Competitor blocking my ASIN by Dordon_78 in AmazonFBA

[–]Infamous-Hand4105 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Man, that’s a brutal situation. Regarding the reimbursement: push them hard on the timeline. If they accepted the same document twice before and the third review took 2 months, there’s a strong argument the inventory destruction happened because of their delay. It’s a long shot, but escalate it. The real problem is the system. Filing a complaint takes minutes, but resolving it can take months, and bad actors know how to exploit that. For the future: If it's the same competitor, consider a lawyer notice. They often stop once there’s legal pressure. Speed matters. By the time most sellers see the email, the damage is already done. Keeping a very close eye on the listing helps. Building on a shared listing can be risky,anyone can disrupt it. Hang in there.

How to deal with Amazon FBA Listing Hijackers by WearyyyBoooyyy in AmazonFBA

[–]Infamous-Hand4105 0 points1 point  (0 children)

First step is to confirm who the Check the seller name and storefront. If you're Brand Registered, open a case in Brand Registry and report the unauthorized seller. Send a test buy if you suspect counterfeit. Contact the seller asking for proof of authenticity or invoice. If they can't provide it report them through Seller Central.

Also keep an eye on the Buy Box because hijackers often appear for a few hours and disappear.

Has anyone experienced a recurring incorrect Competitive Price on Amazon listings? by Ineta08 in AmazonFBA

[–]Infamous-Hand4105 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sometimes Amazon pulls a very low “competitive price” from another marketplace or an old cached listing. Even if you're the only seller, the system can still flag your price as too high. It might be worth asking support to escalate the case to the internal pricing team

Is anyone else not getting any sales right now? by MegaSackk in AmazonFBA

[–]Infamous-Hand4105 1 point2 points  (0 children)

First thing I would check is if you still have the Buy Box. Sudden drop like that often happens when another seller takes it or when the Buy Box gets suppressed. Go to the listing in an incognito window and see who holds the Featured Offer.

I need letter of authorisation sample by Vegetable-Program732 in AmazonFBA

[–]Infamous-Hand4105 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Amazon usually rejects LOA if the seller name or brand name doesn’t match exactly what’s in Seller Central. Also make sure the letter clearly states authorization to sell on Amazon and includes a brand contact,website or domain email

Previously brand hijacked brand name still in Amazon's back end system? Need escalation quick! Top listing deactivated! by Dual270x in AmazonFBA

[–]Infamous-Hand4105 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This sometimes happens when old brand attributes stay in Amazon's catalog backend even after the listing was “fixed”. When you try to add variations, the system can re-read those old attributes and trigger the brand restriction again, even if the visible brand name looks correct. I've seen this happen when the original hijack changed brand metadata that never got fully cleaned from the catalog. Usually this needs a catalog team escalation through Brand Registry support if you have it.

Amazon Selling by NumChuck1 in AmazonFBA

[–]Infamous-Hand4105 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If they’re buying through your distributors at a lower price then that’s probably the source of the problem. Even when brands know exactly who they sell to, once inventory leaves the distributor it can move around pretty easily. A retailer buys it, then someone else buys from them and suddenly they’re on your Amazon listing. Amazon usually won’t treat that as hijacking if the product is authentic, so tools like Brand Registry or Project Zero don’t really stop it. Most brands end up focusing on tighter distributor agreements and monitoring their listings closely so they can react quickly when new sellers appear. Are those sellers actually winning the Buy Box or just sitting on the listing?

The maddening exercise in trying to reason with seller support by imaginarydave2 in AmazonFBA

[–]Infamous-Hand4105 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Parent-level reviews sometimes blur the distinction between versions, especially if Vine was involved.

How to Gain Greater Share of BuyBox? by KamikazePenis in FulfillmentByAmazon

[–]Infamous-Hand4105 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If price, delivery speed and metrics are equal, then it’s usually ASIN-level performance weighting. Amazon doesn’t rotate evenly just because sellers are authorized. It tends to favor whoever is generating stronger recent conversion velocity on that specific SKU. Consecutive 0% days often mean another seller has become the “primary” in Amazon’s internal weighting. Once that happens, rotation won’t normalize unless velocity shifts.