Standard A+ vs Premium A+ Content
Standard A+ Content
Available to all brand-registered sellers. Provides access to 17 module types including image/text combinations, comparison charts, and single images. Allows up to 7 modules per product.
Standard A+ is sufficient for most sellers. The constraint isn’t the module variety — it’s how strategically you use the available modules.
Premium A+ Content
Previously restricted to top-tier sellers, Premium A+ is now accessible to sellers who meet specific criteria (typically: all ASINs must have A+ Content, and you need an active Brand Story on all ASINs). Premium adds interactive modules: hotspot images, carousels, video, and enhanced navigation.
Premium A+ Content takes up more visual real estate on the product page and can improve conversion further — but only if the underlying content strategy is sound. Premium modules with weak content won’t outperform Standard modules with strong content.
Brand Story
Brand Story is a separate section that appears above your A+ Content, featuring a carousel of branded cards. It’s shared across all your products (you create it once) and provides a consistent brand presence. Think of it as your “About Us” section on every product page.
Recommendation: Enable Brand Story on all ASINs. It’s additional real estate that takes minimal effort and contributes to brand recognition and cross-product discovery.
The Sales-Logic Framework for A+ Content Layout
Most A+ Content fails because it’s assembled randomly — “put an image here, text there, comparison chart somewhere.” Effective A+ Content follows a deliberate progression that mirrors how buyers make decisions.
Module 1: The Hook
Purpose: Stop the scroll. The buyer has read your title and bullets and is now scanning below the fold. Module 1 must capture attention and communicate the single most compelling reason to buy this product.
Best module type: Full-width hero image with bold text overlay.
Content: One powerful benefit statement. Not a feature, not a tagline — the outcome the buyer gets from owning this product. Example for a portable blender: “Restaurant-Quality Smoothies. Anywhere.” supported by a lifestyle image of the product in use.
Module 2: The Proof
Purpose: Back up the hook with specifics. The buyer is now interested but skeptical. Module 2 provides the evidence.
Best module type: Image with text, or multiple image/text pairs.
Content: 3-4 key features with specific numbers and proof points. Not “powerful motor” but “300W motor blends frozen fruit in 20 seconds.” Not “long battery life” but “15 blends per charge — tested at full speed with ice.” Specificity builds credibility.
Module 3: The Objection Handler
Purpose: Address the #1 reason shoppers DON’T buy products in this category. Every product category has a primary objection — price, durability, size, complexity, safety. Module 3 tackles it head-on.
Best module type: Image with text, or comparison module.
Content: Identify the objection from competitor reviews (1-3 star reviews reveal what buyers worry about). Then explicitly address it. If the top objection is “portable blenders are hard to clean,” your Module 3 shows the easy-clean design: detachable blade, dishwasher-safe parts, single-button disassembly.
Module 4: The Differentiator
Purpose: Show why THIS product instead of the 15 alternatives on the same search results page.
Best module type: Comparison chart module.
Content: A comparison table showing your product against 2-3 unnamed “generic” alternatives across 5-6 attributes. You set the comparison criteria, which means you choose the dimensions where your product wins. This is the most underused and highest-impact A+ module.
Example comparison chart:
| Feature | Our Product | Generic Brand A | Generic Brand B |
|---|---|---|---|
| Motor Power | 300W | 150W | 200W |
| Blends Per Charge | 15 | 6-8 | 10 |
| Material | BPA-Free Tritan | Plastic (unspecified) | BPA-Free Plastic |
| Cleaning | Dishwasher Safe | Hand Wash Only | Hand Wash Only |
| Warranty | 2 Years | 90 Days | 1 Year |
| Weight | 14.2 oz | 16 oz | 18 oz |
The buyer doesn’t need to open competitor tabs. You’ve done the comparison for them — on your terms.
Module 5: The Use Case Expander
Purpose: Help the buyer envision multiple scenarios where they’d use this product. This expands perceived value and triggers “I’d use this more than I thought.”
Best module type: Multiple images in a grid or gallery.
Content: 3-4 use case images with short captions. For a portable blender: gym post-workout, morning kitchen routine, office desk, travel/camping. Each use case speaks to a different buyer motivation and expands the product’s relevance.
This module also serves a COSMO/Rufus optimization purpose — use case descriptions provide the intent signals that Amazon’s algorithm uses for contextual matching.
Module 6: The Trust Close
Purpose: Reduce remaining purchase hesitation with trust signals.
Best module type: Brand Story module or image with text.
Content: Warranty details, certifications (FDA, BPA-free, OEKO-TEX), customer support information, satisfaction guarantee, or a brief brand origin story. Anything that reduces perceived risk.
Module 7 (Optional): The Cross-Sell
Purpose: If the buyer is convinced but this specific product isn’t the right fit, direct them to another product in your catalog.
Best module type: Comparison chart showing your own product variants (size, color, model) side-by-side.
Content: Product line comparison table. This keeps the shopper within your brand ecosystem instead of sending them to search results where they’ll find competitors.
Module Selection Quick Reference
| Module Type | Best Used For | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Standard Image & Text | Proof, objection handling, use cases | The workhorse module — most versatile |
| Standard Comparison Chart | Differentiation, cross-selling | Highest conversion impact per Amazon’s data |
| Standard Single Image | Hero/hook, lifestyle shots | Full-width impact, use sparingly |
| Standard Four-Image & Text | Use case expansion, feature highlights | Good for feature grids |
| Brand Story Carousel | Brand awareness, cross-product discovery | Enable on all ASINs |
| Premium Video | Product demos, customer testimonials | Only available in Premium A+ |
| Premium Hotspot Image | Interactive feature exploration | Works well for complex products |
A+ Content Design Principles
Principle 1: Design for Mobile First
Over 70% of Amazon shoppers browse on mobile. Your A+ Content must be legible on a 4-inch screen. This means: large text (minimum 16pt equivalent in images), high-contrast colors, simple layouts that stack vertically, and no text that requires zooming.
Principle 2: Show, Don’t Tell
If you’re writing “durable construction” in text, you’re doing it wrong. Show the durability: a close-up of the material, a drop-test image, a “built to last” badge with a specific warranty period. Every claim should have a visual counterpart.
Principle 3: One Idea Per Module
Each module communicates one concept. Don’t cram three features, two benefits, and a brand story into a single module. Clarity beats density.
Principle 4: Maintain Visual Consistency
Your A+ Content should look like it belongs to a single brand — consistent color palette, typography, image style, and graphic elements across all modules and all products.
Principle 5: Test Everything
Amazon’s Manage Your Experiments feature lets you A/B test A+ Content against control versions. Set up experiments for your top-selling ASINs and let data tell you which layout converts better. Run tests for a minimum of 4 weeks to reach statistical significance.
Measuring A+ Content ROI
What to Track
Conversion rate (Unit Session Percentage). Compare your conversion rate before and after A+ Content implementation. If you’re launching A+ on a new product, compare against category averages.
A/B test results. Manage Your Experiments provides direct comparison data between A+ Content variations. This is the most reliable measurement method.
Sales velocity. A+ Content that improves conversion also improves sales velocity, which improves organic ranking, which drives more organic traffic. The ROI compounds beyond the direct conversion lift.
Expected Conversion Impact
| A+ Content Quality | Expected Conversion Lift |
|---|---|
| Basic (bullet repetition, generic images) | 0-3% |
| Good (structured layout, original images, some differentiation) | 3-7% |
| Excellent (sales-logic framework, comparison chart, use cases, original photography) | 7-15% |
| Premium A+ (video, interactive, excellent content) | 10-20% |
The gap between “basic” and “excellent” is enormous. A 10% conversion lift on a product doing $30K/month adds $3K/month in revenue — with zero additional ad spend or traffic.
Common A+ Content Mistakes
Repeating bullet points. If your A+ Content says the same things as your bullets, you’ve wasted the space. A+ should cover what bullets can’t: visual proof, comparison charts, use case imagery, and brand story.
Using stock photography. Buyers recognize stock photos instantly. They communicate “we didn’t invest in this product.” Use original product photography — even smartphone photos with good lighting beat stock images.
Ignoring the comparison chart module. This is consistently the highest-converting A+ module, yet most sellers skip it. A comparison chart keeps shoppers on your page instead of sending them to competitor listings to compare manually.
Creating A+ Content once and never updating. Customer needs change, competitor landscape shifts, and your product evolves. Review and refresh A+ Content at least every 6 months — more often if you’re actively testing.
Forgetting mobile optimization. If your text is legible on a desktop monitor but microscopic on a phone, 70%+ of your audience can’t read it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need Brand Registry for A+ Content?
Yes. A+ Content is only available to sellers enrolled in Amazon Brand Registry, which requires an active or pending trademark. If you don’t have Brand Registry yet, our Amazon Brand Registry guide → walks through the process.
How much does professional A+ Content design cost?
DIY using Canva or basic tools: $0-$100 per ASIN. Freelance designer: $200-$500 per ASIN. Professional agency (photography direction + copywriting + design): $500-$1,500 per ASIN. AI-assisted production (our approach): faster and more affordable because AI handles first-draft copy and layout concepts, with human refinement.
Our Amazon management plans include A+ Content creation — 10 products on the Launch plan, complete library on Growth and Scale. See pricing →
How long does A+ Content take to go live?
After submission, Amazon typically reviews and approves A+ Content within 7-10 business days. Occasionally they request revisions — usually for image quality issues, prohibited claims (medical/health claims without FDA approval), or trademark violations.
Can A+ Content help with Amazon SEO?
A+ Content itself is not directly indexed for keyword search (Amazon has been inconsistent on this over the years). However, the conversion rate improvement from good A+ Content directly impacts organic ranking — because Amazon’s algorithm heavily weights conversion velocity. Better A+ → higher conversion → more sales → higher organic rank. It’s an indirect but powerful SEO lever.
Should I add A+ Content to every product?
Prioritize your top sellers and highest-traffic listings first. A+ Content on your #1 ASIN has 10x more impact than on your #50 ASIN. Once your top 10-20 products have optimized A+ Content, extend to the full catalog.
Next Steps
Want A+ Content created for your products? Our Amazon management plans include professional A+ Content design as part of the service. Get a free listing audit → and we’ll include A+ Content recommendations in the report.
Keep reading:
- Amazon Listing Optimization: The Complete 2026 Guide →
- Amazon PPC Strategy 2026: How to Cut ACoS by 40% →
- Amazon Brand Registry: Complete Setup Guide →
Last Updated: March 2026