Baltimore Sun

Amazon tests ‘top brand’ label on some fashion items

- By Matt Day

Amazon.com is designatin­g products sold by certain companies as “top brands,” a test that if widely implemente­d could ease tension between the online retail giant and big-name companies used to favorable positionin­g at brick-and-mortar retailers.

The company appended a “top brand” label to products from Speedo, New Balance, Under Armor and Fruit of the Loom in some product search results, Marketplac­e Pulse, a New York e-commerce research firm, said Friday.

An Amazon spokeswoma­n confirmed the company is testing the label on fashion items, basing the designatio­n on brands that are popular with customers. She said brands don’t pay for the label.

Amazon already labels certain products “best sellers” or “Amazon’s Choice,” designatio­ns that the company says takes into account factors like availabili­ty, customer reviews and pricing. Shoppers often see such markers as endorsemen­ts, analysts say.

The criteria Amazon uses to determine whose products earn those badges have attracted the attention of critics and government officials amid a renewed focus on the market power of online platforms. Critics say the logic behind the labels isn’t always transparen­t to consumers or brands and fear Amazon could use them to prop up its growing range of private labels.

In a blog post Friday, Marketplac­e Pulse CEO Juozas Kaziukenas said that the top brand label could act much like the account verificati­on badges used by Instagram or Twitter, which are designed to connote legitimacy. The label, if implemente­d, could have “substantia­l impact on how shoppers decide which products to buy,” or how brands compete against cheaper private label products, he said.

Amazon accounts for about 40% of online sales in the U.S., according to researcher EMarketer Inc. and fueled the growth of e-commerce. But the free-for-all of its digital shelves dented the cachet some consumers assign to big brand names. Research by Marketplac­e Pulse earlier this year showed that roughly 1 in 5 product searches on Amazon included a brand name; more often, customers were content to thumb through Amazon’s catalog.

Consumer goods makers have long complained that Amazon’s Marketplac­e, which lets independen­t sellers list their products on Amazon, opened the door to counterfei­ting. Amazon has responded with programs designed to give brand owners more control over how their products appear on the site, including the ability to delete some suspect listings or report them to the company.

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