What’s Hurting Your Ability To Scale Your Amazon FBA Business?

Jan 18, 2022

What’s Hurting Your Ability To Scale Your Amazon FBA Business?

Time to Read: 5-7 minutes
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As we dive into the new year, it’s out with the old and in with the new. As a seller, you can move on from the past and start the year on a fresh foot, and build better strategies, products, and resolutions for yourself and your brand. With that, we’ve put together a useful list of common mistakes and roadblocks that many Amazon sellers faced throughout 2021. In partnership with our friends at Zentail, one of the leading listing automation platforms for Amazon sellers, we spoke with 3 experts from the unybrands team on these challenges and how to overcome them within supply chain, PPC, and brand strategy departments to help set you up for success.

7 Issues Holding Back Growth on Amazon

1. Lack of Supplier Diversity

It’s not uncommon for brands to become dependent on one supplier that they trust, whether for manufacturing or handling logistics. After all, expanding your supplier base can be an arduous and costly process. 

At the same time, failure to diversify has left many brands defenseless against natural disasters, trade tensions, labor shortages, rising material costs—and, more recently, global pandemics. 

Under a single-source or single-geography model, your business is at risk of losing the lifeline of its sales at any moment. You remain at the mercy of your one supplier with no immediate leverage to negotiate prices or tweak your engagements as needed. 

A Quick Word:

An overwhelming majority of U.S. Amazon sellers (73%) use FBA for fulfillment. While FBA is a strategic move for competing on Amazon, many brands are overly dependent on it and have fallen victim to sudden toss-ups within the program. During the COVID-19 crises, for instance, Amazon temporarily banned non-essential products from FBA, throwing thousands of sellers into a frenzy overnight.  

2. Expensive Operations

Between shipping costs, fulfillment costs, product costs and inventory costs, seller fees can quickly stack up. Needless to say that these costs eat directly into your margin and if not managed effectively, you can find yourself with little-to-no margin. 

However, finding the right solution isn’t always straightforward. For example, to reduce fulfillment costs, you may ask yourself, “Should I outsource fulfillment to a 3PL?” 

On one hand, managing fulfillment in-house tends to sink costs (and time) as your brand grows, but offers the most control over your operations. On the other hand, a 3PL can free up your time and expand your reach immediately, but comes at a higher per-unit cost. 

Finding the right solution requires a mix of number-crunching, good supplier relations and the willingness to spend money to make money—a step that some sellers skip over. 

3. Mirroring the Competitors Game

Amazon is flooded with players that take a pure “copy” strategy. They mimic everything ranging from their competitors’ product assortment to their prices and brand messaging, hoping to mimic their success as well.

This may work to an extent, but it doesn’t allow you to build a long-term brand that stands on its own. Founders who take this strategy tend to hide in the shadows of their competition rather than building up their brands and continuously improving their products to become the competitor to beat. 

 

4. Cash Flow Issues

Many times during your brand’s growth, you’ll have to invest in production, freight forwarding and other business expenses. When a new product is involved, you’ll also have to factor in extra advertising and marketing costs to build up momentum (on marketplaces, this will help you to generate enough sales that will, in turn, help you to collect reviews and raise your organic rankings). 

But with all the planning in the world, things can still go wrong. If ill-prepared, you could be pinching for capital and money injections to keep your business growing.

5. Too Many Tools, Too Little Capacity

Running an ecommerce business is anything but simple. As a business owner, you need to develop a project management mindset for handling various sprints and tasks at once. This alone frustrates some sellers. Instead of executing on clear, well-organized project plans, they stretch themselves too thin and spend a majority of their time putting out fires.

In the same vein, you may be bombarded with various courses, tech recommendations and growth hacks that threaten to take time and money away from your core business. 

When this happens, it’s important to recognize that some tools and changes require a certain level of business maturity. You should do everything in your power to police yourself and stay hyper-focused, asking yourself questions like “Is this tool or process really necessary? Is it going to help me grow the business as per my strategy?”

6. Poor Inventory Management

Having adequate inventory is critical to sustaining (and scaling) sales. But inventory issues are one of the most common and pervasive issues among businesses. Some brands lack the tools to align inventory costs with business plans and, as a result, wind up with excess inventory or tied-up capital. 

7. Lacking a Brand Voice

When you’re first starting out on Amazon, creating a compelling and consistent brand experience for your customers across various touch points may not be high-priority.

But brand-building is a necessity when you begin expanding to new channels and cross-selling. For folks who take too long to make this mental switch will likely face quality control issues and struggle to establish their brand voice later on. 

 

7 Tips for Growing Your Amazon Business

Don’t worry, we have tons of solutions to avoid and combat common mistakes. Here are some methods from outsourcing your PPC management to improving your supply chain management.

1. Improve Supply Chain Visibility

A resilient supply chain begins with having total visibility into your operations. Knowing where an item is in your supply chain at any point in time is paramount—as is knowing the status of all purchase orders (POs) and shipments.

This allows you to adjust for low inventories or overstocks when planning out your marketing, re-ordering and restocking strategies. 

To achieve this, establish one source of truth for tracking inventory movement and/or managing your suppliers. A multichannel platform can ensure that all of your sales channels and tools constantly communicate with one another, plus can save you the headache of tracking down data from multiple sources. 

A Quick Word:

One of unybrands’ companies faced product and invoicing delays, due to having data in many disparate information sources (some of which conflicted with each other). In response, the team conducted a root-cause analysis. 

“Through this process, we were able to identify a disconnect between our instructions to suppliers and how our internal systems read invoices for certain payment scenarios,” says McIntyre. “By focusing on the problem the second it was identified, we were able to mitigate future risk for [our newly acquired] brand and enhance internal processes to be more robust and scalable.” 

2. Pretend that You’re Driving a Cruise Ship, Not a Speed Boat

When it comes to your supply chain, you’ll want to build towards your future needs, not just for your immediate needs. In this sense, it’s wise to pretend that you’re driving a cruise ship, not a speed boat. 

Focus on your 12- to 24-month growth plans when optimizing your infrastructure and making partnership decisions. Don’t cut corners or make emotional decisions, and instead, move carefully and methodically. 

This will entail having clear operating plans, supply chain visibility and strong demand/production forecasting abilities. With the right data, you can drive meaningful conversations with your partners and check that they can realistically meet your future needs as your brand grows. 

3. Optimize for Retail Readiness

Invest in peak retail readiness, even if it requires upfront time and costs. When a product has legitimate demand and traction among your audience, you’ll want to capitalize on this momentum by providing the best customer experience.

This all starts with your product listings. You need to have ultra high-quality product imagery, product video, A+ content and well-optimized content (title, bullets, backend search terms) at a minimum. 

You may need to invest in potentially loss-making advertising as well to generate your first orders and reviews. This investment, however, will not be in vain. On marketplaces, reviews and sales velocity are vehicles for organic ranking.

4. Outsource Amazon PPC Management

In the early days of your business, it’s typical to operate as a ‘solopreneur’ who wears many hats. But as your business scales, you’ll want to outsource things like advertising to an experienced partner.

Your time will be best spent on bigger growth-generating tasks. Meanwhile, an Amazon PPC specialist can keep close watch over your PPC campaigns at all time and expertly shave costs, while taking your strategies to the next level. 

5. Invest in Multichannel Marketing 

With the rapid growth of white-label sellers and corporate players on Amazon, the fight for attention will only become more vicious. Not to mention, Amazon PPC costs are steadily on the rise—so you’ll want to diversify your traffic sources to your Amazon listings.

 

 

6. Know Your Consumer, Know Your Competitor 

Gather qualitative and quantitative data on your end-consumer and competitors to make better business decisions oriented around growth. This may mean A/B testing your content, scouring reviews, surveying customers and/or running focus groups. If you’re limited in time and budget, you can alternatively invest in a virtual assistant to analyze reviews around your products.

The goal is to build a process for regularly collecting insights on your pricing, listings, products and customer service so that you can find gaps (and opportunities) that impact growth.

7. Manage the Now, and Invest in the Future

It’s never too early to develop a growth mindset. While you might be busy trying to handle day-to-day operations, set aside time and resources for performing market research, generating opportunities and placing bets on long-term growth.

Avoid waiting until sales are stagnant to think of ways to pivot your brand. Keep a portfolio of ideas to act on—including, but not limited to, strategies for developing new products, engaging new categories, enhancing packaging or improving your brand position.

 

In Summary

Tackling the ins and outs of Amazon as a seller is a huge feat, we know and we empathize with you. Luckily, there are tons of ways that you can continue to grow your business with the right mindset, resources, and help from the experts. Find the type of business management that works for you to utilize these tips, and do your best to avoid the mistakes all now-expert-sellers have made in the past.