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Amazon – The Basics

What you need to know when getting started

Heard of Amazon?

If you said no, I hope the weather was nice under the rock you have been under for the past 10 years.

Amazon has redefined what a man can do when starting a company in his garage. Envy aside, the channel is a household name to most of the planet now. We won’t bore you with the statistics – they are mind mindbogglingly large.

Selling on Amazon has never been easier than today. It has also never been as competitive. Where many new Brands try, not all suceed. This is because Amazon is a painful learning curve to expereince – mistakes can lead to serious long term consequences and the company is unforgiving to sellers who do not plan, manage and execute their online Amazon accounts properly.

Its a Catalogue

Amazon is an online catalogue of product. You either connect to existing product records, competing with other sellers of those same product on price and shipping… Or, you add your unique Branded product to the catalogue. Either way, the listings aren’t ‘your’s’ strictly speaking. The listing is Amazon’s.

The Amazon Buyer

The buyer belongs to Amazon. You sell the product on the Amazon platform, but Amazon is the retailer and the buyer is Amazon’s. Your ability to communicate with the buyer is limited, and must be done on Amazon only.

Get good grades

Amazon will measure how quickly you reply to questions, how ‘on time’ your orders are dispatched and delivered. They will grade the accuracy of your data based on returns and complaints. Your Amazon success or failure is in a big part determined how well you are measured.

Amazon means many things…

Want to host your website? Amazon has a service for that. What to ship your website orders, or have them warehoused? Amazon has a service for that. In fact, Amazon has so many spun off services and secondary companies, its hard to keep track of them all month to month.

We’re not here to chat to you about all of them. You can ask your Echo.

For the online sellers reading, we’re focused on what Amazon means to you. Are you a wholeseller and thus thinking about a Amazon Vendor account? Are you an eCommerce trader and thinking about Amazon Seller? Are you a physical store, or chain, and debating both of them?

Maybe that part is resolved, and Amazon Sponsored product listings is on your radar? Or Sponsored Brand ads? Maybe its not just Amazon native traffic you need – maybe you want to drive external traffic to Amazon? Or market Amazon products externally?

Im confused already, and I’m suppose to be en expert…

Conversion Matters

You want the right buyers finding you. Not every single buyer under the sun. Not ever single living human being on Amazon. Conversion is about how many find your product and buy the product. Being found by many, with only a few purchasing, will produce a good long term conversion.

History Matters

Amazon is using your past account history, across many grades, to determine how safe you are for its buyer to have a positive experience. Your history is therefor important to build and grow long term.

Sales Rank

Amazon tracks how well a product listing, known as the ASIN, preforms over time. Some product sell better than others, and Amazon will over time push better sellers higher in search results to buyers, because it is focused on the buyer experience.

Buyer, buyer, buyer…

There are pages above to help you with various topics for set up, or help you plan out your strategy for the channel… but whatever you decide to do, you must do it right.

Some company’s think they can test Amazon by doing the bare minimum… no. Stop it, no. That will not only give you an awful ‘test’ of the Amazon platforms potential, it may inadvertently stop you from ever doing Amazon properly.

Amazon made it this far by staying laser focused on one thing; buyers. Amazon prizes the buyer satisfaction above everything. If a buyer has a poor experience, Amazon is all over that like hot syrup on spongy pancakes.

Guess who is in the firing line when a buyer gets a poor expereince? I’ll give you a clue – its not Amazon. Its you, the seller. And if you keep screwing up, you may wake up one day to being permantely barred from selling on Amazon.

So, for the good of your ‘testing the Amazon water’ plans, and for the sake of any longer term thinking, don’t launch a fast and furious Amazon account. 

Ask yourself…

Am I selling product competitively? This is a catalogue – if you are twice the price as the next seller of the same product, there is no where to hide. And no – you can’t duplicate them and get away with it for long!

Test yourself…

Are my product optimised for core search terms a buyer will input? Remember – buyers are searching for a ‘shoe’ more than ‘Nike’. Are your listings optimised in the right ways to be found?

Demand of yourself…

Am I ready to ship orders on time, all the time? Are my couriers reliable to deliver within strict timelines? Is my customer service ready for same-day reply?

Short term plans

No matter how you decide to make a start, your short term plan often will be different from your long term. Amazon relies on history. Your account history and the product history are factors. 

If you start from step one, so does Amazon’s history of you. They focus on the buyer, so they have no reason to trust you early on. Your rankings will therefor be low.

This means one simple thing – you need to maximise conversion. That means a compelling offer. And that means a low price.

If you want to launch on Amazon, plan it.