Most sellers treat marketplace listings as a simpler version of website SEO. Same idea, different platform. Write keywords in the title, get reviews, rank higher.
That mental model is why most listings underperform.
Marketplace search is not a simplified version of Google. It is a different search discipline with different objectives, different ranking signals, and different optimization logic. The algorithm behind Amazon search is not trying to do what Google does. It is trying to solve a different problem entirely, and understanding that problem is what separates sellers who rank from sellers who wonder why they do not.
This article maps the full landscape of Marketplace SEO as a discipline: what it is, how it differs from traditional SEO, which platforms matter and what each one is optimizing for, what categories of signals actually drive rankings, and where the field is heading as AI systems change how buyers find products. Tactical deep-dives on each platform live in separate guides. This is the foundation.
What Marketplace SEO Actually Is
Marketplace SEO, also called Marketplace Optimization or MPO, is the practice of improving how product listings perform within the internal search systems of commerce platforms like Amazon, Walmart, Etsy, and Google Shopping.
The keyword there is “internal.” Every major marketplace runs its own search engine. When a buyer types “wireless earbuds” into Amazon, they are not querying Google. They are querying Amazon’s proprietary ranking system, which has its own index, its own ranking factors, and its own definition of what a good result looks like. The same is true for Walmart, Etsy, eBay, and every other platform with a search bar. Each one is a separate search engine with its own logic.
MPO is the discipline of understanding those search engines well enough to compete in them deliberately.
Why Marketplace Search Exists as a Separate Discipline
Google’s fundamental job is to match a query to the most relevant and trustworthy page on the internet. The ranking signals it uses, things like backlinks, content quality, topical authority, and page experience, are all proxies for answering the question: is this page the best result for what this person is looking for?
A marketplace algorithm is not asking that question. It is asking a different one: given this buyer and this query, which product listing is most likely to result in a completed purchase?
That shift in objective changes everything about how the ranking system works.
Google rewards relevance and authority built over months and years. Marketplace algorithms reward commercial performance measured in days and weeks. A listing that converts well today has a ranking advantage tomorrow. A listing that went out of stock yesterday is losing ground right now. The feedback loop is immediate and transactional in a way that organic search never is.
This is also why the optimization work is different. Traditional SEO is largely about content and authority: write well, earn links, build trust over time. Marketplace SEO is about conversion infrastructure: get indexed for the right terms, earn the click, close the sale, maintain availability, accumulate social proof. The inputs are different. The timeline is different. The skills are different.
Treating them as the same discipline means applying the wrong mental model to the wrong problem.
The Marketplace Landscape
Not all marketplaces are the same, and understanding what each platform’s algorithm is optimizing for is the starting point for competing in it.
Amazon is the dominant marketplace in most categories and the most studied. Its ranking system, known internally as A9, is primarily a conversion prediction engine. It is trying to identify which listing, shown to a buyer searching for a given term, will most likely result in a purchase. The signals it uses to make that prediction include sales velocity, conversion rate tracked at the keyword level, review recency, price competitiveness, and fulfillment reliability. Amazon is also now layering AI-powered discovery through its Rufus assistant, which answers buyer questions by synthesizing listing content, Q&A sections, and review data.
Google Shopping operates differently from every other marketplace because it is powered by product feeds rather than manually crafted listings. Sellers submit structured product data through Google Merchant Center, and Google’s system matches that data to relevant queries. Eligibility for organic Shopping placement depends on feed accuracy: correct GTINs, matching prices, complete category taxonomy, and clean attribute data. Unlike Amazon, where a poor listing ranks lower, a poor feed on Google Shopping can exclude your product from results entirely. The optimization problem is as much data management as it is marketing.
Walmart Marketplace shares surface similarities with Amazon but has notable differences in how it weights ranking signals. Walmart places heavier emphasis on price competitiveness, partly because its buyer base has strong price sensitivity, and enforces price parity rules that penalize sellers who list lower prices on competing platforms. Its fulfillment program, Walmart Fulfillment Services, carries ranking benefits similar to Amazon’s FBA program.
Etsy operates in a different category entirely. It is a discovery-driven marketplace where buyers browse as much as they search, and its ranking system reflects that. Listing recency and renewal activity have outsized influence compared to platforms like Amazon. Niche keyword specificity matters more than broad category terms. Review velocity and shop reputation are meaningful signals. Etsy is also more dependent on its own internal traffic than Amazon, which means the LLM discovery dynamics discussed later in this article apply less directly, at least for now.
eBay sits between these models. Its Cassini search algorithm weighs seller reputation heavily, along with item specifics, competitive pricing, and shipping terms. For new or used goods, the dynamics differ significantly from new-in-box retail categories.
Each of these is a separate competitive environment with its own rules. What works on Amazon does not automatically transfer to Walmart. What ranks on Etsy would not rank on Google Shopping. MPO as a discipline requires understanding each platform on its own terms.
The Signal Categories That Drive Marketplace Rankings
Across platforms, the signals that influence marketplace rankings fall into four broad categories. Understanding these categories, rather than memorizing platform-specific tactics, is what makes it possible to reason about any marketplace search environment.
Relevance signals determine whether a listing is eligible to appear for a given query at all. On Amazon, this means keyword indexing: your product must be indexed for a term before it can rank for it. Indexing happens through your title, bullet points, description, and backend keyword fields. On Google Shopping, relevance eligibility comes from feed attributes matching the query intent. On Etsy, it comes from tag and title alignment with how buyers actually search. Relevance is the entry gate. Without it, no other signal matters.
Performance signals determine where within eligible results a listing ranks. These are the behavioral signals the algorithm collects after showing your listing to buyers. Click-through rate tells the algorithm whether your listing looks compelling enough to open. Conversion rate tells it whether buyers who open the listing actually purchase. Sales velocity tells it how commercially active the listing is overall. These signals are why a new listing with no history ranks lower than an established one even if the content is identical: the algorithm has no data yet on how it performs.
Trust and social proof signals operate differently across platforms but serve the same function: reducing the buyer’s perceived risk of purchasing. Review count, rating, and recency are the primary trust signals on Amazon and Walmart. Seller reputation and transaction history carry more weight on eBay. Shop reviews and completion rate matter on Etsy. These signals influence both the algorithm’s ranking decision and the buyer’s conversion decision, which means improving them has a compounding effect.
Operational signals are the ones sellers most often underestimate. Inventory availability, fulfillment speed, return rate, and price competitiveness all feed into how marketplaces rank and surface listings. Amazon actively suppresses out-of-stock listings. Walmart rewards fast and reliable fulfillment. Google Shopping penalizes price mismatches between the feed and the live site. These are not peripheral factors. They are first-class ranking inputs that reflect the platform’s interest in providing a reliable buying experience.
How MPO Relates to Traditional SEO
MPO and SEO are complementary disciplines, not competing ones, but understanding where they overlap and where they diverge is important for building a coherent strategy.
The overlap is in keyword research and intent understanding. The same underlying question applies to both: what words do buyers use when they are looking for this product, and what does their intent tell you about what they need to see? The tools and methods for answering that question have significant crossover.
The divergence is in almost everything else.
SEO builds authority over time through content, links, and trust signals that accumulate across a domain. A well-optimized product page on your own site benefits from the domain authority of everything else on that site. A listing on Amazon gets none of that. Each listing competes on its own merits within the platform’s index.
SEO optimization work tends to be strategic and slow-moving: a well-constructed page can hold rankings for years with minimal maintenance. Marketplace listings require ongoing operational attention: pricing, inventory, review velocity, and feed accuracy all need active management or rankings drift.
SEO is primarily about discoverability at the top of the funnel, capturing buyers who are researching. Marketplace search is primarily transactional, capturing buyers who are ready to purchase. The buyer intent on Amazon is almost always closer to purchase than the buyer intent on Google for the same query.
For sellers with both a brand website and marketplace presence, both disciplines are necessary and each one does a job the other cannot. SEO for e-commerce websites builds the brand authority and top-of-funnel traffic that marketplace listings cannot generate on their own. MPO captures the conversion at the moment of purchase intent that a brand site rarely matches in efficiency.
The Emerging Layer: AI Discovery Above the Marketplace
For most of the last decade, the marketplace search bar was the starting point for product discovery. A buyer with purchase intent opened Amazon or Google Shopping, typed a query, and the platform’s algorithm determined what they saw.
That starting point is shifting.

A growing share of product research now begins inside AI interfaces that sit above the marketplace entirely. When a buyer asks ChatGPT “what yoga mat should I get for hot yoga,” or uses Perplexity’s shopping assistant to compare sustainable home goods, or reads a Google AI Overview that recommends a specific brand before the Shopping tab has even loaded, the platform’s own algorithm has been bypassed. The recommendation they receive comes from a system that draws on editorial content, brand web presence, community discussions, and structured product data — not from the marketplace’s internal ranking engine.
This is not a future trend to prepare for. Amazon Rufus is already inside the active purchase flow. Perplexity shopping is live. Google AI Overviews surface product recommendations for purchase-intent queries in volume. The behavior exists now.
What this means for MPO as a discipline is that platform-internal optimization is no longer sufficient on its own. A product can index well for every relevant term in A9, maintain strong review velocity, and hold top organic positions on Amazon, while being effectively invisible to the AI systems that are increasingly influencing what buyers consider before they ever open a marketplace.
The signals that drive LLM-layer visibility are different from the signals that drive marketplace ranking. Editorial mentions in buying guides and category roundups, consistent brand entity presence across the web, structured product data with clean attribute naming, and community discussion in relevant forums all feed into whether an AI system has enough signal to confidently recommend a product. These are signals that marketplace-only optimization has never needed to build, which is why most sellers currently have a gap there.
As MPO evolves as a discipline, this layer becomes a core part of the strategy rather than an adjacent concern. The keyword variants and entity naming consistency that help AI systems recognize your product across multiple surfaces are optimization work, just a different kind than title writing and backend keyword stuffing.
Why MPO Is Worth Treating as a Serious Discipline
The reason marketplace SEO gets treated as a checklist rather than a discipline is that the surface-level version is genuinely simple. Write a good title, get reviews, keep stock available. For a seller in a low-competition category with strong organic demand, that might be enough.
For everyone else, simplicity is an illusion. Competitive marketplace categories behave like sophisticated search environments where the difference between first page and second page is measured in conversion rate, review recency, keyword indexing completeness, feed accuracy, and operational signals that interact with each other in ways that are not obvious from the outside.
Understanding MPO as a discipline, rather than a set of listing tips, is what makes it possible to reason about why a listing ranks where it does, what is actually causing underperformance, and what the right intervention is. That reasoning requires a clear mental model of what the algorithms are trying to do and what signals they use to do it.
The tactical work, how specifically to optimize a title, how to structure a Google Shopping feed, how to build review velocity without violating platform terms, how to structure product data for LLM visibility, all of that lives in platform-specific guides. This article is the map. Those are the territories.
