No public product API. DataFeedWatch is explicitly no-code: data enters via prebuilt cart connectors, file imports, or Google Sheets, and leaves as hosted feed URLs that channels pull. Its pushes to Google, Meta, and marketplace APIs run internally and are not exposed to third parties.
DataFeedWatch scores D+ on the API Report Card. No public product API. DataFeedWatch is explicitly no-code: data enters via prebuilt cart connectors, file imports, or Google Sheets, and leaves as hosted feed URLs that channels pull. Its pushes to Google, Meta, and marketplace APIs run internally and are not exposed to third parties.
Without a usable official API, teams fall back on manual exports, file drops, or one-off vendor integrations. The other option is an unofficial API layer like Supergood that automates the authenticated web app directly.
DataFeedWatch is a product feed management and optimization platform that helps e-commerce merchants and agencies transform raw product data from their store into channel-ready feeds for paid shopping, marketplaces, affiliate networks, and price comparison engines.
Primary vertical: E-commerce Marketing / Product Feed Management. A Shopify Plus merchant or an agency PPC manager signs up, installs the DataFeedWatch connector for their cart (or uploads a CSV/XML/JSON file), and DataFeedWatch ingests the product catalog (SKU, title, description, price, inventory, image URLs, custom attributes).
High within the product-feed-management niche. DataFeedWatch reports 18,000+ brands and agencies worldwide and 2,000+ supported shopping channels across 60+ countries.
DataFeedWatch is the system of record for the product feed that drives a merchant's paid shopping and marketplace listings, meaning the platform sits directly on the revenue path for Google Shopping, Meta catalog ads, TikTok Shop, Amazon, eBay, Bing, and 2,000+ other channels.
Founded in 2014 by Jacques van der Wilt and headquartered in California, with engineering and operations offices in Poland and the Netherlands.
Grades measure one thing: can a customer's engineering team get their own data out programmatically? We check six things (whether a real API exists, how access is gated, data coverage, auth quality, docs and developer experience, and stability) and roll them into a letter grade. Grades get re-verified, and they only move on evidence.