Guide / FAQ
Things to know before using BluePick
Important note: BluePick is a product research support tool that helps sellers organize product opportunities, market risks, customer pain points, and testing directions faster. The analysis combines currently available Amazon product samples, search result scale, prices, ratings, reviews, ad pressure, ASIN/product page information, and AI analysis. Results are intended as product research reference. Before sourcing or launching, please also check samples, costs, supply chain, compliance, ad conversion, and your own resources together.
What does the BluePick opportunity score mean?
The opportunity score is a product research reference based on currently visible product samples, Amazon search result size, ad pressure, ratings, reviews, differentiation potential, and AI analysis. It helps you decide whether a product is worth further checking through samples, cost, supply chain, and compliance. It does not represent exact sales volume or guarantee launch success.
Why do some products show “Not analyzed”?
This usually means the product was saved from search results or product samples, but has not yet been analyzed through a dedicated ASIN search. Not analyzed does not mean the product is bad. It only means BluePick has not generated the full opportunity score, Fit for You, pain points, and next-step guidance yet. Search this ASIN first, then review the complete analysis.
Where does BluePick data come from?
BluePick combines currently available Amazon product samples, search result scale, prices, ratings, review counts, ad display pressure, and ASIN/product page information. AI then organizes opportunities, risks, and test suggestions based on these signals and product research logic. Some data may be incomplete depending on marketplace, keyword, API response, or page changes, so results should be used as product research reference rather than exact sales data or a final decision.
Can BluePick directly tell me whether to source a product?
BluePick does not make the final sourcing decision for you. It helps you quickly decide whether a product is worth further research by organizing competition, differentiation, customer pain points, compliance risks, and testing directions. Before sourcing or launching, you should still check sample quality, cost structure, supply chain stability, compliance, ad conversion, and your own resources together.