Sharing is caring!

Selling on Amazon is incredibly lucrative, flexible, and a major source of income for Amazon’s 2.2 million sellers. In fact, anyone can sell on Amazon if they have the right resources and time.

And while the majority of Amazon sellers use Amazon’s Fulfillment by Amazon method (aka FBA) to store and ship products from Amazon’s warehouses, there is another option.

You can fulfill your own products that you sell on Amazon’s website using Fulfillment by Merchant (FBM).

We’ll tell you what you need to know about getting started selling on Amazon and how to fulfill products via Amazon’s Merchant Fulfilled Network (MFN, which is the same thing as FBM).

You’ll also learn:

How to sell on Amazon

Selling on Amazon is a great way to earn extra income or to expand a business you already have, and it’s something you can start building today.

Everyone’s experience selling on Amazon is unique, so your first step is to consider what kind of business you want to create.

We’ll review the main decisions you’ll have to make and provide an introduction to the basics of how to sell on Amazon. If you’d like to learn more, be sure to read our free in-depth guide: “How to Sell on Amazon FBA.”

Step 1. Select your marketplace

Amazon has 14 global marketplaces:

Australia

Brazil

Canada

France

Germany

India

Italy

Japan

Mexico

Netherlands

Saudi Arabia

Spain

United Kingdom

United States

While you are free to sell in any marketplace you like, we recommend the following guidelines:

If you are a US seller , sell in the US marketplace . The US is not only the largest of the Amazon marketplaces, but it is also the easiest on which to start selling.

If you are a seller living in the EU or the UK, sell in the EU marketplace . The second largest Amazon marketplace in the world is the EU marketplace. It encompasses the UK, Germany, France, Spain, Italy, and the Netherlands. Although it’s not as easy to sell on as the US marketplace because of taxation and language barriers, it is convenient for EU-based sellers.

If you are a seller living anywhere else in the world, sell in the US marketplace (even if you have another marketplace in your country). The other global marketplaces do not have nearly the traffic as the US marketplace, therefore, it’s better to forego those marketplaces for the larger, simpler US marketplace when starting.

Step 2 – Select your business model

Amazon lends itself well to various business models that fit all different budgets, time investments, and seller personalities. But, the business model you select depends largely on whether you know what you want to sell on Amazon or not.

Jungle Scout can help you identify a high-demand, low-competition product to sell or validate a market opportunity for something you already have or make yourself.

Here are the most popular business models for Amazon sellers:

Private Label . Private label is the practice of manufacturing bulk products to sell under one’s own brand or label. 71% of all Amazon sellers use the private label business model.

Wholesale . Whereas private label involves selling one’s own brand, wholesale is the process of purchasing another company’s branded products in bulk to resell on Amazon. 27% of Amazon sellers use the wholesale model.

Reselling (Arbitrage) . Resellers practice retail or online arbitrage by purchasing discount products at retail outlets, big box stores, or even online on discount sites like eBay to sell at a higher price on Amazon. 20% of Amazon sellers use retail arbitrage and 15% use online arbitrage.

Dropshipping . Dropshippers market and sell products of another manufacturer or supplier. When a sale is made, the dropshipper purchases the product from the supplier who in turn ships the product to the buyer. 8% of Amazon sellers are dropshippers.

Handmade . Handmade Amazon sellers create their own products to sell on Amazon, like jewelry, clothing, or gifts. Unlike the other business models mentioned above, Amazon Handmade has its own separate section on the platform. 6% of Amazon sellers sell via Amazon Handmade.

There are also methods of selling on Amazon that are for digital products or are a little more niche, such as a Kindle Direct Publishing or Amazon Merch.

Step 3 – Select your fulfillment method

There are two methods for fulfilling products on Amazon: FBA and FBM.

Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA): A method of selling on Amazon in which a seller (or a seller’s supplier) sends their products directly to Amazon’s warehouses. Amazon then stores the inventory and ships it directly to the customer (often through 2-day Prime shipping) and manages customer support.

Fulfillment by Merchant (FBM): A method of selling on Amazon in which a seller lists their products on Amazon, but manages all storage, shipping, and customer support themselves (or through another third party). This is also referred to as a Merchant Fulfilled Network or MFN.

94% of Amazon sellers use FBA 66% of Amazon sellers use only FBA 28% of Amazon sellers use both FBA and FBM

34% of Amazon sellers use FBM 6% of Amazon sellers use only FBM



Note: This article goes into further detail on how to choose the right fulfillment method for your needs and abilities and how to ship products via Fulfillment by Merchant successfully.

Step 4 – Create an Amazon seller account

After deciding what you’ll sell and how you plan to get your products to your customers, you’ll need to get your business set up — it’s easier than you might think.

Creating your business

You will need to have a named business at this point. The name of your business can be anything you like, but we recommend you keep it relatively generic in case you want to pivot your focus in the future (say, from Smith Spatulas Co. to Smith Home Goods if you expand/change your product focus).

However, you don’t need to file your business as a corporation or LLC when you’re starting out. You can sell on Amazon as a sole proprietorship, meaning that you use your personal tax ID. Although, depending on the state or country that you live in, you may still need to file a Do-Business-As (DBA) form for the name of your business.

Once you have your business information, you can create an account in Amazon Seller Central.

Prepare all of the information you will need: Business information (your business name, address, and contact information) Email address Credit card Phone number Tax ID (Federal and State) Go to Amazon Seller Central ( sellercentral.amazon.com ) and click the box that says ‘Register now’ Decide if you want to be a professional or individual seller Enter your information into Amazon

Step 5 – List a product

As soon as Amazon approves you for selling on the platform, you can start listing products.

There are two ways to do this.

1. Sell on an existing product listing

First, if you are selling a product that already exists in Amazon’s catalog, all you need to do is go to the existing listing and click the ‘Sell on Amazon’ button.

From there, add the information for your offer:

Your price

Condition (new or used)

Quantity (if you have more than one)

Fulfillment channel (FBA or FBM)

2. Create a new product listing

If the product has never existed in Amazon’s catalog, you will need to create a new listing. To do this, you must:

Log into Seller Central Click Inventory > Add a product Click ‘I’m adding a product not sold on Amazon’ Enter in the details for the product

After you have created your listing, it will take between a few minutes to an hour for your listing to appear in Amazon’s catalog.

Step 6 – Fulfill your orders

When you make a sale on Amazon, you will need to fulfill the order.

If your products are sold via Amazon FBA, then Amazon will handle fulfillment for you and make sure your customers receive your products. However, if you are selling your product via Amazon FBM you will have to handle and ship your own order.

Each Amazon fulfillment method has its pros and cons.

Back to Top

The pros and cons of FBM

Before we cover the details of how to ship products using Amazon’s Merchant Fulfilled Network, here are a few pros and cons to shipping via Amazon FBM. (Data from Jungle Scout’s 2020 State of the Amazon Seller Report.)

Pros of Amazon FBM:

FBM sellers earn more revenue

27% of FBM sellers earn more than $25,000 per month in revenue compared to 24% of FBA sellers.

22% of FBM sellers have profit margins of 25% or more versus 20% of FBA sellers.

FBM sellers spend less money to start their business

40% of FBM sellers started with less than $1,000 versus 27% of FBA sellers.

38% of FBA sellers started with more than $5,000 versus 28% of FBM sellers.

FBM sellers start their businesses faster

51% of FBM sellers took less than six weeks to get started on Amazon versus 34% of FBA sellers.

31% of FBM sellers realized a profit in fewer than three months versus 21% of FBA sellers.

FBM sellers are more concerned with competition

49% of FBM sellers are concerned about increased competition driving down prices versus 46% of FBA sellers.

31% of FBM sellers are concerned that Amazon sells products that compete directly with their own versus 27% of FBA sellers.

FBM sellers have a back-up plan in place

During the holidays, when unloading times for inventory replenishment may slow down an FBA seller’s business, FBM sellers can continue to receive orders and ship goods.

When emergencies occur such as the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic and Amazon stops shipping certain products, FBM sellers can continue to receive orders and ship goods.

Cons of Amazon FBM:

FBM sellers spend more time on their business

23% of FBM sellers spend more than 40 hours per week on their Amazon business versus 18% of FBA sellers.

42% of FBM sellers attribute their success on Amazon to having more time to commit to the business than 37% of FBA sellers who said the same.

For Amazon beginners, FBM costs can be higher than FBA costs

While it might seem like sellers who pick, pack, and ship their own goods have lower costs than those who use Amazon FBA and must pay FBA fees, when the total costs are compared, FBM sellers often spend more to ship products.

Use Amazon’s FBA calculator to compare the costs and profits to ship the product yourself versus Amazon doing it for you.

FBM sellers must handle their own customer service

Amazon handles the majority of the customer service needs for Amazon FBA sellers. On the other hand, FBM sellers not only have to handle their own customer service claims, but they also have to accept and receive returns and manage their seller feedback.

Back to Top

When should I sell Amazon FBM instead of FBA?

Here are a few scenarios where fulfilling your own products, instead of relying on Amazon to fulfill them for you, is the better option.

You sell products that aren’t easy to ship via FBA

Certain products such as oversized products, products that require special handling, and products with slow turnover are sometimes better to ship on your own versus having Amazon do it through FBA.

Plus, shipping your own large/atypical products could save you money, as well as ensure that the product is presented to your customer the way you want it presented.

And, as noted above, if you’re unsure of which method of fulfillment will cost less, you can use Amazon’s FBA calculator to compare the two methods.

You can do it cheaper than Amazon

On the same note, you might already have an existing merchant-fulfilled network in place or a third-party fulfillment service (other than Amazon) to do it for you.

In this instance, using your own network may be the better solution.

You do dropshipping

By virtue of the business model, dropshippers can only ship their products via FBM since their products are being shipped directly from the manufacturer/supplier.

You sell handmade products

Although handmade products can be stored in Amazon’s fulfillment centers and shipped via Amazon FBA, many Handmade sellers fulfill their own products to ensure that the product arrives the way the seller intended.

Back to Top

How do I list a product on Amazon FBM?

Listing an FBM product is, in many ways, the same as creating any other product offer.

Using the steps outlined above, once you reach the part of the offer that reads ‘Fulfillment Channel’, select the radial that states ‘I will ship the item myself (Merchant Fulfillment).’

After the product appears in Amazon’s catalog, you will find your Merchant Fulfilled products under Inventory > Manage Inventory. Make sure you check ‘Active’ for ‘Status’ and ‘Merchant’ for ‘Fulfilled by.’

How do you know when a product sells?

As an FBA seller, once a product sells it is quietly confirmed, packed, and shipped by Amazon without so much as a notification. However, as an FBM seller, you will need to know when you have an order so you can confirm and ship it to your customer.

There are two ways to do this.

1. Amazon Seller Central Order Widget

First, on Amazon Seller Central, you have an order widget as pictured below.

When an order comes through, you will get a number listed under ‘Pending.’ After the order is confirmed by Amazon and the sale goes through, the pending order moves to ‘Premium unshipped’, ‘Prime unshipped’, or ‘Unshipped.’

Premium shipping is if you offer fast shipping options to Amazon shoppers such as overnight or express delivery.

Prime shipping is for orders shipped via Seller Fulfilled Prime.

Unshipped encompasses all other methods of shipping such as USPS Media Mail or First Class.

2. Amazon Seller Mobile App

If you have the Amazon Seller Mobile application, you will receive a notification when an order is ready to ship.

Back to Top

How to ship a product

After Amazon notifies you that an order is ready to ship, you have 24 hours to confirm that the order went out.

If you aren’t sure how to ship your order, first, choose a carrier. In the US you have multiple options, including:

USPS

FedEx

UPS

DHL

In addition, larger products such as furniture or mattresses may require using a transport truck for shipment.

You can compare the rates of various shippers using websites such as:

Can I still ship Prime?

One of the biggest benefits of selling Amazon FBA is that your products, more often than not, are automatically available for Prime benefits. That means that Amazon shoppers who are Prime members can order and receive products fulfilled by Amazon within 2-3 days.

This benefit does not apply to FBM sellers unless they are qualified for Seller Fulfilled Prime.

Seller Fulfilled Prime is a program that allows FBM sellers to sell products with the Prime badge from their own warehouse/fulfillment center. Sellers who sell Prime reach more customers, have a better chance of winning the Buy Box, and offer guaranteed delivery date messaging to their customers.

To join Seller Fulfilled Prime, a seller must apply for the position. However, Amazon is not accepting any further applications for Seller Fulfilled Prime currently, so FBM sellers interested in the program will have to add their names to a waiting list.

What shipping supplies do FBM sellers need?

The carrier and method in which you ship also helps determine the shipping supplies you will need to ship your goods.

Some methods of shipping — such as USPS Flat Rate — use specific boxes that you can get for free from the nearest post office. Or, you can have them delivered directly to your door.

Other methods require you to supply your own shipping supplies. We recommend:

Boxes, envelopes. etc.

Packing material (air bags, brown paper, etc.)

Peel & stick mailing labels

Printer

Packing tape and Scotch tape

Where can I purchase shipping supplies?

While there are a myriad of shipping supply businesses where you can purchase bulk shipping goods, here are a few that we recommend:

Uline Fastpack.net Amazon.com



Back to Top

5 FBM best practices from Amazon itself

According to Amazon’s best practices document, here are a few considerations for selling your products via FBM.

1 – Use Amazon’s ‘Buy Shipping’ feature

One of the easiest ways to ensure that your orders are on time and have tracking numbers is to purchase your shipping directly through Amazon using Amazon’s ‘Buy Shipping’ feature.

When an order is placed for one of your products, Amazon gives you the option to purchase shipping directly from them.

To access Amazon’s ‘Buy Shipping’, go to Orders > Manage Orders. Then, click on the ‘Buy Shipping’ button next to the order you want to ship. Next, verify the information and confirm. Finally, from there, print the label.

Once you buy shipping through Amazon, it automatically confirms the orders and sends the customer the tracking number (see #2).

2 – Always provide tracking numbers

Amazon requires all orders to have a tracking number. If you purchase shipping through Amazon, then the tracking number will auto-generate and be sent to the customer.

3 – Manage delivery times

Amazon wants to ensure that all of its customers receive their goods on time, so it’s important to confirm, pack, and ship your products in a timely manner. And if you’re selling a product with Premium or Prime shipping, it needs to arrive by the guaranteed date.

4 – Incorporate a good return policy

Make sure you have clear return instructions included in your packaging, as well as a valid return address.

Remember: as an FBM seller, you will need to process and handle your own returns. Plus, returns are not optional with Amazon. If a customer requests a return, you must accept it.

5 – Comply with Amazon’s dropshipping policy

Note: these policies only apply if you are a dropshipper.

Be the seller of record of your products. Identify yourself as the seller of your products on all packing slips, invoices, external packaging, and other information included or provided in connection with them. Remove any packing slips, invoices, external packaging, or other information identifying a third-party drop shipper prior to shipping the order. Be responsible for accepting and processing customer returns of your products</span.



Back to Top

Using Amazon FBM during COVID-19

From March 17, 2020 to April 5, 2020, Amazon put a freeze on receiving non-essential inventory into its fulfillment centers, hampering Amazon FBA sellers’ ability to sell on the platform.

But, sellers can still sell non-essential products if they fulfill the products themselves, with a few considerations:

In addition to not receiving non-essential FBA inventory, Amazon is also not returning the inventory to sellers. Therefore, if a seller has their inventory in an Amazon fulfillment center they will not be able to reach it in time.

At this point, the plan is to end the freeze on April 5th. Unless a seller already has their inventory on hand along with shipping supplies, it’s unlikely that they will be able to change their logistics before the current end-of-freeze date.

As the story evolves we will make regular updates to this article.

Get started with Amazon FBM now

With everything going on in the world right now, there’s never been a better time to get started with Amazon FBM. Although, even if you decide to stick with FBA full time, having FBM as a backup plan won’t hurt.

And as the data shows, sellers who add FBM into their repertoire find more success in the long run!

Sharing is caring!