
What's great
I didn't realize how much I was just hoping things were profitable. I'd look at revenue numbers and feel okay about it, but I wasn't really seeing the full picture per product.
What I like about Sellerview is it doesn't overwhelm you. You open it, you see your SKUs, you see what's working and what's not. TACoS, ACoS, margins - all there without having to build anything yourself. I found a product I'd been running ads on for months that was basically eating its own profits. Fixed it within a week.
Would love more integrations down the line but for what it does right now, it's become a regular part of how I run my Amazon business.
What needs improvement
Honestly the tool is pretty focused right now - which I like - but I'd love to see a few more integrations down the line. Something like direct Shopify connectivity or multi-marketplace support would be useful as you scale beyond just one Amazon account. Also a mobile view would be handy for when you just want to quickly check numbers on the go without sitting at a laptop. But these feel more like "would be nice" things rather than actual problems - the core of what it does, it does really well.
vs Alternatives
Okay so I tried Sellerboard. Used it for a few months. And look, it works. I'm not going to sit here and trash it.
But every time I opened it I felt like I was doing homework. There's just so much. So many numbers, so many tabs, so many things to configure. I'd go in wanting a simple answer - is this product making me money? - and come out 45 minutes later having gone down a rabbit hole and still not being 100% sure.
The data is all there in Sellerboard. That's the thing. It's accurate. But it just dumps everything on you and says "good luck, figure it out." And I don't have time for that. I'm running a business, not studying for an exam.
So I tried Sellerview.
First time I logged in I literally said "oh." out loud.
It just showed me my SKUs. And right next to each one - TACoS, ACoS, ad spend, margin. All together. No jumping around, no building your own reports, no connecting dots manually. It just told me what was happening.
And within the first week I found a product I'd been running ads on for months that was basically making me nothing after you factored everything in. I had no idea. I thought it was fine because the revenue looked okay. It wasn't fine.
That's the difference. Sellerboard gives you the data. Sellerview gives you the answer.
Maybe that's not for everyone. Some people love diving deep into spreadsheet-style tools. But for me? I just want to know where my money is going and where it's leaking. And Sellerview just shows me that without making me work for it.


sellerboard