Most Amazon Ads tools fall into one of two camps. Either they hand you a dashboard full of numbers and leave the work to you, or they quietly change your bids and budgets and ask you to trust that it all worked out. Neither is how a serious operator wants to run real spend.
AdsPlane takes a different posture. It runs your Amazon Ads like operations — on a schedule, within rules you set, with a record of everything.
One daily Runbook
Every day, AdsPlane runs a single optimization cycle:
Pull → Analyze → Manifest → Approve → Execute → Reconcile
- Pull your latest Sponsored Products, Brands, and Display reports for the campaigns on your allowlist.
- Analyze them with a deterministic engine that classifies campaigns, scores keywords and search terms, and factors in your product economics.
- Manifest the result as a structured, reviewable action plan.
- Approve it — in the dashboard or straight from Telegram. Nothing happens until you do.
- Execute approved actions through the official Amazon Ads API, with a before/after snapshot for every change.
- Reconcile afterward to confirm each change landed as intended, flag any drift, and write it all to the Execution Ledger.
That loop is the product. Everything else exists to make it safe.
Control is the default, not a setting
A recommendation only becomes an action inside a Manifest, and a Manifest only executes after it clears your Guardrail Policy and passes the Approval Gate. Your Guardrails bound how far any single change can go — max bid and budget moves, protected terms, protected campaigns and ASINs, confidence thresholds, and daily spend caps. Anything outside the rails is blocked or flagged, never silently applied.
New accounts start in Shadow Mode: the engine runs the full Runbook and shows you the Manifest it would propose, with Data Confidence Scores, and executes nothing at all. You move toward more automation only when you choose to — never automatically.
Flat monthly pricing. Never a % of your ad spend.
We charge a flat monthly fee. We don't take a percentage of what you spend on Amazon, because that would reward us for your spend going up — exactly the wrong incentive for a tool whose job is to spend your budget well.
Want to see the loop in detail? Read how it works, or compare plans.