PrettyLitter, the subscription cat litter brand, ran the numbers and found its Amazon expansion was pulling customers away from its own site—where margins ran 37% higher. According to The Drum, the brand and agency Mindgruve used Amazon Marketing Cloud to track which direct customers were switching to Amazon, then created Amazon-exclusive SKU variants to recapture those buyers without undercutting the direct business.
The mechanics: PrettyLitter deployed Amazon Marketing Cloud to analyze overlap between their DTC customer file and Amazon purchase behavior. The data revealed that a measurable segment of existing direct subscribers were defecting to Amazon for convenience or Prime eligibility. Instead of fighting the channel or matching price across both, the brand created distinct product configurations—different packaging sizes, bundled offerings, or scent variants—sold only on Amazon. The exclusive SKUs let PrettyLitter serve the Amazon shopper without training the direct customer to comparison-shop.
Why it worked: The move exploits a structural truth about multi-channel commerce. When a brand sells the identical SKU on Amazon and its own site, the customer who discovers both will default to whichever offers faster shipping, lower friction, or a lower price—almost always Amazon. That arbitrage destroys the direct relationship and the margin that funds acquisition. By segmenting inventory at the SKU level, PrettyLitter turned Amazon into a separate storefront with separate offerings, preserving the direct site as the premium, full-assortment destination. The analytics layer confirmed the cannibalization before it became fatal, and the exclusive SKUs gave defecting customers a reason to stay in the ecosystem without burning the higher-margin channel.
The pattern extends beyond cat litter. Physical product brands in consumables, supplements, pet care, and personal care face the same pressure: Amazon delivers scale and discovery, but margin and lifetime value live on the DTC site. Most founders either avoid Amazon entirely or list the same catalog everywhere and watch margin compress. The smarter play is channel-specific inventory.
The steal for a small brand: Start with your best-selling SKU and create a variant sold only on Amazon. Change the pack count, add a bundled accessory, or offer a trial size not available direct. Price it to maintain acceptable margin on Amazon's fee structure, but never match it on your own site. Use Amazon Attribution tags or UTM parameters to track how many direct site visitors search your brand on Amazon after discovering you elsewhere—that overlap is your cannibalization risk. If the data shows meaningful crossover, the exclusive SKU is your hedge. Set up the Amazon listing with Fulfillment by Amazon to compete on Prime speed, and direct your paid social or influencer traffic to your DTC site with exclusive offers or loyalty incentives. The key cost: time to create the variant listing and a modest inventory commitment to test the exclusive SKU. Total outlay: under $2,000 for a small brand to set up FBA and seed 200-500 units of the Amazon-only variant.
For brands already on both channels, audit your Amazon traffic sources. If a significant share comes from branded search after a customer visited your site, you are training people to price-compare. Pull your core SKU from Amazon or price it higher there, and replace it with the exclusive variant. The customer who wants your product on Amazon can still buy it; the customer who values your brand story, subscription perks, or direct relationship stays on your site. The analytics tell you where the line is. The SKU architecture enforces it.
The broader pattern: Multi-channel physical product brands win by treating each channel as a distinct business with distinct economics. Amazon is a volume play with tight margins and zero customer data. DTC is a margin and retention play with full control. Selling the same thing in both places at different prices is a race to the bottom. Selling different things in each place is a moat.
The takeaway
Create Amazon-exclusive SKU variants to serve marketplace shoppers without cannibalizing your higher-margin direct site.
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