The new report will contain your entire Amazon history, slowing down performance of the initial upload step considerably (it now takes several minutes). The old report was based on a user-selected time range.A filter has been added those of you who want to remove these items from your import (see screenshot at bottom). Inexplicably, these purchases are identified in the CSV as coming from the “panda01” website. The old report did not include Amazon Fresh purchases- that data is now interleaved with the rest of your Amazon purchases- and these can be really high volume.The data mapping isn’t exactly the same as the previous version of this tool but it is really close. The Import CSV Line-item workflow can now read the Retail.OrderHistory.1.csv file in the “Your Orders” Privacy Central download. Tiller’s Import CSV Line-item workflow has been updated to read this data. To access your Amazon order history, you must now visit Amazon’s “privacy central” service to find a comprehensive record of everything Amazon knows about you – including your order history. Fortunately, Amazon is required to provide customers with access to their personal data. However, in March, Amazon abruptly stopped providing this popular download, frustrating many users in the Tiller Community and beyond. This workflow takes your Amazon orders and categorizes each item purchased within that order as discrete transactions in Tiller-powered spreadsheets.įor example, instead seeing of a single transaction for $20 from in your spreadsheet, you would see: You could then use Tiller’s free Import CSV Line Items utility to upload each transaction into Google Sheets. To download your Amazon order history before March 2023, you could simply visit Amazon’s Order History portal and download your order history CSV.
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