If you’ve ever looked at your idea lists and wondered, “Are these even doing anything?” you’re not alone. And according to Altovise Pelzer in our latest community session, you might be asking the right question.
Because here’s the twist: the problem isn’t idea lists themselves, it’s how most creators are building them.
The Algorithm Shift You Probably Missed
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Altovise uncovered something interesting: Amazon is quietly spotlighting very niche, hashtag-powered idea lists in new, high-traffic placements, including those “post-purchase” discovery zones buyers see right after checking out.
And the creators who are winning?
They’re not making giant lists with 20+ items.
They’re crafting tight, purposeful, “how-to” themed lists with just 4–5 products, and Amazon seems to love them right now.
Think ultra-specific:
- “How to prep for your dog’s grooming day.”
- “How to host a no-stress holiday dinner.”
- “How to build your cozy reading nook.”
Small lists. Big visibility.
Real Creators, Real Results
The conversation in the session was electric:
- Andrew shared how he’s getting steady conversions from dozens of these focused micro-lists.
- Sandy broke down how she pairs image collages with a linked idea list for double the impact.
- Stephanie, Catherine, and Michelle jumped in with fresh niche angles, everything from pet care to holiday gifting to SEO-powered topics that ride trending searches.
The chat was basically a brainstorming goldmine.
Altovise’s Weekend Challenge
If you’re ready to experiment, here’s the challenge she issued:
Create at least two brand-new, very niche, how-to style idea lists this weekend.
Keep them short. Keep them specific. Then track performance views, clicks, conversions, and see what Amazon does with the placement.
And if you’re using Logie, you’ve got a bonus advantage:
You can monitor sales more clearly and build supporting collections to share across socials. No pressure. No hype. Just a smart, data-backed strategy the panel has already seen working.






