Finding the right product is the hardest part of building an Amazon business. Get it wrong, and you’re stuck with inventory nobody wants. Get it right, and you’ve built the foundation for a profitable business.
The problem? Most new sellers rely on gut feeling or copy whatever’s trending on TikTok. That’s not research — that’s gambling with your savings.
As someone who’s tested dozens of research approaches (and currently uses Nexscope to automate most of this work), here are seven proven methods ranked by effectiveness.
What Makes a Good Amazon Product
Before diving into methods, know what you’re looking for:
- Demand: BSR under 50,000 in the main category confirms people are buying
- Competition: Under 500 reviews on top 3 listings means room for newcomers
- Margins: At least 30% profit after all Amazon fees
- Price point: $15-50 is the sweet spot — high enough for margin, low enough for impulse buys
Products meeting these criteria have the highest success rate for new sellers.
Method 1: Amazon Best Sellers
The simplest approach: browse subcategories on Amazon’s Best Sellers page.
How to use it: Don’t look at #1 products. Focus on items ranking #20-100 with fewer than 200 reviews. That’s where real opportunities hide.
The catch: Everyone does this. If you find it in 10 minutes, so can thousands of others. Use this as a starting point, not your final decision.
Method 2: Product Opportunity Explorer
Amazon’s free tool in Seller Central shows where customer demand exceeds existing supply. It essentially tells you where gaps exist in the marketplace.
What to look for: Niches with high search volume but low click concentration on existing listings. When top products only capture 40% of clicks, there’s room for you.
Verdict: Seriously underrated. Most sellers ignore this tool entirely.
Method 3: Competitor Review Mining
This method consistently delivers results. Go to competitor listings and read their 1-3 star reviews. Write down every complaint.
“Too small.” “Broke after a week.” “Wish it had a lid.” “Instructions were confusing.”
These complaints are your product roadmap. If customers consistently ask for something existing products don’t offer, that’s your differentiation strategy.
Verdict: Essential. Never skip this step for any product you’re considering.
Method 4: Keyword-First Research
Instead of starting with products, start with what people are searching for.
Keyword research tools show search volume and competition for specific terms. Look for keywords with 1,000+ monthly searches and fewer than 300 competing products.
The keyword tells you what people want. Your job is figuring out which product best answers that search query.
For a deeper dive into this approach, this guide on Amazon product research covers keyword-first methods in detail.
Method 5: Social Listening
Reddit, TikTok, niche forums — this is where real people discuss real problems without filters.
Search for phrases like:
- “I wish there was a…”
- “Why doesn’t anyone make…”
- “Looking for recommendations on…”
These conversations reveal unmet needs that keyword tools miss entirely. Time-consuming, but the potential payoff is significant.
Method 6: Supplier-First Research
Flip the traditional approach. Instead of finding a product then sourcing it, browse Alibaba or 1688 first.
Look for products trending with suppliers, items with reasonable MOQs (under 500 units), and things that photograph well for listings.
Then verify demand exists on Amazon. When supply capability meets proven demand, you’ve found a match worth pursuing.
Method 7: AI-Powered Research
AI tools now combine multiple research methods automatically. Feed them a niche, and they pull BSR data, analyze reviews, check keyword demand, and identify market gaps.
What used to take hours of manual work now takes minutes. AI tools for Amazon sellers can automate keyword research, competitor analysis, and product validation — all through simple chat commands.
For sellers serious about scaling, AI-powered research is where the industry is heading.
Validation Checklist
Before ordering samples, verify:
- BSR under 50,000 in main category
- Top 3 competitors have under 500 reviews each
- Price allows 30%+ margin after all fees
- Landed cost under $5-8 per unit
- No trademark or patent issues
- Clear differentiation identified from competitor reviews
- At least 1,000 monthly keyword searches
If you can’t check all boxes, keep researching.
How to Combine These Methods
The real power comes from using multiple methods together. Here’s a practical workflow:
- Start broad: Use Best Sellers and Product Opportunity Explorer to identify promising categories
- Validate demand: Check keyword search volume to confirm active searching
- Find your angle: Mine competitor reviews to identify specific improvements
- Verify sourcing: Confirm you can manufacture at viable costs
- Final check: Run through the validation checklist before committing capital
This process takes time. Expect 10-20 hours of research before finding a product worth pursuing. That investment pays dividends compared to rushing into a bad decision.
Mistakes to Avoid
Falling in love before validating: Personal excitement about a product means nothing without demand data. Always verify with numbers.
Ignoring seasonality: Products selling well in December might be dead inventory by March. Check yearly trends before committing.
Underestimating competition: “Only 300 reviews” doesn’t automatically mean easy entry. Established brands with massive ad budgets present different challenges than small sellers.
Skipping the math: After Amazon fees, shipping, returns, and advertising costs, margins are always smaller than initial calculations suggest. Build in buffer room.
Final Thoughts
Product research isn’t about finding the “perfect” product — it doesn’t exist. It’s about finding sufficient demand, manageable competition, and room for meaningful differentiation.
The most successful sellers combine at least three research methods before committing to any product. The boring, thorough research work separates profitable businesses from expensive hobbies.
Start with these methods. Be patient with the process. And remember: the goal isn’t to find a product fast — it’s to find a product that actually sells.