Your Amazon main image gets the click. But it’s the secondary images in slots 2 through 7 that close the sale. These are your infographic images — the visual content that educates, persuades, and converts a curious browser into a paying customer.
Most sellers treat these slots as an afterthought. They throw in a few extra product angles, maybe a stock lifestyle photo, and call it done. That approach leaves thousands of dollars on the table every month. The brands actually winning Amazon in 2026 treat their image stack like a strategic asset — designed, tested, and refreshed continuously.
This guide covers everything you need to know about creating Amazon infographic images that actually move the needle on conversion rate — from design fundamentals to category-specific strategies to the mistakes that silently kill your sales. For our service implementation of this exact framework, see Amazon Listing Optimization and AI Product Photography.
Amazon gives you 7 image slots — slots 2-7 are where infographic images live. Listings with strong secondary images see 10-25% higher conversion rates than basic product-only listings.
The 7 core infographic types: feature callouts, comparison charts, lifestyle scenes, size and scale, ingredients, how-to-use, and social proof.
Mobile-first design is non-negotiable — 80%+ of Amazon traffic is now mobile. Top brands follow a deliberate image sequence and refresh creative every 3-6 months.
What Are Amazon Infographic Images?
Amazon infographic images are the secondary listing images that combine product photography with text overlays, icons, graphics, and design elements to communicate key selling points visually. They occupy image slots 2 through 7 on your product detail page.
Unlike your main image — which must be a pure white-background product shot per Amazon TOS — infographic images have far more creative freedom. You can add text callouts, comparison tables, lifestyle backgrounds, dimensional diagrams, ingredient highlights, and more. For the rules and craft of the main image specifically, see our Amazon Main Image Guide.
Think of your infographic images as a visual sales pitch. Most Amazon shoppers never read your bullet points or A+ content. They scroll through your image carousel, and within 15 to 30 seconds, they’ve decided whether your product is worth buying. Your infographics need to answer every major objection and highlight every key benefit in that window.
Why Secondary Images Matter More Than You Think
Amazon’s own internal data shows that listings with high-quality secondary images see conversion rate improvements of 10 to 25% compared to listings with basic product-only photos. That’s not a marginal gain — it’s the difference between profitability and breaking even on PPC.
How Shoppers Actually Use the Image Carousel
Eye-tracking studies on Amazon product pages reveal a consistent pattern:
- 70% of shoppers view at least 3 secondary images before scrolling to bullet points
- 45% of shoppers view all 7 images before making any purchase decision
- On mobile, the image carousel is swiped through before any text is read — images are the primary content
- Average time spent on the image carousel: 12 to 18 seconds on desktop, 8 to 12 seconds on mobile
If your secondary images don’t sell your product, most shoppers will never read far enough to find out why they should buy. Your infographic images are your sales copy for the majority of your audience.
Mobile vs Desktop Behavior
On desktop, shoppers can see your image carousel, bullet points, and pricing simultaneously. On mobile — where 80%+ of Amazon traffic now comes from — the image carousel takes up the entire screen. Shoppers swipe through images first, then scroll down. This means your infographic images need to tell a complete story on their own, without relying on text content below the fold.
The 7 Types of Infographic Images That Convert
Not all infographic images serve the same purpose. The most effective Amazon listings use a strategic mix of these seven types — not seven of the same type, not three product shots and four guesses.
1. Feature Callout Infographics
The workhorse of Amazon infographic images. These overlay text callouts, arrows, and icons on top of or beside the product to highlight key features and benefits. The best ones focus on 3 to 5 features maximum per image and use a clear visual hierarchy so the most important benefit registers first.
2. Comparison Charts
Side-by-side comparisons against competitors or against your product’s “before” state. These are especially powerful in crowded categories where differentiation is hard to communicate. Use a simple two or three-column table format with checkmarks and X marks — shoppers process this format instantly.
3. Lifestyle Callout Images
Product shown in a real-world or AI-generated lifestyle setting with subtle text overlays that reinforce benefits. These images build emotional connection and help shoppers visualize the product in their own lives. Our one-shoot-to-100-images workflow makes these cost-effective at scale.
4. Size and Scale Images
Dimensional diagrams, hand-held shots, or next-to-common-object comparisons that show exactly how big (or small) the product is. Returns caused by size surprises are one of the biggest margin killers on Amazon — a good scale image prevents them.
5. Ingredient or Material Callouts
Especially critical for supplements, skincare, and food products. These images highlight key ingredients with descriptions of what each one does and why it matters. For non-consumables, material callouts serve the same purpose — “304 stainless steel,” “BPA-free Tritan plastic,” “organic cotton.”
6. How-to-Use / Assembly Images
Step-by-step visual instructions that show the product in action. These reduce perceived complexity and address the “will I be able to use this?” objection. Numbered steps with clear illustrations convert better than text-only instructions every time.
7. Social Proof Images
Customer review quotes, star ratings, “As Seen In” logos, awards, or UGC-style photography that builds credibility. Amazon has strict rules about what you can include — no fabricated reviews or misleading claims — but authentic social proof in image form is extremely persuasive.
Design Principles for High-Converting Infographics
Great infographic images follow a set of design principles that ensure they communicate effectively at every size — especially on mobile thumbnails where most shoppers see them first.
Visual Hierarchy
Every infographic image needs a clear reading order. The shopper’s eye should land on the most important element first (usually the headline or primary benefit), then flow naturally through secondary information. Use size, color contrast, and positioning to guide attention.
Text Legibility Rules
- Minimum font size: 24pt for body text, 36pt+ for headlines (at 2000 by 2000px canvas)
- Maximum word count: 40 to 60 words per image — fewer is better
- Contrast ratio: Dark text on light backgrounds or vice versa — never low-contrast combinations
- Font choice: Sans-serif fonts (Helvetica, Arial, Montserrat) for readability at small sizes
White Space and Breathing Room
The most common amateur mistake is cramming too much information into one image. Professional infographics use generous white space around text and graphics. If an image feels crowded, split the content across two images — you have 6 slots to work with, not 1.
How Top Amazon Brands Structure Their Image Stack
The highest-converting Amazon listings don’t place their images randomly. They follow a deliberate sequence designed to mirror the shopper’s decision-making process.
The Ideal 7-Image Formula
After analyzing hundreds of top-performing listings across competitive categories, here’s the pattern that consistently converts:
| Slot | Type | Buyer Question Answered |
|---|---|---|
| Slot 1 | Main image — pure white background | What is it? |
| Slot 2 | Hero infographic — top 3-5 features | What does it do? |
| Slot 3 | Lifestyle image — product in use | What does it look like in my life? |
| Slot 4 | Size/scale or ingredient breakdown | What’s in it / how big is it? |
| Slot 5 | Comparison chart or differentiation | Why this one over others? |
| Slot 6 | How-to-use or assembly steps | How do I use it? |
| Slot 7 | Social proof, brand story, or upsell | Can I trust this brand? |
It mirrors the natural buyer psychology. The shopper subconsciously moves through these questions in order — if your image stack answers them in the same order, conversion rate goes up because friction goes down.
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Title, bullets, A+ Content, and full image stack rebuilds for higher CTR and conversion.
Learn more →The 10 Most Common Infographic Mistakes That Kill Conversions
We’ve audited thousands of Amazon listings. These are the infographic mistakes we see most often — and every one of them is costing sellers real money.
- Text overload. Cramming 100+ words into a single image. If it looks like a paragraph, nobody’s reading it.
- Low contrast text. Light grey text on a white background, or dark text on a dark lifestyle image. Unreadable at thumbnail size.
- Inconsistent branding. Each image looks like it was designed by a different person. No consistent color palette, typography, or visual style.
- Stock photo overuse. Generic stock images that look fake and don’t show your actual product. Shoppers can tell immediately.
- No clear hierarchy. Every element is the same size and weight. The eye doesn’t know where to look first.
- Missing size/scale reference. Shoppers can’t tell how big the product is. The #1 cause of “not as expected” returns.
- Ignoring mobile. Images designed on a 27-inch monitor that become unreadable on a phone screen.
- Feature-focused, not benefit-focused. “Made with 304 stainless steel” tells a feature. “Won’t rust, chip, or stain — guaranteed for life” sells a benefit.
- No lifestyle context. Seven images of the product on white backgrounds. No emotional connection, no imagination trigger.
- Outdated designs. Infographics that haven’t been updated in 2+ years look dated compared to competitors who refresh quarterly.
If your image stack hits 4 of these mistakes, your conversion rate is probably 15-30% lower than it could be. On a listing doing $50K/month, that’s $7,500-$15,000/month in revenue lost to fixable image problems — before counting the wasted ad spend driving traffic to a listing that converts below benchmark.
Infographic Images vs A+ Content: What Goes Where
One of the most common questions we get from Amazon sellers: should I put this information in my infographic images or in my A+ content?
The answer depends on priority and visibility:
- Infographic images: Your most critical selling points. These are seen by 90%+ of visitors. Put your strongest benefits, key differentiators, and must-know information here.
- A+ content: Deeper brand story, detailed comparisons, cross-selling modules, and supplementary information. Seen by 30 to 50% of visitors who scroll below the fold.
Think of infographic images as your elevator pitch and A+ content as your detailed brochure. Both matter, but the infographic images need to close the deal on their own for the majority of shoppers who never scroll down.
Mobile-First Design: Why 80%+ of Shoppers See Your Images on a Phone
This is not optional. If your infographic images don’t work on a 6-inch screen, they don’t work at all.
Mobile Design Rules
- Design at 2000 by 2000px but preview at 400 by 400px — that’s approximately what shoppers see on mobile
- Minimum font size 28pt at full resolution (anything smaller is unreadable on mobile)
- 3-4 key points per image maximum — not 8, not 10, not “as many as will fit”
- High-contrast color combinations only — test by converting to grayscale; if it’s still readable, the contrast is sufficient
- Icons over text where possible — a simple icon communicates faster than a sentence
The Thumb-Zone Test
Open your listing on your phone. Hold it the way you normally would. Can you read every piece of text in every image? Can you understand the key message of each infographic within 3 seconds? If not, the image needs to be redesigned.
When to Use AI-Generated Lifestyle Backgrounds vs Studio Shots
The rise of AI product photography has changed the cost equation for infographic images dramatically. But AI isn’t always the right choice. The smartest approach is the hybrid workflow — which combines both.
Use AI-Generated Backgrounds When:
- You need lifestyle scenes in multiple settings (kitchen, bathroom, outdoor, office) — AI generates these at a fraction of studio cost
- You want to test different background styles before committing to a full shoot
- You need seasonal variations (holiday, summer, back-to-school) without reshooting
- Your product photographs well on white but you need lifestyle context
Use Studio Photography When:
- You need precise detail shots (texture, stitching, material quality)
- Your product has reflective or transparent surfaces that AI struggles with
- You need model photography for apparel or wearable products
- Amazon requires specific compliance images (nutrition labels, warning labels)
Most $1M-$5M+ Amazon brands now operate on a hybrid model: studio for the foundation (main image, hero shots, detail), AI for scale (lifestyle variations, seasonal content, demographic variants). For our service implementation, see Real Photo to AI Content.
How to Brief a Designer or Agency for Amazon Infographics
Whether you’re working with an in-house designer or an Amazon listing agency, the quality of your infographic images depends heavily on the quality of your brief. Bad briefs produce bad images, regardless of who’s designing them.
What to Include in Your Creative Brief
- Product photos: High-resolution source images on white background (minimum 2000 by 2000px)
- Top 5 selling points: Ranked by importance — what matters most to your customer?
- Target audience: Age, gender, lifestyle, pain points — this shapes visual tone
- Competitor references: 3-5 competitor listings you want to beat, with notes on what they do well and poorly
- Brand guidelines: Colors, fonts, logo usage, tone of voice
- Must-include information: Dimensions, certifications, ingredients, warranty details
- Image sequence preference: If you have a preferred slot-by-slot plan, share it
The best briefs include a “what NOT to do” section. If you’ve seen competitor infographics that feel cheap, cluttered, or off-brand, screenshot them and include them as anti-references. This saves rounds of revisions and gets you to the right output faster.
Testing and Iterating Your Infographic Images
Creating great infographic images isn’t a one-time project — it’s an ongoing optimization process. The brands that win on Amazon treat their image stack the same way they treat their PPC campaigns: test, measure, iterate.
A/B Testing with Manage Your Experiments
Amazon’s Manage Your Experiments tool lets Brand Registered sellers run controlled A/B tests on listing images. Here’s how to use it effectively:
- Test one image slot at a time — changing multiple slots simultaneously makes results unreadable
- Run tests for a minimum of 4 weeks to reach statistical significance
- Test during non-promotional periods — Prime Day or Lightning Deals will skew your data
- Focus on conversion rate as the primary metric, not click-through rate (CTR is a main image metric)
What to Test First
If you can only run one test, start with Slot 2 — your hero infographic. This is the first image shoppers see after the main image, and it has the highest impact on conversion rate. Test different feature prioritization, layout styles, and color treatments.
Iteration Cadence
Top Amazon brands refresh their infographic images every 3 to 6 months. Competitive categories move fast — if your images look the same as they did a year ago, you’re falling behind. Set a calendar reminder to audit your image stack quarterly.
Category-Specific Infographic Strategies
What converts in one category may fall flat in another. Here are proven infographic strategies for the verticals we work with most.
Beauty & Skincare
Lead with ingredient callouts and “free from” claims (paraben-free, cruelty-free). Use beauty-specific photography with soft, aspirational lighting. Before-and-after imagery (within Amazon’s guidelines) performs exceptionally well. Include texture close-ups — shoppers want to see the consistency, color, and finish of the product.
Health & Supplements
Ingredient transparency is everything. Dedicate one full image to your supplement facts panel with callouts explaining each key ingredient. Dosage and usage instructions reduce “how do I take this?” questions. Third-party certifications (NSF, GMP, USP) belong in your infographics — they build immediate trust.
Home & Kitchen
Size and scale images are critical — home product photography should show the item in a real kitchen or living room setting. Include dimensional diagrams with exact measurements. Material and care instructions prevent returns. For multi-piece sets, show everything laid out with individual labels.
Pet Products
Pet product infographics should always feature real animals (or AI-generated pet scenes). Pet parents buy emotionally — show happy dogs using the product, cats lounging on it, or birds playing with it. Safety certifications and material safety data are conversion drivers in this category.
Electronics & Tech
Spec comparison charts dominate in electronics. Shoppers in this category are analytical — they want to compare your product’s specs against competitors at a glance. Include compatibility information (which devices, which models), setup steps, and what’s included in the box.
Building a Consistent Visual Brand Across All 7 Image Slots
The most successful Amazon brands treat their 7 image slots as a cohesive visual experience — not 7 independent images. When a shopper swipes through your carousel, every image should feel like it belongs to the same brand.
Color System
Choose 2 to 3 brand colors and use them consistently across every infographic. Your primary brand color should appear in headlines and callout boxes. A secondary color works for supporting text and accents. A neutral (white, light grey, or dark charcoal) serves as the background base.
Typography Consistency
Use the same two fonts across all images: one for headlines (bold, impactful) and one for body text (clean, readable). Never use more than two typefaces — it creates visual chaos. Maintain consistent sizing: same headline size, same body text size, same caption size across every image.
Template Frameworks
Create a reusable template system with consistent margins, text placement zones, icon styles, and graphic elements. This speeds up production for new SKUs and ensures every product in your catalog has the same professional visual standard. It also reinforces brand recognition — repeat customers should recognize your infographic style immediately.
Cross-Listing Consistency
If you sell 20 products on Amazon, all 20 should share the same visual brand identity in their infographic images. When a shopper clicks from one of your listings to another (via your Brand Storefront or variation listings), the consistent design builds trust and increases average order value.
Your secondary images are where the conversion happens. If your current infographics aren’t strategically designed, mobile-optimized, and visually branded — you’re leaving revenue on the table with every impression. Audit them quarterly, test continuously, and treat the 7 image slots as one cohesive system, not 7 separate images.

