How Not to Sell on Amazon, According to The Former Head of
Selling on Amazon
The Amazon marketplace is designed to make it easy for
practically anyone to list products on the site, including the brands
themselves. Add the features of
the FBA program, and now companies that haven’t historically
fulfilled direct-to-consumer orders can easily handle that operational
complexity. Layer in how Amazon’s Buy
Box algorithm prefers lower-priced offers to higher-priced ones
and competition across different sellers can quickly become a race to the
bottom for margins.
With far too many sellers not properly incorporating all of
their costs into their pricing decisions, I regularly see sellers overestimating
how far they can drop their prices and still be profitable.
Brands acting as direct-to-consumer resellers on Amazon are
better able to cut retail prices and remain profitable, creating an advantage
over resellers.
So, it becomes harder for a reseller to bring meaningful
value to customers if:
- There is no real limit to how many resellers could offer the same products
- Resellers are having to undercut one another to win the Buy Box
- They don’t often understand their all-in cost structures
- The very brands that make product available to them are now able to compete side-by-side as resellers.
Only those resellers having an exclusive sourcing
relationship with its brands, where the brands also agree not to become
resellers themselves, have much luck with this route. Even so, as more brands
realize the opportunity on Amazon, fewer brands are willing to make such a
deal.
In response to these many changes, we have seen two major
shifts in the past 3-4 years occur among the base of resellers on Amazon:
Resellers are aggressively courting brands to become their
exclusive resellers on Amazon
Resellers are developing private label brands of their own
so that they can become exclusive resellers of their own brands.
With so many new private
label brands surfacing, there is no longer just competition across
national brands or between national brands and private label brands, but now
also between private label brands operating in the same product spaces.
So if you’re about to get started on Amazon as a third-party
seller, it’s critical to understand what sourcing/distribution advantages you
will have, as those gains are likely to be short-lived.
It’s critical for third-party sellers to continuously
evaluate their product sourcing advantages and expect that the products making
the seller profitable today will need to evolve into a different mix of
products within six months.
How Amazon Wins on Amazon
There are more than two million third-party sellers
operating on the Amazon marketplace.
And yet, Amazon has all the data, including but not limited
to:
- Which products customers search for
- What they actually buy
- How much they buy at what prices
- Where they can’t find the brands they were searching for
Although Amazon is a publicly held company, it’s investors
have tolerated years of razor-thin margins, which has partly played out by way
of Amazon selling products at next to no profit or even at unprofitable levels.
Amazon would make more profit in the short-term by letting
third-party sellers earn the sale. However, the company has taken the approach,
in each category of products, of pursuing all of the strategic brands it
believes need to be in the catalog to attract Amazon customers to shop first on
Amazon over any other site –– online or offline.
To do this, Amazon has made a number of sourcing agreements
with brands to acquire products at prices that don’t allow Amazon to make any
significant profit. This is because the objectives here are for Amazon to bring
the right selection at prices consistent with or lower than market prices,
available all of the time to Amazon customers. To make these objectives
possible, Amazon has chosen selectively to forgo short-term profits in pursuit
of long-term customer loyalty.
For the third-party seller competing head-to-head with
Amazon Retail, these differences in objectives often creates situations where
Amazon lowers its prices to a point where, rightfully so, the third-party
sellers competing against Amazon can’t figure out how Amazon Retail is making
any money.
The answer is that Amazon isn’t making money, at least in
the short-term, and it’s entirely comfortable with that.
I have also seen third-party sellers frustrated that Amazon
doesn’t increase its prices in times of scarcity, such as popular toys being
sold right before Christmas. In these situations, while Amazon may put limits
on how much product any one customer can buy, it maintains prices at stable
levels to help Amazon customers avoid apparent price gouging that can happen
otherwise in such situations.
Let’s just say that Amazon’s runway is a lot longer than any
of the other sellers on Amazon.
Finally, for FBA sellers whose products end up competing
directly with Amazon Retail, these sellers often get frustrated that they
rarely win the “Buy Box,” even though their products are also Amazon Prime
eligible (by being FBA products) and sold at the same prices as Amazon or even
slightly lower.
Yes, as long as Amazon is in stock on an item, it will
almost always win the Buy Box, even if another seller appears to have a better
price and equal Amazon Prime designation on its offer. At some point, another
seller can lower its prices below a threshold that Amazon Retail has set for
itself, but that point is usually well under water for all sellers.
This information isn’t to scare you away from Amazon. In
fact, it’s here to do exactly the opposite.
Knowing how to
operate your business within the Amazon ecosystem will better
help you to win in this massive global channel. Competing directly with Amazon
Retail isn’t necessarily a winning strategy, but there are plenty of other
strategies to double down on or modify your approach.
By James Thomson
Article Source: https://www.bigcommerce.com/blog/how-not-sell-on-amazon/


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