If so, it's crucial to assign browse node IDs to your ASINs for each site.
The browse node ID values determine where offers are placed in the Amazon catalog. If this information is missing or incorrect, buyers may have trouble finding, comparing, and purchasing your offers, which could impact your sales. Use the Browse Node Mapping table to identify the proper nodes in each European marketplace.
Download the European Browse Node Mapping Table
How to use it:
Example:
You sell on Amazon.uk and want to sell the following products on Amazon.de and Amazon.fr:
Add these numbers so your products are properly placed in each European marketplace.
For more information on this, visit the Browse Node Mapping Table for European Stores help page.
👍 / 👎 this article to let us know if this content is useful, and comment with any questions or tips for other sellers.
If so, it's crucial to assign browse node IDs to your ASINs for each site.
The browse node ID values determine where offers are placed in the Amazon catalog. If this information is missing or incorrect, buyers may have trouble finding, comparing, and purchasing your offers, which could impact your sales. Use the Browse Node Mapping table to identify the proper nodes in each European marketplace.
Download the European Browse Node Mapping Table
How to use it:
Example:
You sell on Amazon.uk and want to sell the following products on Amazon.de and Amazon.fr:
Add these numbers so your products are properly placed in each European marketplace.
For more information on this, visit the Browse Node Mapping Table for European Stores help page.
👍 / 👎 this article to let us know if this content is useful, and comment with any questions or tips for other sellers.
I think this post is super useful! 👍👍👍👍 Keep em' coming!
Do I need to do this if I am adding my offers to already existing listings or is this just for when I create a new listing?
Absolutely valid information, but if it's super informative, why is it not possible to list individual browse node ids via the listing template by marketplace?
And more to the point, why have different brose nodes for different market places?
this might explain why when the amazon-eu* selling account deletes browse nodes on uk product pages when it creates a seller offer based on stock held elsewhere by amazon (either amazon owned or fba sourced)
But to get a browse node reinstated seller support will refuse if the asin is brand-registered - this is not changing the browse node - this is just reinstating what was there before.
Often the amazon-eu selling account is "lazy" and just "dumps" all the asin it touches into random categories such as "Playstation 5 consoles" - or the other month "Baby Monitor".
Perhaps we can have a fast track way to get these corrected when a seller cannot fix them with their own contribution - they can often sometimes take weeks to get fixed 1 at a time
(*it uses 3rd party FBA stock and amazon owned stock from one territory to sell into another)
If so, it's crucial to assign browse node IDs to your ASINs for each site.
The browse node ID values determine where offers are placed in the Amazon catalog. If this information is missing or incorrect, buyers may have trouble finding, comparing, and purchasing your offers, which could impact your sales. Use the Browse Node Mapping table to identify the proper nodes in each European marketplace.
Download the European Browse Node Mapping Table
How to use it:
Example:
You sell on Amazon.uk and want to sell the following products on Amazon.de and Amazon.fr:
Add these numbers so your products are properly placed in each European marketplace.
For more information on this, visit the Browse Node Mapping Table for European Stores help page.
👍 / 👎 this article to let us know if this content is useful, and comment with any questions or tips for other sellers.
If so, it's crucial to assign browse node IDs to your ASINs for each site.
The browse node ID values determine where offers are placed in the Amazon catalog. If this information is missing or incorrect, buyers may have trouble finding, comparing, and purchasing your offers, which could impact your sales. Use the Browse Node Mapping table to identify the proper nodes in each European marketplace.
Download the European Browse Node Mapping Table
How to use it:
Example:
You sell on Amazon.uk and want to sell the following products on Amazon.de and Amazon.fr:
Add these numbers so your products are properly placed in each European marketplace.
For more information on this, visit the Browse Node Mapping Table for European Stores help page.
👍 / 👎 this article to let us know if this content is useful, and comment with any questions or tips for other sellers.
If so, it's crucial to assign browse node IDs to your ASINs for each site.
The browse node ID values determine where offers are placed in the Amazon catalog. If this information is missing or incorrect, buyers may have trouble finding, comparing, and purchasing your offers, which could impact your sales. Use the Browse Node Mapping table to identify the proper nodes in each European marketplace.
Download the European Browse Node Mapping Table
How to use it:
Example:
You sell on Amazon.uk and want to sell the following products on Amazon.de and Amazon.fr:
Add these numbers so your products are properly placed in each European marketplace.
For more information on this, visit the Browse Node Mapping Table for European Stores help page.
👍 / 👎 this article to let us know if this content is useful, and comment with any questions or tips for other sellers.
I think this post is super useful! 👍👍👍👍 Keep em' coming!
Do I need to do this if I am adding my offers to already existing listings or is this just for when I create a new listing?
Absolutely valid information, but if it's super informative, why is it not possible to list individual browse node ids via the listing template by marketplace?
And more to the point, why have different brose nodes for different market places?
this might explain why when the amazon-eu* selling account deletes browse nodes on uk product pages when it creates a seller offer based on stock held elsewhere by amazon (either amazon owned or fba sourced)
But to get a browse node reinstated seller support will refuse if the asin is brand-registered - this is not changing the browse node - this is just reinstating what was there before.
Often the amazon-eu selling account is "lazy" and just "dumps" all the asin it touches into random categories such as "Playstation 5 consoles" - or the other month "Baby Monitor".
Perhaps we can have a fast track way to get these corrected when a seller cannot fix them with their own contribution - they can often sometimes take weeks to get fixed 1 at a time
(*it uses 3rd party FBA stock and amazon owned stock from one territory to sell into another)
I think this post is super useful! 👍👍👍👍 Keep em' coming!
I think this post is super useful! 👍👍👍👍 Keep em' coming!
Do I need to do this if I am adding my offers to already existing listings or is this just for when I create a new listing?
Do I need to do this if I am adding my offers to already existing listings or is this just for when I create a new listing?
Absolutely valid information, but if it's super informative, why is it not possible to list individual browse node ids via the listing template by marketplace?
And more to the point, why have different brose nodes for different market places?
Absolutely valid information, but if it's super informative, why is it not possible to list individual browse node ids via the listing template by marketplace?
And more to the point, why have different brose nodes for different market places?
this might explain why when the amazon-eu* selling account deletes browse nodes on uk product pages when it creates a seller offer based on stock held elsewhere by amazon (either amazon owned or fba sourced)
But to get a browse node reinstated seller support will refuse if the asin is brand-registered - this is not changing the browse node - this is just reinstating what was there before.
Often the amazon-eu selling account is "lazy" and just "dumps" all the asin it touches into random categories such as "Playstation 5 consoles" - or the other month "Baby Monitor".
Perhaps we can have a fast track way to get these corrected when a seller cannot fix them with their own contribution - they can often sometimes take weeks to get fixed 1 at a time
(*it uses 3rd party FBA stock and amazon owned stock from one territory to sell into another)
this might explain why when the amazon-eu* selling account deletes browse nodes on uk product pages when it creates a seller offer based on stock held elsewhere by amazon (either amazon owned or fba sourced)
But to get a browse node reinstated seller support will refuse if the asin is brand-registered - this is not changing the browse node - this is just reinstating what was there before.
Often the amazon-eu selling account is "lazy" and just "dumps" all the asin it touches into random categories such as "Playstation 5 consoles" - or the other month "Baby Monitor".
Perhaps we can have a fast track way to get these corrected when a seller cannot fix them with their own contribution - they can often sometimes take weeks to get fixed 1 at a time
(*it uses 3rd party FBA stock and amazon owned stock from one territory to sell into another)