Your Seller Central dashboard won't tell you that the shopper buying your product this morning might not be a person. It won't flag that the reviews you spent two years earning could vanish from a variation by May 31 — or that a bright red label is quietly tanking conversion on listings that look completely fine.
This week's issue is the stuff your dashboard misses.
- The review-sharing crackdown has a May 31 deadline ☠️
- Rufus can now buy for you—your listing is the new sales pitch 🤖
- A brutal new "High Price" label just went site-wide 🔴

AMAZON NEWS
Amazon is killing shared reviews across "fake" variations. For years, sellers merged genuinely different products under one parent listing to pool review counts — a controller and a controller-plus-case bundle, or a supplement's orange flavor riding on the blue raspberry's 5,000 reviews. That game is over. The entire catalog gets updated by May 31.
Who's safe: white-hat sellers. If your variations are simple — color, size, multi-packs — nothing changes. Who's exposed: bundles and "functional differences." Amazon now treats flavor, scent, and similar attributes as real differences in customer satisfaction, so reviews stop flowing between them.
💸 What it costs you
Watch a child variation go from 5,000 reviews to 500 and the damage spreads fast: search results show the gutted count, conversion drops, and your TACoS climbs as ads work harder for the same sales.
⚠️ The catch
Don't try to outrun it with a flat-file reupload under a new variation theme. Sellers already tried — and Amazon's response was to shut down review sharing across all their child variations. Mega ouch.
🖊️ What to do
Go into Manage All Inventory today and confirm every variation theme actually reflects what you're selling. If a child variation only brings in chump change, consider killing it and concentrating reviews on your revenue drivers — that's the smart move here, not a workaround.-tier shopper might miss your better warranty just because their AI didn't dig deep. That stings, but it's the new game.

TRENDING TOPIC
Rufus can now buy for you—your listing just became a robot's shopping list

Amazon's AI assistant stopped answering questions and started placing orders. Prime members can now tell Rufus to watch a product and auto-buy it the second it hits a target price — the order goes through within 30 minutes of the price dropping, with a 24-hour cancellation window before it ships.
The guardrails for now: FBA items only, one unit per request, Prime members only. Narrow — but that's how every Amazon feature starts.
🖼️ The bigger picture
This isn't a side experiment. Amazon disclosed on its Q1 earnings call that ~20% of shoppers who hit a sponsored brand prompt inside Rufus keep chatting about that brand. One in five. Rufus is quietly turning into a discovery andcheckout layer — and the shopper isn't reading your listing anymore. The AI is.
🖊️ What to do
Pull your top FBA ASINs and read them the way a machine would: clean specs, complete attributes, no story-driven fluff burying the facts.
If Rufus can't parse your price, dimensions, and key features fast, it recommends the competitor it can read. And if you're running Sponsored Brands, watch your Rufus engagement data — that 20% stat means the prompt is a real funnel now, not a novelty.

ECOMMERCE NEWS
Amazon's "High Price" label is now live site-wide

There's a new warning label on Amazon listings, and it's bright red. The "High Price" tag has officially rolled out site-wide, and it's brutal for conversion — right up there with the dreaded "frequently returned" label.
What triggers it: inconsistent pricing and reseller activity. If you hold steady pricing, you're probably fine. If you make big price jumps, or have resellers undercutting you on other platforms, you're a candidate.
🖊️ What to do
Audit your listings this week and check for the tag. Sync your prices across every channel — Walmart, TikTok, Shopify, eBay, Meta. Skip the $5 price jumps; move in small increments over several weeks instead. If you see the label and your pricing is genuinely clean, force a listing update by re-entering the price, or request a manual review with screenshots showing your pricing is aligned everywhere.

QUICK HITS
- Hazmat just got more profitable. As of April 30, all FBA-eligible dangerous goods can ship through Amazon's Partnered Carrier program — lower inbound rates mean fatter margins on a category most sellers avoid. Less competition, dedicated storage limits, replenishable winners.
- Amazon is staffing up for agentic commerce. It posted a Principal Technical Program Manager role to integrate with third-party AI agent platforms, and joined the Universal Commerce Protocol council. Translation: it's building for a world where buying happens inside AI apps Amazon doesn't own.
- The $1M club is growing. A record number of sellers crossed $1M in revenue in 2025, per Amazon's small-business report — even as the total seller count shrinks. The middle is hollowing out; the top is pulling away.
- Meta opened its ad system to Claude, ChatGPT, and Perplexity via MCP (open beta) — 29 tools for performance reporting, anomaly detection, and campaign creation by natural language. Start with read-only operations; write operations can change live campaigns instantly.
- ChatGPT launched product feed ads. Plug in your feed and it auto-generates ads that surface on conversational intent, not keywords. CPC bidding and conversion tracking are maturing, with CPA models reportedly on the way.
- Marketplace moves: Walmart dropped OpenAI in an AI shake-up, TikTok Shop hit $4.9B in US sales in a single quarter, Temu is courting small Shopify brands, and Whatnot plugged directly into Shopify.

DO THIS WEEK
- Read your top 5 FBA listings the way a machine would — clean specs, full attributes, no fluff. That's what Rufus is reading now.
- Open Manage All Inventory and confirm every variation theme is legit. Fix anything that looks like a bundle-or-flavor merge before May 31.
- Scan your live listings for the red "High Price" label, and sync your pricing across every channel you sell on.
- Move your Prime Day prep onto a June calendar, and start lining up affiliate and creator partners now.




