Overcoming the Cons of Amazon: Make the Most of Amazon Sales (2024)

Overcoming the Cons of Amazon: Make the Most of Amazon Sales (1)

By Kristina Lopienski Last updated on December 19, 2023

Overcoming the Cons of Amazon: Make the Most of Amazon Sales (2)

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Table of Contents

** Minutes

5 pros of selling on Amazon

8 biggest cons of selling on Amazon

How ShipBob helps boost your Amazon sales

Amazon cons FAQs

As one of the world’s biggest names in ecommerce, Amazon has no shortage of sellers who want to list their products and access a massive audience.

But just like anything in life, if you plan on joining the marketplace, you’ll want to assess the pros and cons so you can make an informed decision.

Ecommerce brands need to be aware of the limitations as selling on Amazon is very different from selling on a Shopify store, for example.

Don’t get us wrong – we think Amazon is a great sales channel for ecommerce brands (at ShipBob, we have an integration to fulfill Amazon FBM orders in the United States, Canada, Mexico, Australia, United Kingdom, Germany, France, Spain, Italy, and Poland, along with FBA prep services).

In this guide, we explore the pros and cons of selling on Amazon. More importantly, we also help you navigate how to overcome the biggest cons of Amazon and make the most of the platform. Let’s get into it.

5 pros of selling on Amazon

First, let’s go over the top five benefits of selling on Amazon. Here are the reasons why fast-growing ecommerce businesses continue to join and sell on Amazon Marketplace.

1. Increased product visibility

The biggest benefit of selling on Amazon is the ability to reach millions of global customers.

In May 2022 alone, the website saw 2.4 billion visits on mobile and desktop combined, making it the most visited ecommerce site in the United States.

Considering this high amount of traffic, there’s no denying that listing your product(s) on Amazon can bring significant visibility, getting your inventory in front of millions of established customers.

2. More customers and sales

With greater visibility comes a better opportunity for sales. According to internal Amazon data, the platform boasts 300 million active customer accounts, with 6,500 American products sold every minute.

That’s 300 million potential customers for your business. Listing your product on Amazon can significantly increase the chances of growing your sales.

3. Global reach

Amazon is one of the biggest ecommerce websites in the world, and it gives sellers the opportunity to reach customers in 180 countries.

This type of global reach makes the platform ideal for businesses that want to tap into global markets and expand their reach on an international scale.

4. Generates trust

Amazon is already an established name in the ecommerce industry. Most ecommerce buyers already know and trust the platform.

Amazon’s excellent ecommerce return policies, fast and affordable shipping options, and product reviews give customers the assurance to complete their purchases on the website.

So when you sell on Amazon, you can take advantage of their established presence and gain instant trust with your target audience.

This makes it particularly advantageous for brands that are just entering the market. Consumers are more likely to buy from Amazon than from a website that they’ve never heard of before.

5. Easy to get started

Amazon offers a plug-and-play ecommerce solution, allowing you to start selling even without the technical knowledge or resources typically needed for ecommerce sellers.

You don’t have to build and maintain your own website or create an intricate logistics network.

Instead, you just need to start listing products on the Amazon website. You can even leverage Amazon’s fulfillment service (or third-party fulfillment players like ShipBob), so logistics experts can fulfill orders on your behalf.

8 biggest cons of selling on Amazon

Now that we’ve gone over the top benefits, it’s time to weigh them against the cons. This will help you make an informed decision, so you can overcome some of the challenges of selling on Amazon. Here are some of disadvantages of Amazon.

1. High competition

Although selling on Amazon gives you access to a massive audience, it also sets you up for higher competition as many businesses try to leverage the platform to generate more sales.

According to the internal data cited above, the platform currently boasts 1.9 million selling partners all over the world. This leaves the platform densely populated, making it challenging for startups and smaller businesses to stand out.

This is particularly true considering how Amazon works. If you have the same or similar product listed as other sellers, the platform will decide which seller is most suitable to get the coveted Buy Box (the “Add to Cart” and “Buy Now” section of the product listing).

When a customer decides to buy something, the product sold by the featured seller will automatically be added to their cart.

As such, it can be particularly difficult to get customers on the platform if you don’t have the Buy Box (though not possible).

2. High selling fees

While Amazon offers a ton of benefits, those benefits come with a price tag. There are several fees associated with selling on Amazon.

First, you have to pay to maintain your seller account. Amazon offers two selling plans: the Individual plan and the Professional plan.

While you don’t have to pay a monthly subscription fee for the Individual plan, you would need to pay USD $0.99 for every item sold. Meanwhile, the Professional plan would cost you USD $39.99 per month, regardless of whether you make a sale or not.

On top of this, Amazon also charges referral fees, typically ranging between 8% and 20% depending on the product category.

So if you’re selling a t-shirt that costs $150, Amazon would charge you a 17% referral fee, meaning you’d have to pay $25.50 to the platform. That’s in addition to other fees that are associated with selling on Amazon.

Beyond this, if you plan on using Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA), there are also unique FBA fees for fulfillment services. Some sellers may even pay for additional services such as long-term storage, advertising, etc.

Taking the t-shirt example from above, if you’re letting Amazon fulfill your orders, you’d end up paying well over $30 to sell that single $150 t-shirt.

3. Complex order management

Amazon’s order management system can be a bit… chaotic. Sellers have to manually and constantly ensure their Amazon orders are updated into their systems.

Moreover, it may not necessarily integrate with your store, which can complicate things if you’re selling your products through multiple channels.

Without a proper integration to your store, stock levels are not automatically updated, so you could be selling something that you’ve already run out of stock for.

Plus, you’d have to deal with two different inventory management and fulfillment systems (thought tools like ShipBob can help in this area). This complex order management process could deter many sellers from listing their products on the platform.

4. Lack of control and ownership

Sellers are often at the mercy of Amazon. Since you don’t have ownership of the channel, you have little control over branding and narrative.

On Amazon, the name of the seller hardly gets noticed, which means that although you’re making a sale, your brand name might remain largely unrecognizable.

The lack of control also extends to other aspects of your business. Any decision by Amazon to change its algorithm or its rules and approach could have a detrimental impact on your business.

5. No insight into customer data

When you’re selling on your own website, you get access to valuable first-party data that you can use to inform your decisions. The richer your customer data is, the better you can get at targeting your customers with offers that appeal to them.

However, selling on Amazon limits your access to this type of data. Whatever data is available will be solely accessible by Amazon, and it can be challenging to extract out of the Amazon UI.

6. Risk of scams

Amazon is particularly prone to scams, leaving your business vulnerable to malicious parties.

For example, a common scam involves a consumer cleaning out your inventory by placing a large order and then returning all of it (after your competitor gets other sales and you’re left with returned items). This type of scam is particularly common during peak sales seasons.

Another common scam involves stealing a merchant’s listing, which would allow malicious sellers to take control of other sellers’ listings. Amazon hasn’t come up with a viable solution to address this problem yet that we know of.

7. Limited warehouse space

If you plan on using Amazon’s FBA service, it’s important to note that Amazon often limits warehouse space during peak season. This means that you won’t be able to maintain as much inventory as you’d like, preventing your business from operating at 100%.

As a result, you might end up losing out on potential sales due to low inventory levels. They also often increase warehousing fees in Q4 so be sure to calculate and forecast costs accordingly.

8. No control over customer care and satisfaction

When you sell on Amazon, the platform acts as an intermediary between you and your customers. That means customers don’t really interact with your brand except in certain situations. For certain types of sellers, Amazon also takes over the entire customer care process.

As a result, you have no control over how customers are handled, leaving you at risk of disappointing customers. You give up the ability to offer personalized customer support, leaving you unable to influence customer satisfaction.

For many people, brand and support go hand in hand, so be sure to account for a third-party handling your customer service matters.

How ShipBob helps boost your Amazon sales

If you want to take advantage of Amazon’s established audience base but are hesitant of the various drawbacks, working with an omnichannel fulfillment provider like ShipBob can help.

With world-leading fulfillment capabilities, including an an advanced fulfillment platform, ShipBob reduces the stress of selling on Amazon, so you can focus on other aspects of your business.

Here are some of the selling, fulfilling, and shipping solutions that ShipBob offers for merchants that need help managing a multichannel ecommerce business.

Omnichannel fulfillment

ShipBob’s omnichannel fulfillment capabilities make it easy to run a multichannel retail strategy, so you can generate more sales across channels while also maintaining a streamlined fulfillment operation.

ShipBob’s fulfillment platform integrates with your Amazon storefront, so you can make the switch from Amazon to ShipBob by taking advantage of our Fulfillment by Merchant (FBM) services.

With ShipBob, you can fulfill Amazon FBM orders globally in the United States, Canada, Mexico, Australia, United Kingdom, Germany, France, Spain, Italy, and Poland. As a value-added service, ShipBob also offers FBA prep services for brands shipping at least 400 orders/month through ShipBob.

“While we initially used ShipBob exclusively for our retail fulfillment, we quickly outsourced DTC fulfillment to them as well once we experienced how easy and effective it was. ShipBob’s omnifulfillment solution could handle every sort of order we had, including retail, DTC, and B2B, and had no qualms whatsoever about facilitating our FBA prep orders for Amazon.

Multichannel fulfillment with ShipBob is affordable, too, as not having to do any shipping ourselves enables us to keep low overhead, and ShipBob’s transparent pricing across channels provides even more cost-savings.”

Nathan Garrison, Co-Founder and CEO of Sharkbanz

Distributed inventory

With ShipBob, you can confidently sell on Amazon (FBM), while storing inventory across our global fulfillment network. ShipBob will then fulfill your Amazon orders for you from the fulfillment center closest to the delivery address.

Note: For your website and channels like Walmart, ShipBob offers2-Day Express Shipping that provides 100% 2-day coverage in the continental US, even if you’re using only one ShipBob fulfillment center.

“Fulfilling orders quickly through our site and marketplaces is a must-have, not a nice-to-have for our business. From the beginning, we knew that the early Chewy orders would need to go through our fulfillment partner — all of our retail distribution orders from Chewy go through ShipBob’s fulfillment centers today.

Selling on marketplaces is challenging enough, and ShipBob’s ability to service both D2C and B2B has enabled us to build more consistent procedures and practices across our different sales channels.”

Stephanie Lee, COO at PetLab

Fulfillment software

ShipBob’s fulfillment software simplifies your fulfillment process by automating time-consuming tasks to improve supply chain efficiency.

Once you integrate your store(s) with ShipBob’s technology, including marketplaces like Amazon, you can ship inventory to one or more of ShipBob’s fulfillment center locations.

Once an order comes in it, it is automatically routed to the nearest fulfillment center location to be picked, pack, and shipped.

From the ShipBob platform, you can manage inventory across locations and sales channels with real-time inventory tracking and SKU management tools.

You can even use historical order data to decide when it’s best to replenish inventory and set up automatic alerts when inventory is running low.

Discounted shipping

ShipBob partners with leading shipping carriers to provide discounted rates, evening offering affordable2-Day Express Shipping that provides 100% coverage in the continental US, even if you’re using only one ShipBob fulfillment center.

Branded packaging

To address the lack of ownership that often comes with selling on Amazon, ShipBob lets you take control of your branding with custom packaging solutions.

You can leverage ShipBob’s Customization Suite to have your orders ship in branded packaging, with marketing inserts, and even printed gift notes to deliver a personalized experience.

ShipBob also offers an FBA Prep services for those who already outsource fulfillment to ShipBob, so you can easily transfer your inventory from ShipBob’s fulfillment centers to an FBA facility, making ShipBob your centralized distribution hub. Before the orders go out, ShipBob will prep them with the appropriate FBA item labels and packaging.

Direct customer support

If you need any help, ShipBob’s Merchant Care team can offer well-rounded support. You can reach out to them through chat, email, or phone to answer your questions or provide help when needed.

To learn more about ShipBob’s omnichannel fulfillment services, click the button below.

Request Fulfillment Pricing

Amazon cons FAQs

Below are answers to the most common questions about Amazons cons when it comes to selling.

Who is Amazon good for?

Overcoming the Cons of Amazon: Make the Most of Amazon Sales (3)

Amazon is a good option for sellers of all sizes. Merchants who are just starting can build an audience base, accessing Amazon’s massive and established customer base. Similarly, more well-known brands may have customers that go to Amazon to search for their product by name, because that’s their preferred sales channel. With the option to have Amazon fulfill orders, it’s also an excellent solution for sellers that lack the resources needed to fulfill orders fast and accurately. However, 3PL’s like ShipBob offer Fulfillment by Merchant (FBM) services (non-Prime orders), which allows ecommerce businesses to have more control over the fulfillment process.

Is Amazon to be trusted?

Overcoming the Cons of Amazon: Make the Most of Amazon Sales (4)

As the leading retailer in the world, Amazon is considered a trustworthy platform for consumers and sellers alike. However, consumers and merchants should also be aware that since Amazon is a free market, there’s still a need to watch out for scams, counterfeit products, and bad actors.

How much does it cost to sell on Amazon?

Overcoming the Cons of Amazon: Make the Most of Amazon Sales (5)

The actual cost to sell on Amazon depends on a variety of factors such as your selling plan, your monthly sales, your product category, and your choice of value-added services. Amazon’s selling plan includes the Individual plan, which doesn’t have a subscription fee but requires $0.99 per item. The Professional plan will cost you $39.99 per month regardless of how many items you sold.

In addition, Amazon charges a referral fee ranging anywhere between 8% and 20% depending on the product category. If you’re leveraging the FBA service, there will also be additional costs for storage and fulfillment.

Overcoming the Cons of Amazon: Make the Most of Amazon Sales (2024)

FAQs

What are the cons of Amazon? ›

Here are some of disadvantages of Amazon.
  • High competition. ...
  • High selling fees. ...
  • Complex order management. ...
  • Lack of control and ownership. ...
  • No insight into customer data. ...
  • Risk of scams. ...
  • Limited warehouse space. ...
  • No control over customer care and satisfaction.
Dec 19, 2023

What are the disadvantages of selling products on Amazon? ›

The Cons of Selling on Amazon
  • High competition. You probably saw this one coming, and yes, the competition is fierce. ...
  • Selling fees. Understanding the financial implications of using Amazon's platform is crucial, also when it comes to Amazon FBA taxes. ...
  • Order Management. ...
  • Complex data feed.

Why is selling on Amazon not profitable? ›

As your products start selling on Amazon, you build Amazon flywheel with advertising, pricing, and organic reach. However, if your products go out of stock, you need to 'relaunch' the products and build momentum once again. This process can be inefficient and is the biggest enemy of your profit margins.

Why is it so difficult to sell on Amazon? ›

It's a highly competitive market with endless obstacles that can make it easy to become discouraged. Selling on Amazon is hard work and presents challenges such as competition, negative reviews, and algorithm changes can all lead to feelings of doubt and frustration.

What are 3 weaknesses of Amazon? ›

Amazon Weaknesses
  • Dependence on third-party sellers. Amazon relies on third-party sellers to provide a large portion of its product offerings, which can create certain risks for the company. ...
  • Data security concerns.
  • A business model that is easy to copy.
  • Regulatory issues. ...
  • Limited customer loyalty. ...
  • Limited product control.
Jan 10, 2023

Where can Amazon improve? ›

One recommendation is to develop further private brands for Amazon, because the company already has industry strength introducing more of their own brands into the market would benefit their brand. Having more private brands would make Amazon a more competitive company, similar to Walmart's private brand strategy.

How to make a profit selling on Amazon? ›

7 ways to make money on Amazon
  1. Choose a product type or specialize in a niche. Choosing a product to sell can be a challenge. ...
  2. Sell handcrafted items. ...
  3. Create and distribute merch. ...
  4. Sell to businesses. ...
  5. Earn passive income by recommending products. ...
  6. Sell books online. ...
  7. Resell, wholesale, or dropship products.
Mar 3, 2023

What is a negative effect that Amazon has had on the retail industry? ›

Amazon has rewritten the online selling world, making it more difficult for independent retailers to become digital providers.

Is Amazon a threat to retailers? ›

The biggest threat to retailers in the U.S. is Amazon. The company's business model of selling products direct to consumers online will revolutionize not only retail, but logistics. Amazon will leverage enhanced logistics networks to ship products faster to customers at little to no cost.

How many Amazon sellers fail? ›

With the platform's vast customer base and streamlined logistics, the potential for success is significant. However, a startling 95% of new Amazon sellers find themselves struggling to sustain their business within the first year. This high failure rate can be attributed to several common pitfalls.

Is being a seller on Amazon worth it? ›

Amazon sellers are profiting much sooner compared to a typical small brick-and-mortar business. While it may take the latter 2+ years to turn a profit, 22% of Amazon sellers reported it took less than 3 months to turn a profit, and 58% are profitable within their first year.

Do Amazon sellers lose money? ›

In this challenging world of e-commerce, various situations can lead to profit loss, such as improper inventory management, poor sales strategy, or customer service issues. This guide aims to help you avoid unnecessary financial losses in your Amazon FBA business.

Why do most Amazon FBA sellers fail? ›

Most Amazon FBA sellers fail because they lack the necessary knowledge and resources to be successful. They may not have a thorough understanding of how the platform works, what it takes to get their products listed, or how to market them effectively.

Why is Amazon losing value? ›

For one, revenue growth has slowed as companies cut back on some computing costs. Plus, there are the concerns Amazon is not positioned as well as Microsoft to win generative AI business.

How to make money on Amazon without selling? ›

  1. Affiliate Marketing – Getting Paid to Recommend. ...
  2. Kindle Ebooks – Turn Your Knowledge into Royalty Income. ...
  3. Merch by Amazon – Become Your Own T-shirt Design Empire. ...
  4. ACX Audiobook Narration – Turning Text into Audio Cash. ...
  5. Amazon Virtual Assistant – Your Backoffice to Supporting Their Frontlines.
Apr 19, 2024

What is the meaning of pros and cons? ›

the favorable and the unfavorable factors or reasons; advantages and disadvantages.

What are the disadvantages of fulfillment services? ›

Cons of Using a Fulfillment Center for Your Business

One challenge is the reduced control and flexibility you have over your order fulfillment process. Since the center is managing your inventory and shipping process, you won't be able to make last-minute changes or facilitate special requests for customers.

What are the advantages of Amazon? ›

What are the advantages of Amazon Prime? Generally, Amazon Prime's service is famous for access to faster shipping on select items, more than two million select products, with free shipping. You will have your order the next day at home, all this without the need to reach a minimum expense in your online purchases.

Is it worth to sell on Amazon? ›

Amazon sellers are profiting much sooner compared to a typical small brick-and-mortar business. While it may take the latter 2+ years to turn a profit, 22% of Amazon sellers reported it took less than 3 months to turn a profit, and 58% are profitable within their first year.

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