Stop making bad purchases by nate mccallister

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Stop Making Bad Purchases! Learn How to Source Quality Product to Sell on Amazon An unavoidable aspect of online selling is that not all products you source are going to make you money. It happens to the best of us; this is just the nature of online retail. This deadweight inventory can never be completely eliminated because we lack perfect knowledge of the market; however, there are ways to minimize the number of inefficient purchases that we make. Disclaimer

Some of the products and services I mention in this report are affiliates of FBAtoday.com. These products, sites and services are the ones that I actually use.If you’d like proof,email me at (fbaleads@gmail.com).These products and services are merely recommendations. You can have success in online selling without them, but they are a huge part of the success of my business. If you do click through these links, thank you very much. So yeah, enjoy!

The Basics  Know your parameters.

If you have not set firm criteria for what you want to source, you should do so ASAP. Consider: 

Sales rank for each category.Use FBAtoolkit.com to get a good idea of how many of one item may sell per month at a certain sales rank, in a particular category. Remember, Amazon charges a hefty fee for SKUs that have aged over one year. Keep this in mind when buying/shipping.

Desired price points. Decide how much you are willing to spend per item under multiple circumstances.

Risk tolerance. How deep are you willingto go (how many) and how much competition are you willing to handle?


Minimum profit margin. How does it change with price? Set minimum margins (mentally and on paper) for items in different categories that cost between ($0-$5), ($5-$15),($15$30),($30-$60), ($60-$100), ($100+) etc.… Also, consider how the expected sales velocity affects your desired margin. If an item costs $100 and makes $30, I may buy it if I can assume it will sell quickly and has a low risk of return. If it has a high risk for return (frivolous items like entertainment products or electronics) and may take awhile to sell, I would need the gross profit to be much higher. More risk requires more reward (profit).

How much you want to make and, therefore, how much you will need to spend.A part of this business that is difficult for many people is separating themselves from their money. You have to spend money to make it in arbitrage. If you plan on making a net profit of $100,000 and have an anticipated Profit Margin of 50%, you would have to spend $200,000…. Come to terms with that. The best use of money (besides giving it to charity, of course  ) is to make more of it. Don’t feel guilty for sourcing product.

You should make adjustments to your sourcing parameters over time. Find out what is working and what is not and adjust accordingly. Also, consider that Amazon’s marketplace is always growing, so in the long term you should consider adjusting the tolerable max sales ranks for each category.  Do a four-sided check of each item you scan.

Do your best to assess each item and its components (if it is possible to tell by looking at it; obviously, with some items we cannot see everything inside because of the packaging). I prefer to sell only new items because it minimizes my returns and lowers the risk of negative


feedback. Just make sure you know what you have on your hands before you try and sell it. Look at the tape on the package; it is the easiest way to find out if an item has been opened.

 Press “sell it” before you decide to purchase an item to make sure that it is not

prohibited or in a category requiring approval. This is still not a guarantee, but it is reliable most of the time. Amazon expects you to know what can and cannot be sold. Keep track of brands and items that cannot be sold on Amazon. Many products that are harmless cannot be sold because the manufacturer has restricted its resale. Keep this in mind and check everything before purchasing.Stay up to date with changes to the Amazon policy to make sure you don’t miss any important changes to the restricted and prohibited categories.

Here is a list of the some of the current prohibited and restricted categories and here is a list of possible restricted brands. It is in your best interest to commit these brands to memory to save yourself time while sourcing.

 Make sure that the description correctly describes the product.

Use yoopsie.com to do reverse UPC lookups and cross-reference items and their UPCs to make sure that you haven’t overlooked any details. Even the tiniest details matter, even more so for


high-dollar items and collectibles. You can double-check with a different scouting app if you are in doubt. Amazon Flow works well in this case. You can take the ASIN from Flow and insert it into your scouting app to be sure you have the right product.

 Be apprehensive about the profitability of each item and don’t be afraid to put

something back if it doesn’t meet all of your criteria. In any business, getting too attached to anything can hinder success and growth. There will be other deals – don’t force them if they aren’t there.

 Don’t buy somethingbecause you’re in a slump. You shouldn’t buy anything that doesn’t meet your criteria. If you need more products, you need to source longer or change your strategy. Buying product that is not up to your standards will not make things any better. You want to spend money on the right products and if you tie it up in bad, long-term inventory, your money can’t work for you.There will be highs and lows, so just be patient. The great deals you will find will help offset the slow times.

 Track as much data as you can. There is no better way to learn than from your past mistakes and successes. My team and I use Inventory Lab, a hybrid program that can be used for sourcing, listing, profit analysis and general financial record keeping. There is no limit to the number of users that can use the same account, and they have gone on record as saying this will not change.

 Be aware of the quantity in the listing of the item you are checking.

You will run into a lot of bundles as you scout. This can be disheartening because they usually show a huge margin that will get your hopes up.


 Be sure that you are basing your purchasing decision on a realistic, expected

selling price. If there is only one seller, do more research. When a seller creates a new listing for an item, they are most likely going to set the price higher than the market would normally dictate because there is no other competition. If there is no sales history for this item, check comparable listings and make an educated decision based on that. Use your best judgment here. I tend to avoid buying too many of these items until they have more sales history.

 Consider seasonal changes that may affect your product’s demand.

Remember, there are many reasons that items are on clearance and one of them may be because it is going out of season. If you have the flexibility to do so, you can hold inventory until the season comes back around (such as Halloween clearance items).

 Check the expiration dates carefully. Anything that has an expiration date should be given special attention before you purchase it. Check the Amazon policy here for more information.

 Check the prices on eBay and other selling mediums.

It is always great to have a back-out option. Worst-case scenario, if you cannot return an item, you can sell it somewhere else if there is a market for it there.

 Watch the checkout employee scan the items and make sure the correct prices

are rung up. Many major retailers do not cover original UPCs when they put new clearance labels on items and the original barcode gets scanned instead of the clearance one. This is a very quick way to lose profit without even realizing it.


 Be sure to keep your receipts so that you can return an item(s) if all else fails.

Don’t make this a regular habit, but it is definitely an option. Make sure that you understand the return policies of the store you are buying from. I use shoeboxed.com for all of my receipts. You snap a photo, submit it, and the data is extracted for you. The photo of the receipt is saved and given a URL so that you can view it easily later. This will be great come tax time!

 Consider the visibility of the product and anticipate the amount of competition

you may receive. If a lot of people have access to the same deal, the market may become crowded and pull the price downward. Don’t get into a “race to the bottom” on a product.If competition erodes your anticipated margin, don’t panic, just plan your next course of action soon.

Don’t “go too deep” if a product is bought on a sale that is highly visible to other sellers or if the price has been volatile.

The market is too unpredictable to expect that you can sell a lot of one item before the market balances itself out.  Consider if the item is listed above or below the MSRP price.


If you plan on selling an item at or below MSRP, you can usually go deeper (purchase more), but when selling over MSRP, you need to assume that Amazon will be cutting you on price sooner rather than later. **Note: If you list an item above the MSRP, you won’t have a traditional buy box even if you are the lowest price.

 Employ the 3x rule to skim products better and scan fewer risky items.

As a rule of thumb, you should be able to have close to a 100% profit margin on any item that you can buy for a third of the Amazon selling price. Higher-priced items will have higher profit margins. This doesn’t apply for items that are selling below around $10 because of the fixed fees that Amazon charges.


Online Specific  Type in “(item/store) coupon” and/or “(item/store) free shipping” if you think

you might be able to get a better deal.

 Chris Green recommends in his book Online Arbitrage that you download and

use Chrome for online sourcing and install multiple extensions (listed in the book) for comparing prices. Not that you need to know or don’t know already, but Google is the most amazing company ever created.Just saying.

 Make sure that the item is in retail packaging. Beware of refurbished, “no

hassle packaging” or “bulk packaging” items. Contact the retailer if you have questions about an item. Don’t assume it is what you assume it to be.

 Don’t get scammed by wholesalers and drop shippers.

This is a huge problem right now on Alibaba (which is not a bad company, it’s just littered with scams) and a few other wholesale sites. Never, under any circumstances, send someone a Western Union money order. This is the biggest giveaway of a scam.


Check out this article for tips on avoiding getting scammed. For my own twisted pleasure, once I have realized that I am dealing with a scam artist, I don’t end the conversation; I “increase” my order. My goal is to get them to actually send me money …there would be nothing more righteous. I’m going to document the next time this happens and post it toFBAtoday.com. FYI: I am not recommending you do this, as you never really know who you are dealing with online.


Deep Research  “Spy” on Amazon with Keepa.com. See how and if Amazon is competing and how the price is changing based on whether or not they are in stock (The yellow shaded regions indicate that Amazon was in stock then). Knowing if Amazon is

in the picture is a big deal if you plan to sell over MSRP. If it is merely a temporary shortage, Amazon will come back at the MSRP and might leave you holding a lot of product. Also, if you try and cut Amazon, they will follow you to the bottom. Don’t get into a war of attrition with Amazon.


 Check Keepa.com or Camelcamelcamel.com (shown) and identify the historical

high and the low listing prices. It is ideal that your item has the buy box and is listed at one of the lowest prices ever. You are less likely to experience price erosion in this situation.

 Find out if an item has sold in the past on eBay by clicking “Completed listings”

on the left sidebar on an item page. Ebay is very transparent with past sales info. You can also see what people are currently searching for on EBay by visiting EBay Pulse.


 Research an item with Google Insights.

Find out how much an item is being searched for.  Analyze sales rank sheet.

Consider if the item has a low sales rank because it has not been in stock, or if it is just not in high demand. Even if there was a ton of demand for an item, if it wasn’t in stock, the sales rank is going to drop. Those people who would buy it can’t, so it seems like the item isn’t selling when in fact it was just not being sold.

The sales rank sheet that I reference is the one found on the Proven Amazon Course. I am a member of this community and trust that it is updated as necessary. Check out my projected max items per day sales sheet here.  Find out if an item is ranked in a sub-category.

This can be misleading because a high rank may actually only be high for a specific category, not a larger, general one.


That #1 ranking looks amazing, until you see that it is in a deep subcategory. This particular example is still a frequently sold item, but keep this in mind for other purchases that seem unusually high.

 If you made a bad purchase, it’s not the end of the world.

Decide which of the following you will do:  Return it. If you shipped it, order it back (cheaper than you think, currently less than 50

cents) and return it. This is not a big deal, but you should not make this a regular habit.

 Keep it! This business is intended to improve your utility, right? Maybe it was actually

something that you would have bought for you at this price but you had your “arbitrage eyes” on and didn’t even realize it.

 Cut your losses and sell it. List low and get your money back quickly. Some sales are

worse than no sale at all. Ask yourself if the cash you will receive is worth a potential negative review or other hassle. There is no sense in making unnecessary transactions if they are for nickels and dimes.

 Stick to your guns (if possible), and list high and wait it out. It may sell eventually; you

never know.

 List it on another medium like eBay. Even if you have already sent it for fulfillment, you

can list the item and have it shipped from Amazon to a buyer on the third-party site.

 Sell it the old-fashioned way: in person. You can sell to someone you know or just to

someone on Craigslist. There are also many different Facebook groups where people list deals and/or swap things.


 Store your unsellable items safely and have a garage sale to liquidate them once you

have a good amount of product. Check out garage sale pointers here.

BONUS TIPS!! 1. Are you getting a lot of items that have no sales rank? That doesn’t necessarily mean that they have never sold. If an item’s lack of sales rank seems strange to you, check and see if it has any recent reviews. If there are reviews, that means there have been sales. This happens a lot in the electronics category.

2. Don’t underestimate the power of marketing. You will be amazed at how well advertising a product works, even if it had never sold previously. Read more about Amazon’s PPC program here and check out my article here.

Now, Go Forth and Prosper There you go. I hope this helps you make better purchasing decisions and puts more cash in your pockets! Be sure to bookmark FBAtoday.com and check in frequently for more free content.


Summary of Links • •

Amazon Flow

List of known restricted brands.

Amazon return costs

Max items per day

Amazon’s expiration policy

Proven Amazon Course

EBay Pulse

Shoeboxed.com

FBAtoolkit.com

Tips on avoiding scams

Howazon blog post on restricted brands.

Tips on having garage sales

Yoopsie reverse barcode lookup.

Inventory Lab



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