KDP Rank Fuel · Vappingo
Publishers trying to fix underperforming listings often optimise the wrong layer — tweaking copy when the real problem is a technical error in the keyword boxes, or fixing keyword boxes when the problem is that the description fails to convert. This tool scores your listing out of 100 across three separate dimensions and tells you exactly which layer to fix first.
| 10-minute read | All levels |
Before you change a listing, you need to know what is wrong with it. Not in a general sense — “the description could be better” — but specifically: which elements are costing you rankings, which are costing you conversions, and which are technically incorrect in ways that affect how Amazon’s systems process your listing.
Most publishers who sit down to improve an underperforming listing start with the description because it is the most visible element. Sometimes that is the right instinct. Often it is not. The description may be converting reasonably well, and the real problem is that keyword boxes are formatted incorrectly, wasting ranking potential on every single search Amazon tries to match against your listing. Or the description is strong but three of the seven backend keyword boxes are empty, leaving significant indexing potential untapped.
The Listing Audit is the diagnostic step that happens before optimisation. It identifies exactly what is wrong and exactly which layer it belongs to, so that the fix goes to the right place rather than the most visible one.
Three Layers, Four Tabs
A KDP listing has three distinct layers, each of which can fail independently. The Audit evaluates all three and presents the results across four tabs.
The Technical Tab: What It Catches
The Technical tab is where the Audit earns its value most immediately, because the issues it catches are often invisible to the publisher — errors that have been present since publication without ever producing a visible warning.
The most serious Technical check is for emoji characters. Amazon’s content guidelines prohibit emoji in book titles, subtitles, and descriptions, and a listing that contains them can trigger a content hold that prevents the book from appearing in search results — sometimes without any notification to the publisher. This is particularly common in listings that were written by copying text from a marketing brief or social media post where emoji are standard. The Audit catches every instance and flags it as a critical issue.
The keyword box checks are the second most valuable Technical layer. The Audit evaluates all seven boxes against five specific rules:
The audit checks the listing. Proofreading checks the manuscript.
A listing that passes every audit check and scores 90 out of 100 is doing everything right at the listing layer. The layer beneath it — the manuscript readers receive after clicking buy — is a separate quality question entirely. Amazon’s algorithm evaluates conversion signals continuously, which means a well-audited listing pointing to a book with editing problems will see its conversion rate and rankings erode as reviews accumulate. Vappingo’s professional manuscript proofreading service works at the layer the Listing Audit cannot reach.
The Algorithmic Tab: What A10 Is Looking For
The Algorithmic tab evaluates the signals Amazon’s A10 algorithm uses to assess your listing’s relevance — the elements that determine how broadly and at what positions your book appears in search results. These checks are less visible than the Technical ones but often have a larger impact on ranking performance.
The key checks in this tab include whether your primary target keywords appear in your description body with appropriate frequency and specificity, whether your title keywords are reinforced in the description text, and whether the description demonstrates semantic breadth — the variety of contextually related terms that tell A10’s COSMO knowledge graph that your listing is genuinely relevant to a topic rather than superficially keyword-stuffed.
The Algorithmic tab also checks for generic terms that Amazon’s content guidelines explicitly prohibit in keyword boxes — words like “book,” “novel,” “ebook,” “free,” and author names other than your own. These terms are blocked from generating ranking benefit even when they appear in keyword boxes, so including them wastes character space. The check surfaces these automatically so you can replace them with productive terms.
For a detailed explanation of how A10 weighs these signals and what the algorithm is specifically looking for in listing content, the article on KDP listing optimisation for the A10 algorithm covers the mechanics in depth.
The Conversion Tab: Scoring the Human Response
The Conversion tab is where the Audit evaluates your listing from the reader’s perspective rather than the algorithm’s. It scores five elements:
Understanding Your Score
The composite score out of 100 weights the three layers differently. Technical issues carry the highest weight because they are non-negotiable — a listing with a Technical violation is underperforming regardless of how strong the copy is. Algorithmic issues carry the second highest weight because they affect the volume of traffic the listing receives. Conversion issues affect what percentage of that traffic converts to buyers.
A score below 60 almost always indicates significant Technical or Algorithmic issues that should be addressed before any copy work is done. A score between 60 and 80 typically means the Technical layer is clean but Algorithmic or Conversion elements have identifiable gaps. A score above 80 is the threshold where a listing is performing well enough across all three layers that further optimisation produces diminishing returns — and where the Listing Optimizer is most effective for targeted gap-filling rather than broad reconstruction.
The target before publishing any listing update is above 80. Below that threshold, there are specific, identifiable improvements that will have a measurable impact on performance. Above it, the listing is strong enough that the primary variable affecting sales becomes the book’s review profile and organic ranking momentum rather than the listing itself.
Running the Audit: What You Need
You need your complete current listing: title, subtitle, description, and all seven keyword boxes. You can paste these in manually or enter your ASIN to have the tool fetch them directly. The audit runs in seconds. The results are organised by the four tabs, with every flagged issue explained and a specific fix recommended for each one.
Run the Audit before any other listing work. Before the Optimizer, before a description rewrite, before changing your keyword boxes. The ten minutes it takes consistently improve the quality of whatever optimisation follows — because you know exactly what you are fixing rather than making changes based on general intuition about what might help.
The Listing Audit is available on all tiers. For context on the specific keyword rules the Technical tab checks against, the guide to KDP’s 249-byte keyword limit covers the character rules in detail, and the KDP keyword help page is the authoritative reference for what Amazon permits and prohibits. For independent analysis of what makes book listings convert, Kindlepreneur’s book description guide provides useful context on the conversion principles the Audit’s scoring reflects.
Sign up at rankfuel.vappingo.com — three free credits on signup, no payment required. For the full picture of where the Listing Audit fits within the KDP Rank Fuel workflow, see the platform review. And for the broader context on why listings underperform, the article on why books stop selling on Amazon covers the patterns the Audit is specifically designed to catch.