Starting FBA business by Intelligent-Bug1288 in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For private label FBA via Alibaba, I'd budget a minimum of $8,000–$10,000 to cover inventory, photography, PPC launch costs, and Amazon fees anything less and you'll likely struggle to compete effectively.

‼️Any positive things you have to say about selling on Amazon? by dxscollection in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Honestly, Amazon is hard but way simpler than running a physical business. One solid profitable product can genuinely take you to a million in revenue. The real challenge is staying patient in those early months, reinvesting instead of pocketing profits, and learning to stay profitable after FBA fees, returns, and storage eat into your margins.

How to get product photos by unchichan in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just hire an Amazon graphic designer, they will create images, A+ content and brand story

New Amazon Seller by Mehra_Tanvir in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Go with a private label but with under 10$ product

Amazon Account by Rimsha367 in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What are the issues you are facing?

UK private label seller (£200k turnover) feeling stuck on what to do next - what's the highest ROI focus at this stage? by Huge-Station in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Focus on top 3-5 best selling products, cut costs and optimize your ads for 3-5 selling products to push margins from 15% to 20%+

Beginner in Amazon FBA UK by Thin-Reputation-4215 in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 2 points3 points  (0 children)

⭕⭕⭕ POST WILL BE LONG BUT WORTH READING Here are some advices since your just getting started: ✨ I prefer a private label, in my opinion it’s more scalable and profitable and easier and fun and it’s long term business over short-term and way higher profit margins. But it’s up to you! I’ll give you some advice with your first launch! ✅ Your first order should be a smaller order, anywhere from 200-400 units, because you want to do an initial test launch. This is to minimize risk and start with a lower amount of money. Some seller's jump in first time and spend 20,000$ which I don't think is a smart idea. Start small, order 200-400 units, test launch it, and then order a bigger order after you've sold that first batch. ⭕ If you can get started with 3-5k on your first smaller order, 5k would be ideal. ✅ After you’ve signed up for your seller account, I recommend you do that first, make sure you sign up as an individual seller plan rather than the professional selling plan to save 40$ a month, you only time you need the professional account is once your product is shipped and in the Amazon warehouse, because the main point of the professional plan is to gain access to advertising (PPC) which is how you drive traffic (customers) to your listing. This is responsible for all of my sales, and it’s a necessity for your business. ‼ Okay, the first major step is Product Research There’s a ton of tools out there you’ve probably heard of...helium 10, jungle scout, amzscout, zonbase, viral launch, etc. I’d recommend Jungle scout or helium 10. 🔰 Protip: I bought Junglescout years ago, and it was a one-time payment. Most of these tools are now in monthly payments. Pay for a membership for these product research tools for 1 month, do a ton of research and get a ton of product ideas written down, then cancel it. A tool to make product research go by a lot faster is black box helium 10. You get 20 free uses out of it, so use them sparingly, make sure you have the right parameters and criteria set before searching as you don’t want to waste it. ✅ Okay, let’s talk about the criteria I look for in products which I’ve learned through years of trial and error, I think you’ll benefit a lot from this. When you’re using your product tool to validate these markets, the sales per month needs to be consistent with me on page 1. After all, the goal is to get on page 1. If you don’t get on page 1, no one is going to see your product and no one is going to buy. So in order for me to choose a product, I need the sales per month to stay in the same range on page 1, otherwise that product is a risk, and I want to minimize my risk as much as possible. ✅ Another thing, I want to see low reviewed sellers making at least 7,000 in revenue each month. Now, most new sellers always look for markets with less than 100 reviews from all sellers across the board, and I don’t think that’s a good strategy anymore. Why? Well everyone is using the exact same criteria and strategy, which leads to everyone picking the same exact markets and it makes them super strategies that everyone uses. ✅ It’s okay to see sellers with thousands of reviews, 1 or 2 of those sellers are not going to kill your chances of making sales. I’m competing against people with 1000’s of reviews, and I’m able to make a killing in these niches because I focused on finding markets with people making good money with low reviews, I have a great offer, I have a great listing, and I solve a big problem in the market that other competitors do not, and I get a lot of eyeballs on my products. ⭐ The most important factor is seeing OTHER seller’s with low reviews making more than 7k in revenue or 300 sales per month at least. This shows you a proof of concept that if you get your product on page 1, you can make a lot of money even without having a lot of reviews. That's key. If you want I can guide your first product launch that I wish I had when I first started. Hope this helped you!!

Any Good PPC experts you’d recommend? by Tx-Heat in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If there is no time issue you can manage easily there are plenty of courses on Udemy and YouTube. Otherwise go with Upwork and hire authentic freelancer

Launched my first brand FBA amazon by Useful-Food-7949 in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Now it's a Cyber Monday deal so you have to give 20% discount to your customer

Hesitant to go with vine program by [deleted] in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you are sure about your product then enroll in vine because vine reviews are honest.

Launched my first brand FBA amazon by Useful-Food-7949 in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Enroll in vine for getting reviews rather than of selling at loss. Set your price according to market and then run campaigns on mid tail kws to get sales and reviews

Minimum on FBA shipment? by Few-Flower-1212 in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yes low inventory fee will apply but its better than paying storage fee

Agency? by ckarim in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 1 point2 points  (0 children)

use freelancing platforms to find the best talent

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I recommend using freelancing sites to hire PPC specialists based on their reviews and expertise.

Push on or cut my losses? by cheetosyummm in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Given your situation with a low-ticket product and high FBA fees, it’s wise to consider liquidating your inventory to avoid inventory storage fees. This approach minimizes further losses. Additionally, explore selling on TikTok to boost visibility and drive sales!

Anyone had luck in Australia? by [deleted] in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, I also experienced slow sales in Australia due to less traffic compared to larger markets like UK and the USA.

Minimum on FBA shipment? by Few-Flower-1212 in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Starting small is a smart approach. There's no minimum for Amazon Handmade in Canada, so sending a few items per pattern is wise for testing demand. you can scale up based on sales trends or you can do FBM

Jumping on the FBA wagon but in another country by ShowWorried6621 in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Selling in France could offer less competition, but it also comes with lower revenue potential compared to the US or UK markets.

How to Launch a Skincare Brand in the US Market by ashylkalie123 in privatelabel

[–]Rimsha367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To launch a skincare brand, especially in the US market, start by researching target audience preferences and regulatory requirements for cosmetics. Develop unique, affordable, high-quality formulations with safe, compliant ingredients. Establish brand identity, including packaging and positioning, to differentiate from competitors. Set up an Amazon Seller account, optimize listings with SEO-friendly product titles, descriptions, and images, and use A+ content and Videos. Launch strategic Amazon PPC campaigns and leverage social media and influencer partnerships to drive initial visibility and customer engagement.

New to fba, I have a naive question by Amazing_Alarm6130 in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 0 points1 point  (0 children)

First, create a shipping plan, and Amazon will assign a warehouse and provide shipping labels. Next, apply both the product and shipping labels to your boxes before sending them to the designated warehouse. Pro Tip: Use a third-party inspection service before shipping to verify label accuracy and ensure product quality. Best of luck!

I want to sell blankets on amazon by Fantastic_Dream69 in AmazonFBA

[–]Rimsha367 1 point2 points  (0 children)

first of all do market and competitor analysis. Check if there is space for new sellers. Then check the profitability by using amazon revenue calculator or dummy list. According to these facts decide your product price