![]() Step 3: Click on 3 dot button: After you open the Amazon website, make sure that you have logged in to your Amazon account. Personally, I plan to give this a few weeks and revisit a best-case new workflow if the feature isn’t re-enabled. Step 2: Open amazon: After opening your web browser, click on the search bar and type ‘amazon’ over there. Your order will be removed from the default order history view. ![]() You can not populate the rest of the columns. Go to Your Orders and locate the order or item you want to archive. If there are many items in your order, each may have separate delivery dates and tracking info. I can tell you that the columns that matter are: View all updates to track delivery progress. On each result, you'll find links to buy the product. Your search results will appear in a list below the search box. Enter your search terms in this box and click Search Orders. To see your recently viewed items and get more relevant recommendations, turn your browsing history back on. Just above your list of previous orders, you'll see a search box. They must all be present for the importer to recognize the file. To search your Amazon order history, open Amazon on the web and click Orders in the top right corner. If you really want to fake in the data, your best bet is to start with an old import CSV with all of the headers. Good questions, & know opened a support case with Amazon yesterday and they told her the redirect is a mistake and they are working a on fix (like you heard, Honestly, I’m skeptical since they removed the URL from their Accounts home page a month or two ago that this isn’t the next step in deprecating functionality (and that they don’t have a communications plan yet with their support staff)… but I’m hopeful I will be proven wrong.
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