable warm white”

  • “extra large waterproof picnic blanket thick”

Compared to short, competitive keywords like “garlic press” or “baby night light,” long-tail keywords offer three massive advantages:

1. Lower competition → Faster rankings

Short-tail keywords are dominated by big brands. Long-tails, on the other hand, are easier to rank organically because fewer sellers target them in their listings and PPC campaigns.

2. Higher conversion rate

Shoppers searching long-tail terms already know exactly what they want. They’re not browsing—they’re buying.

3. Better PPC performance

Long-tails usually have:

  • lower CPC

  • lower wasted spend

  • lower ACOS

  • greater profitability

This combination is why long-tail keyword optimization is one of the highest-ROI strategies in Amazon SEO.

 

Why Finding High-Converting Long-Tail Keywords is Essential

Amazon is a giant search engine. If your listing doesn’t match how real shoppers search, Amazon will not show your products—and without visibility, you can’t make sales.

High-converting long-tail keywords help your listing:

  • rank faster

  • compete even in saturated categories

  • improve click-through rate (CTR)

  • improve unit session percentage (conversion rate)

  • generate more profit with less ad spend

Top sellers know: The listing that aligns closest with buyer intent wins.

 

How to Find High-Converting Long-Tail Keywords on Amazon (Step-by-Step)

Let’s break down the exact process used by advanced Amazon SEO specialists.

 

Step 1: Start With Amazon Auto-Suggest (The Most Accurate Source of Buyer Intent)

Amazon’s auto-suggest bar is the most reliable keyword source because it shows what real shoppers are searching right now.

How to use it:

  1. Go to Amazon.

  2. Start typing your main keyword.

  3. Watch the list of suggestions appear.

  4. Note every long-tail variation.

For example, type “garlic press” and you may see:

  • garlic press stainless steel

  • garlic press for arthritic hands

  • garlic press with container

  • garlic press no need to peel

  • garlic press dishwasher safe heavy duty

These are not guesses; these are real search phrases with real volume.

Pro tip:

Type each letter of the alphabet after your keyword:

  • garlic press a

  • garlic press b

  • garlic press c
    … and so on.

This reveals dozens of hidden long-tail keywords competitors often miss.

 

 

Step 2: Reverse ASIN Competitor Research (Steal Their Best Keywords)

One of the fastest ways to discover proven long-tail keywords is to analyze the top competitors already ranking for them.

Tools you can use:

  • Helium 10 Cerebro

  • Jungle Scout Cobalt

  • ZonGuru Keywords

  • Viral Launch ASIN Intelligence

  • DataDive

How to perform reverse ASIN research:

  1. Identify 3–5 top sellers in your niche.

  2. Enter their ASINs into a reverse lookup tool.

  3. Collect all the long-tail phrases they rank for.

  4. Sort them by:

    • relevancy

    • search volume

    • competitor rank

    • organic ranking difficulty

This method identifies long-tail keywords that already drive your competitors’ sales—so you can tap into the same demand.

Important:

Don’t blindly copy all competitor keywords. Focus on relevant buyer-intent long-tails, not random impressions-based terms.

 

 

Step 3: Mine Customer Reviews for Hidden Long-Tail Keywords

Customers naturally describe exactly what they searched for or wanted—making review mining one of the richest sources of buyer-intent keywords.

How to extract keywords from reviews:

  1. Open top competitor products.

  2. Sort reviews by:

    • “most helpful”

    • “4-star”

    • “3-star” (often contain unmet needs)

  3. Look for keyword patterns in phrases like:

    • “I needed a ___”

    • “I was looking for a ___”

    • “This works great for ___”

Examples:

  • “I needed a garlic press for my arthritic hands” → keyword: garlic press for arthritic hands

  • “Perfect for camping trips” → keyword: garlic press for camping

  • “Easy to clean dishwasher safe material” → keyword: dishwasher safe garlic press

These keywords often:

  • have high conversion intent

  • are ignored by sellers

  • rank quickly

  • generate profitable PPC clicks

 

Step 4: Use Keyword Research Tools to Expand Your List

Auto-suggest and reverse ASIN give you the core list—now use keyword tools to expand it.

Recommended tools:

  • Helium 10 Magnet

  • Keyword Tool Dominator

  • Jungle Scout Keyword Scout

  • MerchantWords

  • AmzSuggest

What to look for:

Focus on long-tail keywords with:

  • High relevancy

  • Moderate search volume

  • Low competition

  • Strong buyer intent

  • Indications of conversion (e.g., material, size, problem-based terms)

Examples of high-converting long-tails:

  • “extra large garlic press stainless steel”

  • “heavy duty garlic press ergonomic handle”

  • “garlic press for weak hands no squeeze”

These keywords bring in highly qualified buyers.

 

 

Step 5: Identify Problem-Based and Feature-Based Long-Tail Keywords

The most profitable long-tail keywords usually include:

1. Features

  • size (“extra large”, “small”)

  • material (“stainless steel”, “silicone”, “wooden”)

  • color (“black”, “rose gold”)

2. Problems

  • for seniors

  • for arthritic hands

  • for weak grip

  • for camping

  • for limited counter space

3. Specific use cases

  • for meal prep

  • for restaurant kitchens

  • for RV cooking

When a keyword shows a problem or a use case, it almost always has higher conversion intent.

 

 

Step 6: Validate Search Volume & Competitiveness

Once you have 100–300 potential long-tails, validate them.

Use a tool to check:

  • exact search volume

  • phrase match search volume

  • organic rank difficulty

  • PPC suggested bid

  • competitor count

  • competitor organic rank

What makes a “high-converting” long-tail?

Ideally:

  • Search volume: 100–2,000/month

  • Relevancy: 100%

  • Competition: Low–moderate

  • Buyer intent: Very strong

  • Listing match: You can target the keyword naturally in your listing

These are the long-tail keywords that drive consistent sales.

 

Step 7: Organize Long-Tail Keywords Into Clusters

Once you have validated your long-tail keywords, group them into clusters. Clustering helps Amazon understand the context and semantic relevance of your listing, improving indexing and keyword ranking speed.

How to cluster your keywords:

  1. Primary Cluster:

    • Includes your main long-tail keyword group.

    • Example: “garlic press stainless steel,” “heavy duty garlic press stainless steel,” “dishwasher safe stainless steel garlic press.”

  2. Secondary Cluster:

    • Related features and material-based keywords.

    • Example: “ergonomic handle garlic press,” “soft grip garlic press,” “one-hand garlic press.”

  3. Problem-Based Cluster:

    • Keywords showing shopper pain points.

    • Example: “garlic press for arthritic hands,” “garlic press for weak hands.”

  4. Use Case Cluster:

    • Keywords describing when or how the product is used.

    • Example: “garlic press for camping,” “garlic press for restaurant kitchen.”

Clustering gives you a clear blueprint for writing your listing and prioritizing the strongest keywords. Amazon increasingly rewards semantic relevance, so clusters help your product appear for more long-tail variations without keyword stuffing.

 

Step 8: Insert Long-Tail Keywords Into Your Listing Strategically

After organizing your keyword clusters, it’s time to place them into your listing in a way that boosts ranking and increases conversions. Avoid the old-school tactic of stuffing keywords; Amazon rewards readability and buyer experience.

Where to place your most important long-tail keywords:

1. Title

Place your highest-priority long-tail keyword here.
Example:
“Stainless Steel Garlic Press for Arthritic Hands – Heavy Duty, Easy Clean, Ergonomic Handle”

2. Bullet Points

Use secondary and problem-based long-tail variations naturally in your bullets.

Example bullet:

  • Designed for arthritic or weak hands—our ergonomic garlic press requires minimal force and offers maximum comfort.

3. Product Description & A+ Content

Weave long-tails into engaging storytelling copy.
Amazon reads all the text in A+ content for ranking signals.

4. Backend Search Terms

Include long-tails that don’t fit naturally in your front-end listing.
Avoid commas, repeat keywords, or using brand names.

Backend fields let you capture hundreds of variations with no impact on readability.

 

Step 9: Use Amazon PPC to Validate and Rank for Long-Tail Keywords

One of the fastest ways to confirm whether a long-tail keyword is truly high-converting is to run low-budget PPC tests.

How to do it effectively:

  1. Create a manual exact-match campaign.

  2. Add 10–20 of your highest-potential long-tails.

  3. Start with low bids (e.g., $0.20–$0.50 depending on category).

  4. Let the campaign run for 3–7 days.

What to look for:

  • Click-through rate (CTR)

  • Conversion rate

  • ACOS

  • Ad-attributed sales

  • Organic ranking movement

Long-tail keywords that convert through PPC almost always perform even better organically.

Pro Tip:

Pause keywords with poor performance and scale the ones with:

  • high CTR

  • high conversion

  • low ACOS

  • rising organic rank

This method accelerates your ranking while preventing wasted ad spend.

 

Step 10: Track Organic Rankings to Identify Top-Performing Long-Tails

You should track your keyword rankings weekly to see which long-tails are driving organic visibility and sales.

Tools for rank tracking:

  • Helium 10 Keyword Tracker

  • Jungle Scout Rank Tracker

  • DataDive Rank Monitoring

  • SellerMetrics

  • AMZTracker

Why tracking matters:

  • You can see which long-tail keywords start climbing fast

  • You can optimize bullets or description if rankings drop

  • You can strengthen A+ content or run PPC boosts to reclaim slipping positions

High-converting long-tails typically show:

  • steady weekly ranking increases

  • increased impressions

  • better CTR

  • improved session-to-order ratio

This data helps you continually improve your listing’s keyword performance.

 

Step 11: Analyze Competitor Gaps & Find Untapped Keywords

Even after optimizing your listing, you can discover new long-tail opportunities your competitors missed.

How to find competitor keyword gaps:

  1. Take your main 5–10 competitors.

  2. Identify long-tails they rank poorly for.

  3. Compare those to your own keyword list.

  4. Add relevant missing long-tails to your listing and backend fields.

Tools like Helium 10’s “Competing Products” filter or DataDive’s “Gap Finder” can help uncover these hidden keywords.

Why this works:

You’re targeting keywords that:

  • have search volume

  • are relevant

  • are not well defended by your competitors

These are easy wins and often lead to fast organic ranking.

 

Step 12: Optimize Listing Content Based on Real Customer Behavior

Your reviews, product Q&A, and buyer messages contain powerful long-tail keywords that update over time.

What to monitor:

  1. New reviews:
    Look for repeated phrases buyers use.

  2. Questions:
    Common questions indicate new search intents.

  3. Negative reviews (yours and competitors’):
    These show the problems customers search for solutions to.

Example insights:

  • “Works great for meal prepping large batches.” → new use-case keyword

  • “Needed something that didn’t require peeling garlic.” → problem-based long-tail

Updating your listing with these insights strengthens your Amazon SEO and improves conversion.

 

Step 13: Build External Traffic Around High-Converting Long-Tails

Google searches and social media trends often overlap with Amazon long-tail keywords.
You can rank even faster by driving external traffic using:

  • blog content targeting your long-tails

  • YouTube video reviews

  • TikTok demonstrations

  • Pinterest pins (great for home, kitchen, beauty, crafts)

  • Reddit discussions

  • Google ads targeting long-tail search terms

External traffic boosts:

  • listing relevance

  • keyword ranking

  • brand authority

  • conversion rate

Amazon rewards listings that bring in motivated buyers from outside the platform.

 

Step 14: Maintain a Living Keyword List (Long-Tails Change Over Time)

Long-tail keyword trends change based on:

  • seasons

  • new features

  • emerging shopper problems

  • competitor product launches

  • shifts in demand

Make sure you:

  • update your keyword list monthly

  • rotate underperforming keywords out of backend fields

  • add new problem-based or feature-based long-tails from customer feedback

  • test unranked long-tails through PPC

Your keyword strategy should evolve continuously to stay aligned with demand.

 

Final Thoughts: Mastering Long-Tail Keywords Is the Key to Amazon Success

Finding high-converting long-tail keywords on Amazon isn’t about discovering hundreds of random phrases—it’s about uncovering the exact words buyers use when they’re ready to purchase.

To recap, the best long-tail keywords come from:

  • Amazon auto-suggest

  • reverse ASIN competitor research

  • review mining

  • keyword tools

  • problem-based and feature-based searches

  • PPC validation

  • ongoing ranking and customer behavior analysis

Master this process, and you’ll gain an unfair advantage in almost any Amazon market—even hyper-competitive categories.

Need professional help optimizing your listing and finding high-converting long-tail keywords? Explore our Amazon Listing Optimization Services to boost rankings and conversions fast.

Marketing LTB's logo with red background and white font

About Marketing LTB

Marketing LTB is a full-service marketing agency offering over 50 specialized services across 100+ industries. Our seasoned team leverages data-driven strategies and a full-funnel approach to maximize your ROI and fuel business growth. 

Bill Nash's face

About the author, Bill Nash

Bill Nash is the CMO of Marketing LTB with over a decade of experience, he has driven growth for Fortune 500 companies and startups through data-driven campaigns and advanced marketing technologies. He has written over 400 pieces of content about marketing, covering topics like marketing tips, guides, AI in advertising, advanced PPC strategies, conversion optimization, and others.

From Statistics