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Using filters to refine pricing insights

Updated over a month ago

Key Filters & What They Do

  • Product List Filter: Apply any saved Product List to reduce noise and focus analysis.

  • Category Filters (1–5 levels): Segment your catalog by taxonomy depth to compare similar products.

  • Competitor Filters: Limit analysis to specific retailers or seller groups such as:

    • Amazon Marketplace

    • Walmart Marketplace

    • Core retail competitors

  • Brand Filter: Narrow down to one or multiple brands for quick brand-level review.

  • Price Range: Filter out irrelevant SKUs (e.g., remove extreme outliers that skew averages).

  • Availability & Condition: Use options like In Stock, Out of Stock, New / Used / Refurbished. These identify distribution gaps or unauthorized sellers.

  • Authorized Seller: See only listings from approved sellers. This is critical for MAP compliance enforcement.

  • Marketplace Seller: Isolate third-party listings on Amazon or Walmart, especially useful when:

    • Identifying rogue sellers

    • Tracking the lowest-price pressure

    • Cleaning match sets

  • Regular / Promo / Clearance Price Type: Use this to isolate promotional activity or investigate pricing behavior by sell strategy.

  • Crawl Date: Focus on the latest extraction, or look at a specific day for investigations.

How Filters Improve Workflow

  • Tighter price benchmarking: Focus on competitive sets that truly matter (don’t compare to irrelevant out-of-category sellers).

  • Cleaner reports: Remove noise from expired matches or marketplace listings.

  • More relevant alerts: Limit alerts to high-priority SKUs or specific competitors.

  • Better match management: filter by expired matches to clean up catalog integrity.

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