Amazon's tightening payment rules. Influencer ROI is collapsing for brands. And your PPC costs keep climbing while conversion rates stall.
This week, we're breaking down three things that directly impact your bottom line—and what to do about them.
- Overthinking your PPC strategy? This could solve that 🔍️
- Breaking news: credit cards are STILL accepted for Amazon ads 💳️
- How influencers aren’t driving sales—they’re driving searches 📱
Read on. 👇

AMAZON NEWS
Amazon just issued a clarification to sellers following confusion around recent payment policy announcements.
The company notified a select group of advertisers about upcoming changes to payment options, which triggered concern across the seller community. Now, Amazon is walking that back—at least partially—confirming that most sellers can continue using credit cards, debit cards, and Pay by Invoice for ad spend.
📋 What actually happened
A limited announcement created market-wide confusion. Amazon's response suggests the changes will likely impact only a specific subset of accounts—possibly smaller advertisers or those in certain categories. The broader seller base remains unaffected for the moment.
👁️ The bigger picture
This follows Amazon's established pattern: limited rollouts, miscommunication, clarification, then eventual full implementation weeks later. History suggests this restriction may return with refinements—potentially tiered by ad spend brackets or account level.
⚠️ Key dates to watch
Some sellers received notice of an August 1, 2026 implementation date. If you're in that group, mark your calendar. 📅
What this means for you
For now, your payment methods remain unchanged. But Amazon is clearly testing the waters on stricter payment controls. Monitor your Seller Central for official updates, and don't assume today's policy is tomorrow's reality.
A more complex, less predictable—and potentially more expensive—future for ecommerce delivery.

TOGETHER WITH REDHENLABS
Most sellers overthink Amazon PPC - here’s why you shouldn’t

Amazon’s ad ecosystem quietly rewards two things: control and efficiency.
Not flashy tactics. Not constant bid movement. Just consistent inputs into a system that already has enough volatility built in.
Attribution is delayed. Traffic quality fluctuates. Auction logic adjusts continuously in the background. In that environment, overly complex automation often ends up optimizing against incomplete data. Dayparting, hyper-granular rules, and aggressive AI reactions tend to create churn, not stability.
Experienced sellers usually arrive at the same conclusion the hard way: restraint performs better.
Strong Amazon PPC results typically come from:
- Simple automations that handle obvious, repeatable actions without thrashing
- Clean, readable campaign data that highlights what matters instead of burying it
When changes are deliberate and explainable, campaigns stay predictable. When reporting is clear, sellers spend less time decoding dashboards and more time making decisions Amazon’s system can actually reward.
RRW Ads was built around this reality. Automations are intentionally limited. AI recommendations explain their reasoning. Nothing goes live without approval. The goal isn’t to outsmart Amazon — it’s to operate efficiently inside it.
For SellerBites readers who already understand this dynamic:
Use promo code Adspend for 15% off your first three months.

BITES OF THE WEEK
- AI Is Changing How Customers Think—and Buy [read more]
- US Dominates Retail Ad Spend — Here’s Why It Matters [read more]
- Amazon Locks In Delivery Power with USPS Deal [read more]

TRENDING TOPIC
Influencers don’t drive sales—they start searches

Here's what nobody wants to hear: influencers aren't the sales machine brands think they are.
A new PYMNTS Intelligence report surveyed 3,196 U.S. consumers and found something uncomfortable. Influencers matter, but mainly as a starting point—not a finish line.
💭 The real dynamic
More than half of U.S. consumers buy something an influencer recommended at least once a year. Sounds impressive until you dig deeper. In most cases, that influencer post is just the spark. What actually drives the purchase? Everything that comes after.
Shoppers see the recommendation, then immediately shift into research mode. Reviews. Price comparisons. Forum discussions. Manufacturer websites. Only after checking multiple sources do wallets open.
📊 The numbers tell the story
- 56% of consumers make at least one influencer-recommended purchase annually; 12% buy more than six times
- 95% of buyers do additional research before purchasing—consulting multiple sources
- 44% of consumers return influencer products less often than other purchases (suggesting better expectations)
Translation? When someone actually researches before buying, they're happier with the result. Influencers work best when they're honest guides, not hype machines.
What actually works
Food and cooking influencers dominate every age group—nearly 50% of buyers trust them. Technology and beauty follow. The pattern is clear: practical advice paired with visual proof drives decisions.
Age matters too. Gen Z engages most, but baby boomers show higher willingness to buy on first encounter—and they return items less often. Experience beats impulse.
The bottom line
Influencers are effective guides, not closers. They help consumers discover products and set expectations. The final decision? Still belongs to the shopper.
For brands measuring ROI: influence is about direction, not control.




