Here’s a wild stat to chew on: over 70% of Amazon shoppers never even look past page one. If you’re an author hoping your cover art and a handful of reviews will pull in readers—good luck. The crowd is huge and honestly, most books get lost in the noise.
But what if you could use Amazon’s own giant engine to drop your story in front of people who aren’t even looking for you? Sponsored Display ads are Amazon’s not-so-secret tool for getting noticed. These aren't plain ads—they're like digital billboards that follow your reader around Amazon, Kindle, Twitch, and even IMDb.
Imagine your book cover popping up wherever your reader goes. Annoying? Maybe a little. Effective? Oh yeah.
Back in the day, this fancy setup was something only big-time publishers could use. Now? The doors are wide open, thanks to Amazon’s Ads API. Whether you write at your kitchen table or with a team behind you, you can launch Sponsored Display like a pro. The only real question: how fast can you get ads running—and how many sales can you grab before your rivals even notice?
TL;DR
Let’s rewind. Sponsored Display ads weren’t for everyone at first. Big publishers with tons of cash ruled the game. Indie authors? You were on the outside, your ad money stuck in your wallet.
Now, Amazon opened the gates. Thanks to the Ads API, anyone can play. Whether you’ve got ten books or one, or your work in progress is still called "FinalFinalDraft.docx (no really this time)," you’re in. Sponsored Display is your all-access pass—no giant budget needed.
Forget boring web banners. Sponsored Display puts your book cover under other books, on search results, inside Kindle home screens, and splashed all over places like Twitch and IMDb. Your next reader could spot your romance after checking movie thrillers or find your latest page-turner while deep in gaming streams.
“Sponsored Display opens the doors to buyers who aren’t actively searching for you—but are exactly your tribe.” — Jenna Moreci, best-selling indie author
This isn’t a shot in the dark either. Amazon lets you go super specific with genres, keywords, categories, shopper habits, or even what people just looked at. It’s basically like sending out a search party that won’t give up.
Maybe you already know about Sponsored Product ads, where you pick keywords and hope someone hunting new sci-fi finds your page. Works fine! But Sponsored Display? It’s a completely different animal.
These ads don’t sit around waiting. They follow people. Your ad might pop up on a Kindle after someone browses another book, or on IMDb right after a movie, or even beside a Twitch channel close to your genre. These are called “discovery ads”—and they help you chase just the right readers.
Sponsored Products are the bread and butter. You show up in search results if the shopper types your keywords. Handy for readers already looking, but you’re limited to those searches.
Sponsored Brands are big banners, often right at the top. You get to highlight a few books at once (maybe your whole series). This is great if you want folks to know you’re more than a one-book wonder.
Sponsored Display sticks in people’s minds. You can retarget (remind) people who almost bought, target lookalikes (folks like your current fans), and put your book right on competitor pages. It’s not just advertising—it’s politely stalking readers (with their permission, mostly).
“The best sponsored display authors aren’t always the biggest—they’re the ones who understand how to retarget and outmaneuver the comp.” — Dave Chesson, Kindlepreneur
Someone looked at your book but didn’t click buy? Most people would just shrug and move on. Not you. With retargeting, your ad follows them around, giving them little reminders. Studies say buyers need at least seven reminders before acting, so this matters a lot.
Wish you could clone your best readers? Lookalike tools do just that. Amazon checks what fans read and buy, then finds similar people—even in new countries or categories. So you’re always reaching new folks who might like your book.
Now, you’re not just seeing who bought a book. With Kindle reporting, you see how many pages got read, how much time readers spent, and what happens inside Kindle Unlimited. All this lets you match dollars to real interest—not just clicks.
“If you’re not tweaking your targeting based on real-time Kindle metrics, you’re missing the party.” — Ricardo Fayet, Reedsy co-founder
This is big for authors who care about series, KU fans, and building loyal readers.
If you haven’t yet, do the Amazon Brand Registry. It connects you to your books, makes campaign building easier, and gives you extra perks. Even solo authors should check this box.
Don’t just blast your cover everywhere. Use retargeting to catch folks who almost bought. Use lookalike tools to find new, very similar readers—even in new genres or spots. Layer these audiences for better results.
A great cover helps, but bold ad text is also key. Try stuff like: "Read the free sample!" or "Over 1,000 five-star reviews!" Use awards, blurbs, or top reader quotes. Show the vibe of your book, not just the title.
Launching ads is just the start. Check the numbers! Don’t only look at sales—check how many pages got read, how deep people went, what worked, and where your best fans come from. Double down on wins and turn off what’s weak. Fast.
A survey by Written Word Media found indies using Sponsored Display boosted Kindle page reads by 28% over just using Sponsored Products. That means more money, more fans, and bigger payouts.
Top authors don’t just throw money at ads and hope. They test ad text, images, and headlines often. They run campaigns for every new launch, but also keep old books alive with ads or promote a whole series between book drops.
Mark Dawson—yeah, the guy behind "John Milton" thrillers—credits over a million KU page reads a month to using Sponsored Display well. He’s always retargeting, tweaking ads, and bundling books for promos.
No need to break the bank. Small daily budgets work fine, keeping your books visible all year. This way, you catch readers who discover you after the hype settles—not just during one big launch week.
“You don’t need to outspend, just outsmart. Target smarter, iterate faster.” — Mark Dawson, bestselling thriller author
Amazon is jumping into video ads hard. Sponsored Display lets you use book trailers, animated covers, or quick genre clips. Short videos can really grab people as they scroll. Got a book trailer or anything video? Time to use it.
If you want to push your videos more, check out Prime Video Ads for book trailers inside Amazon’s video world.
Amazon’s Ads API keeps growing. Expect to see device stats, customer journeys, audience interests beyond books, and more. Authors who understand and use this data will leave others behind. Now is the time to get comfy with dashboards and test everything—bids, ads, and audience mixes.
Sponsored Display follows readers on and off Amazon. Sponsored Products put your book in search. Sponsored Brands show off your whole author brand or book series up top. They all work best together.
Yep! You choose your budget, set limits, and Amazon keeps promos in line. Sharp targeting and bold ads are key—being everywhere won’t help if your ad is bland.
Nope. Any author running Display ads is in the "club." If you stand out, you might get a mention in Amazon newsletters or case studies.
For sure! KDP authors are welcome. It helps to update your Brand Registry, but you can dive in as a solo indie too.
Check clicks and sales or downloads, but really focus on pages read and how engaged readers are with your book—especially in Kindle Unlimited. That shows who actually sticks with your story.
Want your book to be unavoidable in your genre? Sponsored Display isn’t magic, but it is your best bet for lasting, reader-focused growth. Treat each campaign like a science lab—test, learn, repeat. Dive into Kindle data. Focus where your readers already hang out and don’t chase every shiny trend.
Your next #1 fan might be just one Sponsored Display click away.
Want to dig into deeper ad stats? Take a look at Requery for custom metrics and actionable advice.
Want the full Amazon ads playbook? Check our guide to sponsored product ads or see real-life sponsored brands ad examples from other authors.