Keywords Help Discoverability, but They Do Not Guarantee Search Placement

Amazon provides keyword fields to help books become more discoverable, but the platform also states that neither Amazon nor KDP can guarantee top search placement. That means a book can have keywords entered correctly and still not appear where the author hopes. This page should stay focused on that keyword-level frustration rather than promising that the right phrase automatically produces strong ranking.

Weak or Broad Keywords Often Fail Because They Do Not Match Buyer Intent

Amazon recommends thinking like a reader when choosing keywords and notes that phrases of roughly two to three words often work best. If keywords are too broad, too generic, or disconnected from how shoppers actually search, they may do very little for discoverability. In practice, many 'keywords not working' complaints are really complaints about poor buyer-intent alignment.

Misleading Keywords Can Create Search Problems Instead of Solving Them

Amazon’s metadata guidelines warn against inaccurate or manipulative keywords. If keywords do not accurately describe the book’s central storyline or subject, they can produce confusing search behavior and may violate KDP rules. This is important because some authors try to force visibility with broader or trend-based terms that do not truly fit the book.

Keyword Problems Are Related to Metadata, Categories, and Competition

Keyword performance does not exist in isolation. Search relevance is shaped by metadata alignment, category context, listing strength, and competitive pressure. A phrase may be technically relevant but still fail to move the book meaningfully if the niche is crowded or if other parts of the listing send weaker signals than competing books.

This Page Should Frame the Keyword Problem, Not Replace the Other Search Pages

For cluster clarity, this page should remain about keyword failure as a specific symptom. It should not turn into a full indexing guide, category troubleshooting page, or ranking-drop analysis. Its job is to explain why entered keywords may not be producing discoverability in the way the author expected, while linking naturally to the broader search and category pages.