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TL;DR: View-through attribution (VTA) measures conversions from customers who saw your ad but didn’t click, while click-through attribution (CTA) tracks those who clicked. Understanding both helps Amazon sellers accurately assess ad performance and make data-driven optimizations.
Note on marketplaces: This guide is specifically optimized for the US market.
Ad attribution is the process of identifying which marketing touchpoints contributed to a sale. On Amazon, this means determining whether a customer's purchase was influenced by a Sponsored Products ad, a Sponsored Brands video, or another form of paid media.
With millions of products competing for attention, Amazon sellers need accurate attribution models to understand where conversions come from. Without proper attribution, you might misallocate your budget—cutting high-performing awareness ads or overspending on underperforming click-focused campaigns.
Amazon uses two primary attribution methods: view-through attribution (VTA) and click-through attribution (CTA). Together, they form the backbone of post-impression performance analysis, helping you distinguish between direct response (clicks) and indirect influence (impressions).
For new and growing Amazon sellers, mastering these concepts is crucial. It allows you to look beyond simple click metrics and recognize how your brand’s visibility shapes long-term customer behavior—even when no immediate click occurs.
View-through attribution (VTA) refers to conversions generated when a customer sees your advertisement but does not click on it, yet purchases your product within a defined time frame—typically 24 hours on Amazon’s platform.
This model acknowledges that ads can have a psychological impact even without direct interaction. For example, a shopper may see a Sponsored Display ad for a premium coffee maker while browsing kitchen appliances. They don’t click, but later search for the product by name and make a purchase. VTA captures this conversion as being influenced by the earlier ad exposure.
Amazon applies VTA primarily to certain ad types, such as:
The standard attribution window for VTA on Amazon is 24 hours post-impression. If a user views your ad and buys the product—or a related item—within that window, it counts as a view-through conversion.
Importantly, VTA helps quantify the “brand lift” effect. Even if customers don’t engage directly, repeated exposure builds recognition and trust, leading to organic or competitor keyword conversions downstream.
For brand managers and larger sellers running awareness campaigns, VTA offers tangible proof that visibility matters. Tools like SellerSprite’s Sales Attribution help track these indirect wins by linking impression data to eventual sales.
Click-through attribution (CTA) is the traditional and most intuitive method of measuring ad success. It credits a sale to an ad only if the customer clicked on it before making a purchase.
On Amazon, CTA is used across all Sponsored Ads: Products, Brands, and Display. When a shopper clicks your ad and completes a purchase within the attribution window (usually 7 days), it's recorded as a click-through conversion. This metric powers core KPIs like ACOS (Advertising Cost of Sale), ROAS (Return on Ad Spend), and conversion rate.
Because CTA provides clear cause-and-effect tracking, it’s favored by performance marketers focused on ROI. You know exactly which keywords, placements, or creatives drove revenue because they generated clicks that led to sales.
However, relying solely on CTA presents a major blind spot: it ignores the majority of shoppers who see an ad, mentally bookmark it, and return organically. Studies suggest that up to 60-80% of conversions attributed to organic searches or competitor terms were influenced by prior ad exposure—none of which appear in CTA reports.
For growth-stage sellers, ignoring VTA means undervaluing top-of-funnel ads and possibly cutting budgets on campaigns that actually drive long-term brand growth.
While VTA casts a wider net, CTA delivers precision. The best Amazon sellers don’t choose one over the other—they leverage both to get a complete picture of their ad ecosystem.
Amazon utilizes a hybrid attribution model that combines first-click, last-click, and multi-touch logic depending on context. However, within its self-service advertising console, the dominant models are:
But Amazon’s native reporting often buries VTA data, especially in aggregated reports. For instance, Sponsored Display ads include view-through conversion metrics, but they’re absent in Sponsored Products reports. This inconsistency makes it hard for brands to assess total campaign impact.
Moreover, Amazon’s attribution model doesn’t account for cross-device journeys or long-term brand influence beyond the 24-hour window. A shopper might see your ad on mobile, research on desktop, and buy three days later—none of which may be connected under Amazon’s current system.
For enterprise sellers, this limitation underscores the need for advanced attribution tools that stitch together behavior across sessions and touchpoints. SellerSprite’s multi-touch attribution model helps bridge this gap by tracking user behavior beyond Amazon’s native limitations.
Accessing and interpreting attribution data requires knowing where to look—and what to infer.
Step 1: Identify Available ReportsLog into Amazon Advertising Console → Navigate to Reports → Select “Performance by Time” or “Sponsored Display Performance” reports. Look for columns labeled “View-Through Conversions” or “VTC”.
Step 2: Compare VTC vs CTCCalculate the ratio of view-through to click-through conversions. A high VTC number relative to CTC suggests a strong brand lift. For example, if you have 10 click-through sales and 8 view-through sales, nearly half your success comes from non-click influence.
Step 3: Analyze by Campaign TypeVideo and display campaigns should naturally have higher VTC. If not, your creative may not be memorable or targeted correctly.
Step 4: Correlate with Organic Rank ChangesUse tools like SellerSprite’s Rank Tracker to see if spikes in impressions correlate with improved organic ranking, even without immediate sales.
Pro Tip: Export weekly data to Excel and create dashboards that overlay advertising spend, impression share, VTC, and organic sales. This reveals patterns invisible in isolated reports.
Ignoring VTA can severely distort your perception of campaign performance.
Imagine running a cinematic Sponsored Brands Video ad. It generates 50,000 views, 500 clicks, 20 sales via click-through, and 15 via view-through. In Amazon’s default “click-only” view, your ROAS appears based on 20 sales. But the real story? 75% more conversions occurred due to brand exposure.
If you only consider CTA, you might conclude the video isn’t worth the spend and pause it. But with full VTA insight, you see it contributed 35 total conversions—justifying the investment and suggesting room to scale.
Additionally, VTA influences:
Brands that track both VTA and CTA are better equipped to optimize for total profitability rather than short-term clicks.
Relying solely on click-through data leads to a myopic view of ad performance. Here’s why tracking both is essential:
Modern buyers interact with brands multiple times before purchasing. Viewing your product on a banner ad, then searching for it days later, is common. VTA helps close the loop on these indirect paths.
Upper-funnel ads build brand equity. Without VTA, their ROI looks poor, increasing the risk of premature campaign cuts. With VTA, you can prove long-term impact.
The goal isn’t just to sell—it’s to drive *additional* sales that wouldn’t have happened otherwise. VTA helps identify campaigns that shift demand, not just capture it.
High VTC with low CTC may indicate compelling visuals that drive recognition but weak CTAs or pricing. Use this insight to refine messaging.
Top-performing brands track both metrics. If you don’t, you’re at a strategic disadvantage when comparing performance across teams or agencies.
View-through attribution credits a sale when a customer sees an ad but doesn’t click, yet buys within 24 hours. Click-through attribution requires the customer to click the ad before purchasing, usually within 7 days. VTA measures indirect influence; CTA measures direct response.
VTA can significantly improve perceived ad performance by revealing conversions that occur after ad exposure but without clicks. This leads to more accurate ROAS, lower effective ACOS, and better-informed budget decisions—especially for video and display campaigns focused on brand awareness.
Tracking both gives a complete view of ad effectiveness. Click-through data shows immediate performance, while view-through data reveals brand influence and upper-funnel impact. Together, they help optimize for total incremental sales, not just direct clicks.
By SellerSprite Success Team
The SellerSprite Success Team comprises Amazon advertising experts, data scientists, and e-commerce strategists with over 50 combined years of experience helping brands scale profitably. We specialize in attribution modeling, PPC optimization, and AI-driven insights that empower sellers to make smarter decisions. Our content is rooted in real-world testing and trusted by thousands of U.S. Amazon sellers.
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