Well, hello and welcome to the eCommerce podcast
Matt Edmundson:with me, your host, Matt Edmundson.
Matt Edmundson:This show is all about helping you deliver eCommerce wow.
Matt Edmundson:Yes, it is.
Matt Edmundson:Now I'm super excited with today's guest, who is Adam Shaffer.
Matt Edmundson:who's from Phelps United LLC uh, and we are gonna be chatting about how to decide
Matt Edmundson:if Amazon is right for you and your business.
Matt Edmundson:Yes, we are.
Matt Edmundson:We're gonna get into Amazon and all of those things to do with Amazon.
Matt Edmundson:But before we do that, Adam, one of the things I love to do is
Matt Edmundson:give a shout out to, uh, past guests and episodes on the show.
Matt Edmundson:And given that we're talking about Amazon today, I thought it would be great to
Matt Edmundson:mention John Tilly's podcast, uh, asking if Amazon is right for your business and
Matt Edmundson:also Chelsea Cohen on inventory management, 1 0 1.
Matt Edmundson:How to leverage the power of Amazon.
Matt Edmundson:And I dunno how you pronounce inventory or inventory, whatever it is.
Matt Edmundson:It's totally fine.
Matt Edmundson:And it's all acceptable here.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, now this episode is brought to you by the eCommerce cohort, which helps you
Matt Edmundson:deliver eCommerce well to your customers.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, the eCommerce cohort is a monthly, uh, membership.
Matt Edmundson:It's like a lightweight membership group with guided monthly sprints,
Matt Edmundson:that cycle through all the key areas of eCommerce, the sole purpose of which.
Matt Edmundson:Is to give you some clear and actionable jobs to be done.
Matt Edmundson:So you'll know what to work on and have the support to get it done.
Matt Edmundson:So whether you're starting out an eCommerce or whether like me, you've been
Matt Edmundson:around a little while, uh, I encourage you to check out eCommercecohort.com or
Matt Edmundson:email me at matt@ecommercepodcast.net with any questions.
Matt Edmundson:Because we are super proud of it.
Matt Edmundson:And then finally, the last thing to say is, make sure you stick around
Matt Edmundson:to the end is I will let you know what the insider's question's gonna
Matt Edmundson:be and how you can get free access.
Matt Edmundson:if you don't already have it.
Matt Edmundson:Whew.
Matt Edmundson:That's the intro done.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, let's talk about our guest.
Matt Edmundson:Adam is, uh, well, it's an absolute legend to be here.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, is great actually, Adam, that you are here, but you are a technology pioneer.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, you have it says here you have found success helping Amazon sellers through
Matt Edmundson:your company's proprietary technology services and distribution platform.
Matt Edmundson:Ultimately this has helped clients navigate the most complex
Matt Edmundson:waters of the largest eCommerce.
Matt Edmundson:In the world I E Amazon, uh, Adam is also a pioneer in direct marketing
Matt Edmundson:and digital eCommerce technology products and solutions to both
Matt Edmundson:consumer and commercial markets.
Matt Edmundson:And if that's not enough, if he actually gets any free time, uh, he,
Matt Edmundson:you will find it spending it with his wife and beautiful daughters.
Matt Edmundson:So, Adam, thank you for joining me.
Matt Edmundson:It's great to have you great to have you on the show.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, you look like you're in very sunny climates there, sir
Adam Shaffer:well, yes, I am Matt.
Adam Shaffer:First of all, thank you for having that on your show.
Adam Shaffer:I love your show and I love what you do for the community.
Adam Shaffer:So thank you for making this happen.
Adam Shaffer:We really
Matt Edmundson:oh, thank you, sir.
Matt Edmundson:This, this is best to share the love.
Matt Edmundson:Let's just share that love out.
Adam Shaffer:uh, share that love.
Adam Shaffer:Right.
Adam Shaffer:And, and I am in, I am in sunny, Miami, Florida.
Adam Shaffer:So the weather is super hot.
Adam Shaffer:I'm in the shade.
Adam Shaffer:Thank God.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah, but, uh, it's pretty warm down here, but I love being outside.
Adam Shaffer:I love being with nature.
Adam Shaffer:So when I'm home and I'm not travel.
Adam Shaffer:I kind of set up the office out here.
Adam Shaffer:And if there's a hurricane, I do go inside, but I also have children and
Adam Shaffer:it makes it a little more difficult.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:So that's your only criteria.
Matt Edmundson:Is there a hurricane?
Matt Edmundson:No.
Matt Edmundson:Well, I'm outside then.
Matt Edmundson:It's just the way it's gonna
Adam Shaffer:be.
Adam Shaffer:No, that's not.
Adam Shaffer:Well, there are some giant AIS that make you think twice about being out here, but.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, I can imagine.
Matt Edmundson:I can absolutely imagine it's um, I mean, I'd be the same way to be fair.
Matt Edmundson:I lived in a sunny climate.
Matt Edmundson:I'd be out a lot more than I am, uh, when I'm in the UK, that's for sure.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, Adam Phelps United the company that you're involved with, what it does it do.
Matt Edmundson:Let's let's start there.
Matt Edmundson:How, what, what is Phelps United?
Adam Shaffer:Well, well, Deep down.
Adam Shaffer:We're a third party seller, but big picture is we are an
Adam Shaffer:eCommerce brand accelerator.
Adam Shaffer:So we are an agency that helps brand brands navigate and grow on a very
Adam Shaffer:complicated, but potentially lucrative channel, which is the Amazon channel
Adam Shaffer:and also the other marketplaces.
Adam Shaffer:But Amazon is really by far the biggest we're talking.
Adam Shaffer:Of 620 billion dollars of merchandise gets sold through
Adam Shaffer:Amazon, uh, in the US for a year.
Adam Shaffer:Wow.
Adam Shaffer:And you know, that's just monstrous.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah.
Adam Shaffer:And when you talk to brands, in many cases, it's by far their number one
Adam Shaffer:channel, it used to not be that way.
Adam Shaffer:It's evolved quickly over the years, but it continues to.
Adam Shaffer:And it's a place where you could make it, or you could really tarnish your
Adam Shaffer:brand after all the years that you've been developing your brand to come to
Adam Shaffer:Amazon, to find others selling your products, maybe counterfeits in your
Adam Shaffer:products, products, uh, that you've been trying to sell through other
Adam Shaffer:channels appear now mysteriously on Amazon at prices that are unheard of.
Adam Shaffer:And so it could be a great channel or it could really.
Adam Shaffer:Be scary.
Adam Shaffer:So we're here to help take the scariness out for brands and help
Adam Shaffer:them grow and protect their brand on.
Matt Edmundson:Amazon.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, it sounds like a bit of a task on its own.
Matt Edmundson:Right.
Matt Edmundson:Just doing that.
Matt Edmundson:Right.
Matt Edmundson:And so, I mean, we were talking before we hit the record button, um, you said
Matt Edmundson:Amazon, it, it can be your best friend and it can be your worst nightmare.
Matt Edmundson:Do you know what I mean?
Matt Edmundson:Your, your, your worst enemy.
Matt Edmundson:Um, and so, I mean, let's deal with that first Amazon, is
Matt Edmundson:it a friend or is it a foe?
Matt Edmundson:Is it both?
Matt Edmundson:And, and, and what have, I guess, what have you learned from
Matt Edmundson:dealing with Amazon on that basis?
Adam Shaffer:Well, it takes a while to.
Adam Shaffer:Be able to understand how Amazon works.
Adam Shaffer:If you're your first time trying to sell on Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:So many things can happen that you'd say how in the world could that happen?
Adam Shaffer:How could my products that have just shipped to Amazon and put in their
Adam Shaffer:warehouse for them to ship to the customers have vanished their gone.
Adam Shaffer:Or how could my listing have been taken off of Amazon?
Adam Shaffer:I have my products up at Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:I spent money to have it there and I can't even sell it now.
Adam Shaffer:So, so many things could happen.
Adam Shaffer:Because you might not have set something upright or you might
Adam Shaffer:not have packaged something right.
Adam Shaffer:Mm-hmm . And so you need to be really good at everything on Amazon, if
Adam Shaffer:you want to succeed, because a, the rules do change from time to time.
Adam Shaffer:And it's not like these big announcements come out, you kind
Adam Shaffer:of have to walk your way and figure it out and you have to be on the
Adam Shaffer:platform every day to figure it out.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah.
Adam Shaffer:And, and the other is it's incredibly competitive.
Adam Shaffer:So there are so many sellers.
Adam Shaffer:Let's try to put that aside.
Adam Shaffer:So I said, there's say 620 million dollars of merchandise that get sold
Adam Shaffer:through Amazon of that 610, about 35% of that is Amazon buying from
Adam Shaffer:a manufacturer or the brand and selling it on the Amazon marketplace.
Adam Shaffer:Okay.
Adam Shaffer:So they're like, Retailer in that sense, they buy from a, a brand and they send
Adam Shaffer:them POs and they buy the stuff and sell it, make a markup, and they charge
Adam Shaffer:you some other fees along the way.
Adam Shaffer:But then the other 65%, which is really where people don't
Adam Shaffer:get it, they're like 65% of the merchandise they get sold on Amazon
Adam Shaffer:isn't from Amazon?
Adam Shaffer:No, it's not.
Adam Shaffer:It's from third parties.
Adam Shaffer:There's about two and a half million third parties on Amazon selling wow
Adam Shaffer:either their own brands or they're selling other people's brands.
Adam Shaffer:We sell other people's brands in conjunction, in cooperation
Adam Shaffer:with the brand itself.
Adam Shaffer:So instead of them selling it to Amazon, we have two models.
Adam Shaffer:One is that we'll buy it and sell it for them, but we don't
Adam Shaffer:want to compete with Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:So we don't want to be buying and selling the same stuff Amazon is
Adam Shaffer:um, you'll lose every, every time or we, we do it, we do it as a
Adam Shaffer:service where it's purely an agency.
Adam Shaffer:So in some cases we'll build a 3P store for a brand
Adam Shaffer:and then start helping them sell on Amazon from the product set up and the
Adam Shaffer:creative, which you gotta be really good at because you gotta tell your
Adam Shaffer:a brand story, your product story.
Adam Shaffer:You have to understand the intricacies of the category and the subcategory.
Adam Shaffer:So you could differentiate your product from the other products
Adam Shaffer:that are in your subcategory.
Adam Shaffer:And what you're trying to do is get people to notice you find you buy you and leave
Adam Shaffer:a great review and leaving a great review is not the same as in your Shopify world,
Adam Shaffer:where you send out a bunch of emails, you might incent them with some incentives
Adam Shaffer:to leave a better review on Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:You have to be very compliant.
Adam Shaffer:You cannot offer them anything.
Adam Shaffer:You cannot beg them to leave a great review.
Adam Shaffer:You have to say, you know, please leave a review.
Adam Shaffer:Whatever you choose to put is great with us.
Adam Shaffer:Something like that.
Adam Shaffer:So there's compliant words that you use and Amazon allows you use or not use.
Adam Shaffer:And if you use the wrong words, Amazon could easily
Adam Shaffer:just take you off the platform.
Adam Shaffer:So we help these brands with their Amazon strategy first and foremost,
Adam Shaffer:should they be selling it through their own 3P store through our 3P store?
Adam Shaffer:Should we be having an agency model for them?
Adam Shaffer:Is that better or is it better for us to buy and sell it?
Adam Shaffer:One thing is we do a quick analysis of the marketplace
Adam Shaffer:and find out is somebody already selling their stuff on the marketplace.
Adam Shaffer:And so many times the manufacturer is shocked to find tens or twenties or
Adam Shaffer:thirties sellers selling their products on Amazon, putting up their own content,
Adam Shaffer:having the wrong content up there, not telling the right story about the
Adam Shaffer:product, not helping it get good reviews and selling it well below what they
Adam Shaffer:prefer the street to be selling it for.
Adam Shaffer:So it winds up hurting their relationships with their regular retailers.
Adam Shaffer:And so we help clean that marketplace up for them.
Adam Shaffer:We try to help them call these non-authorized sellers off.
Adam Shaffer:We have a brand protection practice that helps identify sellers and work
Adam Shaffer:with the manufacturer wholesalers and the sellers to get them to
Adam Shaffer:either comply or get off the market.
Adam Shaffer:And we work on making sure that that content is just awesome and
Adam Shaffer:tells a great story, but then there's the logistics part of it.
Adam Shaffer:It's how many do I need at Amazon?
Adam Shaffer:Because you wanna ship your stuff to Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:Most of the time, because the freight rates from Amazon to the consumer is so
Adam Shaffer:much cheaper and it's usually faster.
Adam Shaffer:So when your products are sitting at Amazon you're in prime status.
Adam Shaffer:So your products will say prime on it, and you're supposed to get it in two days,
Adam Shaffer:sometimes one day, um, when you ship it from your own warehouse, uh, it could take
Adam Shaffer:a while and the dating is further out.
Adam Shaffer:And you'll see that when you ship something prime, you get sell
Adam Shaffer:probably 30 to 70% more depending on the category you're in and
Adam Shaffer:what the other sellers are doing.
Adam Shaffer:Wow.
Adam Shaffer:So you really do wanna be Prime..
Adam Shaffer:The one benefit that we also bring to the table as a seller, is that because we've
Adam Shaffer:been doing this for a long time and we have a very good reputation on Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:We have a medallion called seller fulfilled prime and seller fulfilled
Adam Shaffer:prime allows us to sell things from our warehouse, which we have
Adam Shaffer:one in California, but it could be listed as prime on Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:So even though it's not shipping from Amazon we could still have
Adam Shaffer:a brand's product listed as prime and shipping in two days.
Adam Shaffer:Now we have to be spot on and make sure that we ship that product
Adam Shaffer:and it gets there in two days.
Adam Shaffer:It costs a little bit more, but it's a great backup strategy to have because
Adam Shaffer:it's not always the fastest and easiest thing to get your products to Amazon
Adam Shaffer:and in stock at Amazon, it could take two weeks, four weeks.
Adam Shaffer:I've seen eight weeks.
Adam Shaffer:I've seen when you ship a hundred up only 50, make it and 50 vanished and you have
Adam Shaffer:to put in a case, but you need to wait three months before you put in your case.
Adam Shaffer:So you need a backup strategy and we are kind of a hybrid in what we, you
Adam Shaffer:know, we, we kind of recommend to our partners and that is we'll ship
Adam Shaffer:a bunch of stuff to Amazon for you
Adam Shaffer:but we're gonna keep some here as a backup because if we run out or if
Adam Shaffer:it doesn't get up there fast enough, we're always shipping from a warehouse.
Adam Shaffer:So the second it's in stock in our warehouse, it's prime from there, we're
Adam Shaffer:shipping stuff up to Amazon and getting it there and benefiting from their freight.
Matt Edmundson:Wow, there's a lot there, Adam.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, so let's dig into some of those things.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, if we can, um, let's start, uh, where you ended actually with
Matt Edmundson:the fulfillment and this seller fulfillment prime, which I've noticed
Matt Edmundson:actually here in the UK as well.
Matt Edmundson:I've seen it, uh, where you order things on, uh, with prime and
Matt Edmundson:actually doesn't come from Amazon.
Matt Edmundson:It comes direct from the, the manufacturer.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah, you'll see.
Adam Shaffer:You'll see, Matt, Matt, it's gonna grow.
Adam Shaffer:It's gonna grow in the UK because the UK is, logistics is much
Adam Shaffer:more predictable because you could ship things very easily there.
Adam Shaffer:One in two days, it it's just the, the, the beast of UK.
Adam Shaffer:Most logistics that you use can get to places in two days where in
Adam Shaffer:the US, it's not like that at all.
Adam Shaffer:You're talking California, New York could take seven days.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, it's interesting.
Matt Edmundson:I mean, America's obviously a much bigger, uh, land mass isn't it than the UK.
Matt Edmundson:And so, uh, I've I think I've been slightly spoiled.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, Adam, if I'm honest with you, you living in the UK, you order stuff,
Matt Edmundson:it usually arrives the next day.
Matt Edmundson:And when it doesn't, you kinda like a little bit miffed now.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Um, and so do you think, right, because there seems to have been this
Matt Edmundson:pattern, doesn't it, where you sell stuff on Amazon and Amazon encouraged
Matt Edmundson:you to use prime, then they had, it seemed like a whole bunch of issues
Matt Edmundson:during lockdown with their warehouse.
Matt Edmundson:I dunno if this is why they've come up with, um, what was it seller
Matt Edmundson:fulfilled prime, uh, to kind of mitigate some of these problems they
Matt Edmundson:were having with their warehouses.
Matt Edmundson:But do you see in the states, the shipping companies like UPS, FedEx, uh, US postal
Matt Edmundson:service, are they catching up with Amazon who seemed to have shot ahead in terms
Matt Edmundson:of the speed and accuracy of deliveries?
Adam Shaffer:Um, I think they all have warts.
Adam Shaffer:I think even Amazon was busting at the scenes, um, because the logistics in
Adam Shaffer:general, uh, in the US and, and, and the world, uh, you know, really, really hit
Adam Shaffer:its high point and didn't have the people and the transport to make it all happen.
Adam Shaffer:I, I think it's gotten a little bit better, but I still see
Adam Shaffer:you know, when you order things from FBA, you'll get a delay message from Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:It's gonna take an extra day to get to you.
Adam Shaffer:we're really sorry.
Adam Shaffer:I think that FedEx doesn't make, you know, the grade all the time.
Adam Shaffer:I think ups, I think they all have their issues.
Adam Shaffer:And the beauty of shipping it through Amazon is that if you
Adam Shaffer:ship it through Amazon, Amazon takes the responsibility for it.
Adam Shaffer:And also their rates are just cheaper.
Adam Shaffer:I don't care what your volume is as a, solo using FedEx or UPS,
Adam Shaffer:you cannot get Amazon rates.
Adam Shaffer:So even though we moan and cry at every penny, we have to pay them
Adam Shaffer:their rates are still better and they'll take the responsibility.
Adam Shaffer:If that product for somehow, for some reason, one of the Amazon trucks
Adam Shaffer:don't make it to your house in time
Adam Shaffer:and it goes to the next day, the burden goes on to Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:It doesn't affect your ratings.
Adam Shaffer:And that's what we're all always worried about is will it affect our score ratings?
Adam Shaffer:Will it affect our product to review rating?
Adam Shaffer:Sometimes you get a product review rating because the UPS guy dropped it in the mud.
Adam Shaffer:I mean, that's not fair.
Adam Shaffer:The product's fine guy dropped it in the mud.
Adam Shaffer:So then you gotta work, you gotta set it, you know, file
Adam Shaffer:a case to get that sorted out.
Adam Shaffer:Cause you don't want any blemish on any of your stores or on your product.
Adam Shaffer:So Amazon, um, is good about it, least, um, being, being the main
Adam Shaffer:culprit when there is an issue.
Adam Shaffer:So we kind of like that.
Adam Shaffer:Again, we'd like it, if they would ship everything, but it's impossible to get
Adam Shaffer:everything to them in stock all the time, because mm-hmm, , there's the
Adam Shaffer:logistics issues of products coming into the us, because so much of this
Adam Shaffer:stuff, whether it's British product or it's American product is being made
Adam Shaffer:in China or offshore somewhere, and it's gotta come in and be assembled,
Adam Shaffer:or maybe it's assembled already.
Adam Shaffer:And then it's gotta go up to Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:So you got the time in time off time to your facility where you.
Adam Shaffer:Organize it, and then you gotta get it up to Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:And depending on your store and your velocity in certain sizes, Amazon doesn't
Adam Shaffer:allow you the space that they used to.
Adam Shaffer:So they get to cull your space down.
Adam Shaffer:And so if you're selling very large products, which, you know, shipping large
Adam Shaffer:things is never a lot of fun, but there's definitely some demand for large products.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah.
Adam Shaffer:You know, you, you ship it up to Amazon and Amazon will say, well,
Adam Shaffer:you can only have 200 of those, but.
Adam Shaffer:It's gonna be holiday.
Adam Shaffer:I'm gonna sell a thousand of them.
Adam Shaffer:I, I, I don't wanna send you a hundred or 200.
Adam Shaffer:Well, you know, we're only allowing you this much, man.
Adam Shaffer:And then when you grow, we'll start itching it up a little bit more.
Adam Shaffer:And, and so Amazon is very careful about the space they provide and it for
Adam Shaffer:small things too, you you're selling high velocity products and they're
Adam Shaffer:not gonna give you enough for tens of thousands that give you for a thousand.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, it's an interesting one.
Matt Edmundson:Isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:Because again, this is something that I've noticed over lockdown is Amazon's
Matt Edmundson:sort of closing in on the amount of space you can take in their warehouse.
Matt Edmundson:Um, maybe it happened before COVID maybe it was just part of the thing
Matt Edmundson:that I noticed during that time.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, well,
Adam Shaffer:during closing for sure.
Adam Shaffer:It, it happened
Matt Edmundson:for sure.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Which is fascinating, isn't it?
Matt Edmundson:And so I think the lock lockdown changed a lot of the rules for a lot of people
Matt Edmundson:and Amazon included, and we're all sort of playing catch up still, even though I
Matt Edmundson:feel like we're through the other side of it, maybe now, um, so that's sort of, I
Matt Edmundson:mean, so logistics wise, if I'm selling on Amazon, I need to think about FBA.
Matt Edmundson:I need to think about prime.
Matt Edmundson:I need to get stuff into Amazon, but I need a solution which says actually
Matt Edmundson:be aware that this is not gonna be the ideal solution all of the time.
Matt Edmundson:You're not gonna be able to make that work.
Matt Edmundson:So you need a plan B to work alongside absolutely.
Matt Edmundson:Your plan a, is that what I'm hearing?
Adam Shaffer:Absolutely positively.
Adam Shaffer:You should always have a plan B.
Adam Shaffer:Things happen along the way, and you might make that timing to Amazon, but
Adam Shaffer:they might misplace your product and it happens and you put a case in, and
Adam Shaffer:it, it could take a while for them to solve it or they just don't solve it.
Adam Shaffer:And then they'll reimburse you for the products that they lose.
Adam Shaffer:But what do you do during that three month period?
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, exactly.
Matt Edmundson:Exactly.
Matt Edmundson:Do you think, um, do you think the demands then from third party seller.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, so let's say I, you know, I, I have a brand, I, I sell supplements,
Matt Edmundson:um, and I decide to sell them on.
Matt Edmundson:Amazon are more and more people now trying to get on the Amazon platform.
Matt Edmundson:Um, and is that why it kind of feels like Amazon are tightening up all
Matt Edmundson:these sort of rules all over the place?
Adam Shaffer:Well, I think the space rules are.
Adam Shaffer:People round up when they started, it was give us all your stuff.
Adam Shaffer:We wanna be your 3PL, we wanna be your, you know, your partner where you,
Adam Shaffer:you, you know, keep all your products because if we have your products,
Adam Shaffer:then you can't sell 'em under the channels and that's changed radically.
Adam Shaffer:So now they're send us what you, you know, what you're gonna sell.
Adam Shaffer:We want turn this a bit faster because.
Adam Shaffer:We have limited space.
Adam Shaffer:They over, they overbuilt space, believe it or not, but they're
Adam Shaffer:gonna cull that back down.
Adam Shaffer:They don't need all the space they built.
Adam Shaffer:They don't even have enough employees for that.
Adam Shaffer:So they're basically, you know, I think they, they, they built 13 extra
Adam Shaffer:humungo warehouses in the US that they're not gonna open and, uh, they
Adam Shaffer:don't have the people for it and right.
Adam Shaffer:They don't need that space.
Adam Shaffer:So they're trying to live within a more rational amount of space,
Adam Shaffer:which is still huge by any aspect.
Adam Shaffer:And they just are being very careful by how much you're allowed to put in
Adam Shaffer:there, because if you put stuff that doesn't sell and they can't get in
Adam Shaffer:other products itself, then they lose.
Adam Shaffer:And, and so it, it is just something that has to be measured
Adam Shaffer:on a daily, weekly basis.
Adam Shaffer:And you need to always be shifting product up to Amazon and don't run out of stock.
Adam Shaffer:You definitely don't wanna be overstocked.
Adam Shaffer:Right.
Adam Shaffer:You know, nobody wants to have too much inventory and not turning it enough.
Adam Shaffer:But if you work your heart out with all these competitors to get somewhere
Adam Shaffer:on the ranking that you know, the BSR to say, you're in the top 50 or the
Adam Shaffer:top hundred or the top 20, you don't wanna be out of stock on your product.
Adam Shaffer:And all of a sudden lose all that ground.
Adam Shaffer:You spent X dollars of advertising X dollars on your creative, and you've
Adam Shaffer:been making a great name for your brand.
Adam Shaffer:And all of a sudden you're gone because if it's not in stock,
Adam Shaffer:they can't sell it on Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:Um, to a, to a certain aspect they're starting to show some products
Adam Shaffer:that are on their way to Amazon as available to buy with far outputs.
Adam Shaffer:Okay.
Adam Shaffer:That's a fairly new concept.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah.
Adam Shaffer:You gotta sell it for the most part.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Now it's a top tip actually.
Matt Edmundson:And inventory management or stock management becomes actually one of the
Matt Edmundson:crucial factors, doesn't it to long-term success on, on the Amazon platform.
Adam Shaffer:Yes, for sure.
Adam Shaffer:And I think you mentioned somebody's name earlier that does the inventory
Adam Shaffer:um, has an inventory software program.
Adam Shaffer:Uh, Chelsea is that that's right.
Adam Shaffer:Chelsea Cohen.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah, yeah.
Adam Shaffer:She, she, she has a great program.
Adam Shaffer:I mean, so she she's so focused on Amazon and she knows all the nits and, and her,
Adam Shaffer:her software really does address all this.
Adam Shaffer:So I do, I, we don't use it, but I'm a fan of them.
Adam Shaffer:I've looked at it a lot and it's only for, for internal reasons.
Adam Shaffer:We haven't adopted it, but we love it.
Matt Edmundson:Sure.
Matt Edmundson:Nice.
Matt Edmundson:Great.
Matt Edmundson:Well, I'm sure Chelsea would love that little plug, um,
Adam Shaffer:whatever.
Adam Shaffer:. Matt Edmundson: So back to your formula,
Adam Shaffer:me a formula, but I wrote it down as a formula, Adam, and, uh, basically
Adam Shaffer:it was this you've gotta be, uh, found then you've gotta be noticed,
Adam Shaffer:people have then gotta buy from.
Adam Shaffer:And then they're gonna leave a review.
Adam Shaffer:Right?
Adam Shaffer:These are sort of the key things that you kind of have to think about.
Adam Shaffer:And it's very clear journey in my head.
Adam Shaffer:And obviously we've talked about shipping and logistics
Adam Shaffer:and getting the product to them.
Adam Shaffer:Um, how do you get found on Amazon?
Adam Shaffer:Because if there are 2.3 million, third party sellers all competing for the same
Adam Shaffer:rankings, you know, Amazon feels more and more like its own search engine, uh,
Adam Shaffer:it's more and more taking the principles.
Adam Shaffer:It seems to me to be like, I've got to think about paid media on Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:It can't just be a case of I put it up and they come anymore.
Adam Shaffer:How do we, is that right?
Adam Shaffer:How do we get found?
Adam Shaffer:What are some of the strategies that we need to think about there?
Adam Shaffer:Well, you know, you hit a bunch.
Adam Shaffer:I mean, it's not a freebie that's for sure.
Adam Shaffer:Um, you know, unless you have a brand that's offline, you know, off Amazon
Adam Shaffer:that everybody wants and they go to Amazon because they're shopping for it.
Adam Shaffer:And one day you appear, that's a different story.
Adam Shaffer:But if you are a, you know, a fairly new brand or new to Amazon and not
Adam Shaffer:everybody knows you, who you are, you gotta figure out how to get
Adam Shaffer:people, to find you and trust you enough so that they buy the product.
Adam Shaffer:Now they trust buying on Amazon they know they can return it, but do they wanna
Adam Shaffer:spend the time investing in your product?
Adam Shaffer:And then maybe it doesn't work for them and they have to return it.
Adam Shaffer:And we.
Adam Shaffer:Basically start with the content.
Adam Shaffer:And the content is you have a limited amount of real estate on Amazon to
Adam Shaffer:tell your story and you gotta tell a great story and you have to make sure
Adam Shaffer:that you answer and address as many potential questions that you're gonna get.
Adam Shaffer:So the first thing I would do is study everybody else in my category that's
Adam Shaffer:selling similar products and find out, Hey, what are they talking about?
Adam Shaffer:But what are the reviews that they're getting.
Adam Shaffer:And what are the complaints or the attaboys that they're
Adam Shaffer:getting for their products.
Adam Shaffer:And I would make sure that I'm incorporating that in my explanation,
Adam Shaffer:because if something doesn't work, when you do X, Y, or Z,
Adam Shaffer:let's say I'm gonna go to the UK
Adam Shaffer:and I need the thing that takes the power and steps it down from two 20 to one 10.
Adam Shaffer:So I don't blow up my hair dryer.
Adam Shaffer:Well, you could buy these things on Amazon and they're really important, but they
Adam Shaffer:don't work with every product and what I found is that the really good guys
Adam Shaffer:that are selling this on Amazon know, they put a big ax, although that sounds
Adam Shaffer:counterintuitive to marketing, but they say does not work with these things.
Adam Shaffer:Don't plug that air dryer in this, or you will have no air dryer.
Adam Shaffer:And that's cool.
Adam Shaffer:Like it's, it's not scary.
Adam Shaffer:It's preventing me from buying it, but if I bought it and I blew up my hair dryer,
Adam Shaffer:they're gonna get a horrible review.
Adam Shaffer:Exactly.
Adam Shaffer:So you gotta be really truthful and you gotta tell the story
Adam Shaffer:that people wanna hear.
Adam Shaffer:Does it work with this or does it not work?
Adam Shaffer:What does this work with?
Adam Shaffer:What is this gonna be good for?
Adam Shaffer:How does it work?
Adam Shaffer:How easy is it to.
Adam Shaffer:And the, the picture gallery and then the video you're not allowed.
Adam Shaffer:Just one video.
Adam Shaffer:You could put a couple of videos in there and tell a great story.
Adam Shaffer:So if you're not prepared to put a video about your product, say it's
Adam Shaffer:a networking product and maybe it's not just how great it is and how much
Adam Shaffer:bandwidth you're gonna get in your house
Adam Shaffer:but how easy is it for me to set up?
Adam Shaffer:Show me something that shows it's 1, 2, 3, because if it's beyond
Adam Shaffer:1, 2, 3, and I need to get an installer, then I wanna know that.
Adam Shaffer:And so you need to show these things in video, in words, in content.
Adam Shaffer:And there's plenty of space to provide this content.
Adam Shaffer:And you'll see that if you are shopping for something and there
Adam Shaffer:are several competitors, you definitely look at the pictures
Adam Shaffer:you look at the call outs, you look at the words, you look
Adam Shaffer:at what it doesn't doesn't do.
Adam Shaffer:And that's important.
Adam Shaffer:So start with your content.
Adam Shaffer:And that's the first and most important thing.
Adam Shaffer:The, the other is making sure you understand the keywords that people
Adam Shaffer:are gonna be looking for when they're looking for your kind of product.
Adam Shaffer:Now you might instinctively know what a bunch of them are, but you need to
Adam Shaffer:go take a look at what your competitors are doing and what they're spending
Adam Shaffer:their money on and what keywords they're using in their description of their
Adam Shaffer:products, so that they get found in the Amazon search engine and there's plenty
Adam Shaffer:of software, you know, like Helium 10 and Jungle Scout and others that go out
Adam Shaffer:there and they help you figure this out.
Adam Shaffer:And, um, it, I, I, you don't really need to be a rocket
Adam Shaffer:scientist to use the software.
Adam Shaffer:I mean, I used it and I'm definitely not a rocket scientist I figured it out.
Adam Shaffer:And, and so I think the common person figured out, but if not,
Adam Shaffer:there's places you can go to help you and where one place that would.
Adam Shaffer:But it's something that you need to know.
Adam Shaffer:You need to know.
Adam Shaffer:How do I organize the words to tell the story and use the right keywords so when
Adam Shaffer:people look me up, they find it and then there's the advertising and you can set
Adam Shaffer:these automated campaigns, or you can work with a company like ours or other
Adam Shaffer:ad agencies out there that can help create a, you know, a campaign for you.
Adam Shaffer:There's, you know, products, very product.
Adam Shaffer:Brand specific.
Adam Shaffer:It it's funny.
Adam Shaffer:I always go back to technology because I know it, the vast,
Adam Shaffer:because I grew up there, but you know, there's a brand called Epson.
Adam Shaffer:They make, they make, uh, a bunch of things printers and yeah, yeah.
Adam Shaffer:projectors, but they make, they make a label printer that, you know, you print,
Adam Shaffer:you go to somebody's store and you buy something and the receipt comes out.
Adam Shaffer:So like a receipt printer.
Adam Shaffer:And if the number one printer in the category, um, Breon Epson receipt printer,
Adam Shaffer:And five brands come out before you ever get to absence listing because Epsom's not
Adam Shaffer:spending any time thinking about Amazon, that way they're off somewhere else.
Adam Shaffer:And they're, they don't have really a solid Amazon strategy, but all these
Adam Shaffer:brands, brands you've never heard of, uh, are there using their keywords
Adam Shaffer:and they're using the words and it's the same, you know, you would do this
Adam Shaffer:on Google too, but people are doing it on Amazon and really getting to
Adam Shaffer:display their products well ahead.
Adam Shaffer:Um, so in, in addition to.
Adam Shaffer:brand and product there's videos that you do on Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:So when somebody punches in the search term on the results page,
Adam Shaffer:there's a cool little video in the middle of the page, and it's not like
Adam Shaffer:blaring, it's just movement and you could turn it on and listen to it,
Adam Shaffer:but it's not loud at the beginning, but it definitely catches your eye.
Adam Shaffer:And I always look at those because it's teaching me about the product
Adam Shaffer:and anything that's gonna show me how the product works or how it gets used.
Adam Shaffer:I want to know this, I wanna make sure I'm buying the right thing.
Adam Shaffer:So that video advertising has become high conversion rate and very important.
Adam Shaffer:But for new products, you also should be doing off Amazon advertising,
Adam Shaffer:which is not the highest conversion mm-hmm , but it's definitely important
Adam Shaffer:so I would still go back to Google and Yahoo my affiliates and I'd be
Adam Shaffer:advertising and pointing them to my, um, products on Amazon piece, outside
Adam Shaffer:traffic gets a benefit from Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:Amazon loves anybody that brings new traffic to their website.
Adam Shaffer:And you also get a discount these days, too.
Adam Shaffer:So Amazon will give you some money back or a discount off the advertising.
Adam Shaffer:Um, if you advertise offsite.
Adam Shaffer:So although the conversion's at is high, it's a bit more
Adam Shaffer:affordable than it used to be.
Adam Shaffer:Although nothing.
Adam Shaffer:Not affordable anymore.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah.
Adam Shaffer:Nothing stays the same.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah, no.
Adam Shaffer:Right.
Adam Shaffer:And, and then, then there's social media.
Adam Shaffer:You gotta be in it, man.
Adam Shaffer:Like if you have a consumer product, You gotta go find a
Adam Shaffer:bunch of micro influencers.
Adam Shaffer:That's a lot of fun.
Adam Shaffer:That's new hard work.
Adam Shaffer:You gotta go find people to talk about your product and post your product.
Adam Shaffer:You need to get viral, even if you're not gonna get viral, you
Adam Shaffer:need to have your product seen.
Adam Shaffer:So when people search for it, whether it's on Amazon or on Google, something
Adam Shaffer:shows up and that's very important.
Adam Shaffer:So it's not super expensive, but it's another thing.
Adam Shaffer:If you're new in the BI.
Adam Shaffer:Or even if you've been in the eCommerce business, you might
Adam Shaffer:not be doing some of this stuff.
Adam Shaffer:Maybe you are, but it's really important on Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:And so you gotta be good at all this because the others are good at
Adam Shaffer:all this, some aren't, but the best of the best are good at all this.
Matt Edmundson:It sounds like Adam, the way you're talking.
Matt Edmundson:I'm I'm listening to talking and you've gotta have great content.
Matt Edmundson:You've gotta think about the journey, the customer story, you know, the
Matt Edmundson:questions that they're asking, you've gotta think about paid media.
Matt Edmundson:You've gotta think about social media.
Matt Edmundson:You've gotta, this is all stuff you've got to think about for eCommerce anyway.
Matt Edmundson:Right.
Matt Edmundson:So the Amazon platform, I think, has been a bit kind of, um, uh, it's kind of had
Matt Edmundson:the, uh, what's the word I'm looking for?
Matt Edmundson:The, the sort of the, the black hole reputation.
Matt Edmundson:It's like, we, we don't get Amazon.
Matt Edmundson:We don't understand it.
Matt Edmundson:It's complex, but it sounds like the principles aren't too
Matt Edmundson:dissimilar from general ecommerce.
Matt Edmundson:Anyway, the same sort of things you have to think about here.
Matt Edmundson:You've gotta think about for Amazon, right?
Adam Shaffer:AB absolutely.
Adam Shaffer:I think, I think it's a good discipl.
Adam Shaffer:If you're in the Google, you know, doing Google PPC and you're doing Facebook
Adam Shaffer:and, and, you know, paid, paid social to bring that discipline to Amazon because
Adam Shaffer:it's, it is the same principles, but it's in their machine using their tools.
Adam Shaffer:And some of the tools aren't as sophisticated as you'd
Adam Shaffer:find out in the Google world.
Adam Shaffer:And, and so you have to interpret some of this stuff, some tools that
Adam Shaffer:are out there to help you, but.
Adam Shaffer:It's still evolving.
Adam Shaffer:It's evolving quickly.
Adam Shaffer:And it's the fastest part of Amazon's growth is your advertising.
Adam Shaffer:And so where you used to be able to just go on and have great content, you
Adam Shaffer:gotta go on and spend some money now.
Adam Shaffer:And you know, if, if you wanna be at 8% of sales or 10% of sales,
Adam Shaffer:when you're launching a product, you're gonna be at 50, 60, 70% of
Adam Shaffer:sales, maybe more at the beginning.
Adam Shaffer:And when you're using micro influencers, you gotta give them
Adam Shaffer:product so they could review it.
Adam Shaffer:And you know, that's another cost.
Adam Shaffer:So you gotta invest if you're not gonna invest and you might not want to do
Adam Shaffer:it, but I do think that having your own Shopify site, um, or your own, I
Adam Shaffer:don't wanna say just Shopify in general.
Adam Shaffer:Uh, but your, your own, um, direct to consumer website is
Adam Shaffer:important because I might not wanna put all my products on Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:I might wanna have an assortment of my products on Amazon and then have some
Adam Shaffer:of the more complicated or interesting or harder to get stuff on my own site.
Adam Shaffer:And I do think that although Amazon would frown on it, I
Adam Shaffer:think that there's definitely spillover from Amazon to your site.
Adam Shaffer:So where people are afraid, oh, Amazon's gonna kill my direct to consumer business.
Adam Shaffer:I think that there's so much traffic on Amazon, people are gonna, if
Adam Shaffer:they like the brand, they're gonna wanna learn more about the brand.
Adam Shaffer:They're gonna wanna learn more about the brand by going to the brand's website.
Adam Shaffer:And the brand's website should have so much more and better
Adam Shaffer:content and the company story and what the company cares about.
Adam Shaffer:And.
Adam Shaffer:All the things that consumers think about on their side.
Adam Shaffer:So I think that this is a compliment and can help your direct consumer.
Adam Shaffer:I think there's so many who say, oh man, it's gonna kill my direct consumer.
Adam Shaffer:But I think not.
Adam Shaffer:I think that as long as you can control your pricing and make sure that there's
Adam Shaffer:not a bunch of other sellers lowering your price of the ground and you have
Adam Shaffer:fair pricing on both, it might say fair, consistent pricing with both.
Adam Shaffer:You're gonna wind up getting huge leak.
Matt Edmundson:That's interesting.
Matt Edmundson:It's an interesting idea where you talk about, um, uh, selling stuff on Amazon.
Matt Edmundson:That's not on your website or selling stuff on your website.
Matt Edmundson:That's not on Amazon to create this cross.
Matt Edmundson:You need
Adam Shaffer:to not be able to do that.
Adam Shaffer:There was a rule that Amazon said is you had to be in parity
Adam Shaffer:with your, your consumer website and that that rule is gone.
Adam Shaffer:Since that rule's gone.
Adam Shaffer:I see many brands that have a full assortment, some of the
Adam Shaffer:harder to get stuff, odd, lot stuff, specialty stuff on theirs.
Adam Shaffer:And they have the standard fair on Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:That's you know, if you're in fast fashion, you might
Adam Shaffer:not want it to be on Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:You might want it to be here's my 15 or 20 core skews.
Adam Shaffer:And then I have my 70 or a hundred skews on my site.
Adam Shaffer:And you know, if something becomes a core skew, I put it on Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah.
Adam Shaffer:If something is old and I wanna move it through, maybe I put it on Amazon,
Adam Shaffer:but there there's like a, um, oh, what's the name of this company?
Adam Shaffer:They it's called specs.
Adam Shaffer:I wish we sold it, but specs.
Adam Shaffer:Um, they make these fidget toys and you say what's a fidget toy, like kids,
Adam Shaffer:adults play with them in their hands, their magnets, their little balls mm-hmm
Adam Shaffer:. And we saw this and my kids wanted it.
Adam Shaffer:Like, I gotta have this thing.
Adam Shaffer:And I go to Amazon and they don't have the one that they want.
Adam Shaffer:The one that they want's on the spec site only they, you know, Amazon has
Adam Shaffer:the assortment, but not the cool one that the kids want that's really on.
Adam Shaffer:Right, right.
Adam Shaffer:And obviously a strategy that they didn't want it on Amazon maybe next year will
Adam Shaffer:be on Amazon, but not the first year.
Adam Shaffer:that's really, and I'm not saying that works for everything, but that, that's
Adam Shaffer:an interesting concept for these people that want major distribution, but
Adam Shaffer:don't also wanna over distribute new.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:You know, it's something to test, isn't it, it's something to go actually, it
Matt Edmundson:doesn't have to be this straightforward.
Matt Edmundson:Everything has to be on Amazon.
Matt Edmundson:There's things that we can test here.
Matt Edmundson:Um, what works for Amazon, what works for our website and let's make that work.
Matt Edmundson:Um, one of the things that you mentioned which
Matt Edmundson:I was fascinated by, is this idea of using say Google ads or Facebook ads
Matt Edmundson:to send traffic to your Amazon page versus sending it to your Shopify site
Matt Edmundson:or whatever eCommerce platform you use.
Matt Edmundson:Um, why would I at first glance, Adam?
Matt Edmundson:Uh I'm and I'm just playing sort of the crazy advocate here in one sense.
Matt Edmundson:At first glance, if I'm gonna send someone who's ready to buy.
Matt Edmundson:I'm surely gonna want them to go to my website versus Amazon cause
Matt Edmundson:my margin is greater over here or, or is there other stuff here that I
Adam Shaffer:need to think?
Adam Shaffer:There's there's there's other stuff.
Adam Shaffer:So, so with Google and I shouldn't say Google, but I think it's with
Adam Shaffer:most advertising off Amazon, Amazon will give you eight or 10% back.
Adam Shaffer:So you're gonna get a, you're gonna get a rebate.
Adam Shaffer:So you think about it.
Adam Shaffer:You're probably paying Amazon a commission of at the lowest eight at the highest.
Adam Shaffer:I think it's over 20, but let's say on average, it's 15 to 17.
Adam Shaffer:So you're gonna pay them a commission you're going to, and that's where
Adam Shaffer:you lose the margin that you would've gotten on your traffic
Adam Shaffer:file, your direct consumer site.
Adam Shaffer:So it's like, why would I want to give it to them when I could get it?
Adam Shaffer:And I own the customer by the way, where they own the
Adam Shaffer:customer when it goes to them.
Adam Shaffer:Mm-hmm . But I, I think when you have a new product on Amazon, you
Adam Shaffer:need to get traffic to that product.
Adam Shaffer:And anything you could do to get that traffic to the product
Adam Shaffer:at at the beginning, it's a huge help because the relevance that
Adam Shaffer:Amazon will give it will be based on the traffic and the conversion.
Adam Shaffer:So you wanna get traffic any way you can to that page on Amazon mm-hmm you
Adam Shaffer:might cut that Google out later, put it back to your side, but at the beginning
Adam Shaffer:I would push it on Amazon a bit.
Adam Shaffer:And you could, so, you know, you could still see what the diversions
Adam Shaffer:are from your Google analytics.
Adam Shaffer:I, I think it's definitely worth, um, doing launching or getting new skews.
Matt Edmundson:That's interesting.
Matt Edmundson:And you could split test it as well.
Matt Edmundson:I guess the, the deeper you go down the line, it's like I'll
Matt Edmundson:spend a thousand books on Google ads and I can see on Amazon, it
Matt Edmundson:generates me two grand in sales.
Matt Edmundson:And if I spend a grand over here, it generates me to, and a bit grand
Matt Edmundson:in and I can change and I can test that and see what's working for
Matt Edmundson:different products at different times
Adam Shaffer:of the season.
Adam Shaffer:What's interesting is think about the convenience level.
Adam Shaffer:So say is my conversion read on Amazon?
Adam Shaffer:20 times is good.
Adam Shaffer:You know, is it 20% better than on my own site?
Adam Shaffer:When they come to my site, maybe they haven't bought from me yet before.
Adam Shaffer:So maybe they're brand new.
Adam Shaffer:Now they gotta set up an account.
Adam Shaffer:Maybe they don't wanna, of course, there's probably a quick guest.
Adam Shaffer:Checkout.
Adam Shaffer:Do you have all the different pay methods that they want or they
Adam Shaffer:have their Amazon system set up.
Adam Shaffer:They click the button, they have their addresses in there already.
Adam Shaffer:You know, maybe they have the affirm going where they can pay monthly.
Adam Shaffer:But they have their Amazon cards, their Amazon account.
Adam Shaffer:It's so much easier.
Adam Shaffer:That's why pay, you know, pay with Amazon is a payment method you
Adam Shaffer:see on other sites because how many people are set up on Amazon?
Adam Shaffer:Like, you know, the majority of the universe.
Adam Shaffer:So maybe the US it is, but in England, I'm sure plenty of people have, but in,
Adam Shaffer:but in the US It's like most people do.
Adam Shaffer:So is it, is it gonna be that much easier?
Adam Shaffer:They trust Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:They know they can return it to Amazon, either set up there.
Adam Shaffer:Boom, I'm gonna have a higher conversion rate.
Adam Shaffer:I gotta go with these new guys.
Adam Shaffer:Now, there are plenty of new Shopify sites that I've been going to that I'm
Adam Shaffer:like, oh man, I wish I could just buy from Amazon, this press button, you know,
Adam Shaffer:and then, and then sometimes they're like, okay, you could get it in two
Adam Shaffer:days, but you do have to pay a lot more.
Adam Shaffer:Sometimes you'll get it in two days, but they take three days to ship it.
Adam Shaffer:And, and so with Amazon, it's kind of a known quantity.
Adam Shaffer:So I'm not saying you shouldn't wanna build your own site cuz you want those
Adam Shaffer:customers, you wanna own the customers.
Adam Shaffer:You want the relationship with the customers, but if you want to
Adam Shaffer:crank up a new skew, I, I would push it to Amazon and get it going.
Matt Edmundson:That's top advice, top tip right there.
Matt Edmundson:What, um, what products do you think sell quickly on Amazon?
Matt Edmundson:Is there, are there some trends or is, is it a case of just saying every product.
Adam Shaffer:I mean, it's, it's crazy because we look at all these sub sub
Adam Shaffer:sub sub subcategories, because it's really getting into the minutia to
Adam Shaffer:find out what sells because to be a top, top 25 on the BSR, it's, it's
Adam Shaffer:huge volume, but we, we sell, we, we sell replacement fingernail glue.
Adam Shaffer:Now, I don't know if you use it and I don't use it and my kids better
Adam Shaffer:not use it, but kids and, and, and.
Adam Shaffer:They, they have, uh, fake fingernails and they glue the fingernail, onto
Adam Shaffer:their finger, and we sell a two pack of glue that we probably sell
Adam Shaffer:10,000 a month, 10,000 a month at, you know, $5 and 99 cents.
Adam Shaffer:So selling things for 5.99 is not a lot of last because Amazon gets there
Adam Shaffer:15%, then you gotta ship it to Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:First, we gotta packet with the label on, get it up to Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:and then thank God it's in the small and light program.
Adam Shaffer:So the freight's a little bit cheaper, but you're talking, you know, you
Adam Shaffer:still gotta pay 2, 2.75 for shipping mm-hmm so, so how much is it?
Adam Shaffer:So we make a pop 30, right?
Adam Shaffer:So thank God we make a dollar 30.
Adam Shaffer:If you sell one or two a month, not a lot of funding.
Adam Shaffer:So 20,000, not bad, 10,000, you make some, you know, decent,
Adam Shaffer:gross market for the month.
Adam Shaffer:Mm-hmm so that's a, you know, that's in a, such an odd.
Adam Shaffer:But you name it.
Adam Shaffer:Like we sell files that you, you clip your fingernails with
Adam Shaffer:like, um, it's called trim.
Adam Shaffer:You clip your toenails, your fingernails 3, 4, 5.99 again, and sells like hotcakes.
Adam Shaffer:Uh, but what I, I would recommend is anything that is something you need to
Adam Shaffer:replace or need to add something to.
Adam Shaffer:What's a very big seller.
Adam Shaffer:That's not one of these little $5 AKIs would be.
Adam Shaffer:Air filters.
Adam Shaffer:We, we aren't selling them, but there's a, a breadth of different
Adam Shaffer:brands they're selling them.
Adam Shaffer:And they're cool because you're selling this piece of hardware.
Adam Shaffer:Maybe it's a hundred, 200, $300 depending on the size.
Adam Shaffer:But once every three months you gotta replace the filter,
Adam Shaffer:which is another 50 bucks.
Adam Shaffer:And, you know, most people replace a filter when the light comes
Adam Shaffer:on because they don't wanna have that horrible air in their house.
Adam Shaffer:So that's a pretty cool idea.
Adam Shaffer:Anything that is that you need to replace like batteries or, you
Adam Shaffer:know, food, although we don't do food, but it's a little complicated,
Adam Shaffer:especially if it's like something needs cold storage, but you know,
Adam Shaffer:food obviously is a pretty big thing.
Adam Shaffer:Things like toothpaste that people are using over and over again, if
Adam Shaffer:you can get into those categories, um, you know, people need it.
Adam Shaffer:It's not like you can sell one and done.
Adam Shaffer:You're gonna sell one every week or every month or every, you know, two months.
Adam Shaffer:And so the subscription business is a big deal.
Matt Edmundson:That's a really interesting, I mean, we've had a couple
Matt Edmundson:of guests on recently talking about subscription models and, um, and it, and
Matt Edmundson:Amazon, again, seemed to have pioneered the way in this, the whole subscribe
Matt Edmundson:and save, you know, get it, get 5% off or whatever it is, you know, and you,
Matt Edmundson:and we'll send it to you on autopilot.
Matt Edmundson:Um, do a lot of people use that feature on Amazon.
Adam Shaffer:They, they do because you save money from it, but then there's 60%
Adam Shaffer:or 70% that don't press the subscribe, but they still buy it off in anyway,
Adam Shaffer:thinking, oh, I'll never do it again.
Adam Shaffer:And I'll never do it again.
Adam Shaffer:And they press it and they buy it.
Adam Shaffer:I'm one of those guys, but I so many subscriptions, I can't figure out where
Adam Shaffer:they all are and record I have, and they're hitting everything all the time.
Adam Shaffer:And so I'll just buy it.
Adam Shaffer:I'll just buy it.
Adam Shaffer:And then Amazon will say, you bought this 14 times already.
Adam Shaffer:You should really say it.
Adam Shaffer:You should really save money.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah.
Adam Shaffer:And put it on a.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah.
Adam Shaffer:So, you know, I think they're great if you're gonna use it,
Adam Shaffer:think about coffee, we buy, I don't know what kind of coffee you use.
Adam Shaffer:I maybe you use tea there, but I think that's a big deal, but I do
Adam Shaffer:know Brits started drinking coffee when they put Starbucks there.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah.
Adam Shaffer:So, you know, coffee, coffee, beans, people buy, they have the grinder
Adam Shaffer:that grinds up makes the coffee.
Adam Shaffer:It's great.
Adam Shaffer:How much of it?
Adam Shaffer:You probably use a bag a month.
Adam Shaffer:And so that is like off the charts.
Adam Shaffer:Go to Amazon, look for coffee beans.
Adam Shaffer:And they have all local, you know, kind of beam and foreign beans and hub up.
Adam Shaffer:They're all subscription.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah,
Matt Edmundson:no, it's just listen, Adam.
Matt Edmundson:I, I feel like we're just getting started, bud, uh, so many questions on, on how to
Matt Edmundson:do Amazon, but I'm aware of time and, uh,
Adam Shaffer:well, I, I think, I think the big picture
Adam Shaffer:message is that it's awesome.
Adam Shaffer:Like, so Amazon friend of foe?
Adam Shaffer:You go back to your question you asked it.
Adam Shaffer:They're my friend, because who in the world could have created
Adam Shaffer:this platform that you can go and create your own business.
Adam Shaffer:Like you used to have to go down to some strip mall and rent a store and
Adam Shaffer:put all this money up and pile this inventory and hope people come to
Adam Shaffer:your store to advertise on the local papers and do all this crazy stuff.
Adam Shaffer:Now, the traffic's there.
Adam Shaffer:If you wanna create your own brand, the platform is there for
Adam Shaffer:you to go, go make it happen.
Adam Shaffer:I'm excited.
Adam Shaffer:Like if, if this was around, when I was first getting into the biz,
Adam Shaffer:I would've been all over this.
Adam Shaffer:We had to create our own customer base customer base.
Adam Shaffer:Is there now we just gotta figure how to stand out, not easy, but
Adam Shaffer:it's definitely a head start.
Adam Shaffer:The traffic is there.
Adam Shaffer:So, you know, you could fail all your on your own, but you can't say
Adam Shaffer:it's because the people aren't there.
Adam Shaffer:Mm-hmm , uh, you, you, you got the, you know, you got the best store and the
Adam Shaffer:best block with the best amount of people trafficking, you just gotta be found.
Adam Shaffer:So I think that they're, they, they give everybody a huge opportunity..
Adam Shaffer:And think for, you know, the entrepreneurs 2.5 million, 3PL stores.
Adam Shaffer:Many of them have their own brands and invented their own stuff.
Adam Shaffer:And most of them just need a little help because they can't do it all.
Adam Shaffer:They're small mom and pops, or even if they're bigger than that, it's hard
Adam Shaffer:to scale in this business and we help the smaller brands scale and we help
Adam Shaffer:the bigger brands protect and preserve their brand and grow their brand.
Adam Shaffer:So they don't destroy a brand that's been around for a long.
Adam Shaffer:And get their, you know, their loyal base, angry at them.
Adam Shaffer:So, you know, on both sides of the coin, there's so much opportunity.
Adam Shaffer:And for small businesses, shoot, I mean, like you're, you're doing something, it
Adam Shaffer:sounds like on Amazon with supplements.
Adam Shaffer:I mean it's or maybe not on Amazon yet, you're doing it on your own, right?
Adam Shaffer:I, I think that if, if I could do it again, I would've come up with
Adam Shaffer:three or four different brands and I would've been all over the stuff.
Adam Shaffer:And you know, now, thank God we're helping these brands, as I grew up selling
Adam Shaffer:and working with brands all my life.
Adam Shaffer:And this is a great way of continuing that journey with helping brands not get
Adam Shaffer:caught in the, uh, the, the rabbit hole.
Adam Shaffer:Mm,
Matt Edmundson:no, it's it's I, I mean, yes.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, we, uh, it's just worth being, I'm totally honest with people.
Matt Edmundson:We do sell supplements on our website and we sell them on, or we
Matt Edmundson:are starting to sell them on Amazon.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, and we made the decision when we were gonna sell on Amazon that we needed help.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, because you know, we knew eCommerce.
Matt Edmundson:We knew the principles of Amazon, but we did need some help.
Matt Edmundson:And.
Matt Edmundson:Um, I think, I think that's a fair comment and, uh, just reaching out to
Matt Edmundson:people that can help you saves you so much pain and heartache, uh, in the
Matt Edmundson:long run is my, uh, my experience here.
Matt Edmundson:Um, Adam.
Matt Edmundson:Right.
Matt Edmundson:As you know, this show is sponsored by the eCommerce cohort, which
Matt Edmundson:is all about coaching and peer mentoring to deliver eCommerce.
Matt Edmundson:Well, so I want you to imagine, right.
Matt Edmundson:You're stood in a room full of the cohort, and you've just done your, you
Matt Edmundson:know, your presentation, how to decide if Amazon's right for your business.
Matt Edmundson:And I think we probably have.
Matt Edmundson:The Crowd is going wild and you get a minute to thank those folks that
Matt Edmundson:have had a big impact on your life.
Matt Edmundson:You know, family mentors, author, software podcasts, the list can
Matt Edmundson:be endless, who is on your list?
Matt Edmundson:Who are you thanking and why?
Adam Shaffer:Oh my God, there's one person.
Adam Shaffer:His name is Peter Godfrey.
Adam Shaffer:He's a Brit former Brit.
Adam Shaffer:Okay.
Adam Shaffer:Uh, American citizen these days.
Adam Shaffer:And you know, he was the real true pioneer of direct marketing.
Adam Shaffer:He was one of original Columbia records and tapes.
Adam Shaffer:Uh, folks, he, he, there was a, a series called part works in the, in
Adam Shaffer:the UK where they would create these magazines that was sold in newsstand.
Adam Shaffer:And it was a series that went off a while.
Adam Shaffer:He was the king of that in, in the UK, you know, back in the seventies mm-hmm and,
Adam Shaffer:um, he and a partner created a, a magazine called Mac user magazine, which, um be got
Adam Shaffer:our business in the us, but they also then created a magazine called max magazine,
Adam Shaffer:which was a big magazine in the UK and then came over to the us of mm-hmm , you
Adam Shaffer:know, I'm sure you've heard of Maxim.
Adam Shaffer:Yeah.
Adam Shaffer:Um, you know, it's still around.
Adam Shaffer:So, you know, a true, true entrepreneur that taught me everything about direct
Adam Shaffer:marketing, just magazines was new stand in subscriptions and, and, and
Adam Shaffer:understanding how that game worked was a big deal, but understanding how just
Adam Shaffer:catalogs work and sending catalogs and understanding direct response marketing.
Adam Shaffer:Um, it changed my world.
Adam Shaffer:Plus he was probably, you know, the, the most moral, upstanding
Adam Shaffer:ethical guy I ever met.
Adam Shaffer:So in a, in a world of, oh wow, just pure lunacy.
Adam Shaffer:This guy was, uh, A plus.
Adam Shaffer:He still is.
Adam Shaffer:So I, I still talk to him once a week.
Adam Shaffer:You know, he, he is my, my guy and I thank him every day for giving me,
Adam Shaffer:you know, all the tools I needed to.
Matt Edmundson:Oh, wow.
Matt Edmundson:It, he sounds like a great guy to have on this show.
Matt Edmundson:I mean, that's, that's a big glowing
Adam Shaffer:review.
Adam Shaffer:This guy's done it all.
Adam Shaffer:He'd be great on your
Matt Edmundson:show.
Matt Edmundson:He'd be great.
Matt Edmundson:Oh, fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:So Peter Godfrey and I'll direct you to him.
Matt Edmundson:That sounds fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, no, I'd love to talk to him.
Matt Edmundson:Maybe get him on the show.
Matt Edmundson:That'd be amazing.
Matt Edmundson:Oh,
Adam Shaffer:you know, his partner, Felix, Dennis was
Adam Shaffer:Dennis publishing in the UK.
Adam Shaffer:I don't know if you followed that stuff, but they did all the computer shopper
Adam Shaffer:Mac user, and then they had some car magazines, gaming magazines, but Maxim was
Adam Shaffer:the big head mm-hmm they also, it was a book called stuff, magazine called stuff.
Adam Shaffer:And in the US, they had that magazine also and ultimately sold it.
Adam Shaffer:But you know what arrived, that was by far the most.
Adam Shaffer:It was like Cosmo for guys.
Adam Shaffer:If you remember this
Matt Edmundson:Cosmo for guys, it's such a phenomenal way to describe it.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:I remember.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, I remember.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, yeah, no.
Matt Edmundson:Fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, Adam, listen, how do people reach you?
Matt Edmundson:How do they connect with you?
Matt Edmundson:If they would like to?
Adam Shaffer:Well, you could reach me at adam.shafer.
Adam Shaffer:Hopefully you can see this.
Adam Shaffer:If you don't.
Adam Shaffer:It's adam.Shaffer@phelpsunited.com.
Adam Shaffer:Um, always on email.
Adam Shaffer:So Adam dot Schaeffer, Phelps united.com.
Adam Shaffer:You could hit me at LinkedIn.
Adam Shaffer:You just look up Adam Shaffer and you'll be able to find me.
Adam Shaffer:I'm the only Adam with the spelling Shaffer, and you could
Adam Shaffer:go to our website anytime.
Adam Shaffer:Phelps united.com.
Adam Shaffer:It's PhelpsUnited.com
Matt Edmundson:That's awesome.
Matt Edmundson:And we will of course, link to Adam's, uh, information in the show notes as well.
Matt Edmundson:His LinkedIn, his email will be there.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, no problem at all.
Matt Edmundson:Um, Adam, it's been great having you on the eCommerce podcast really
Matt Edmundson:appreciate you being here, uh, and sharing with your wisdom on Amazon.
Matt Edmundson:If you are thinking about selling on Amazon and you would like to know
Matt Edmundson:more, do connect with Adam, I'm sure he would love, love, love to help you.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, so huge thanks Mr.
Matt Edmundson:Adam for being here.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, don't forget to subscribe to the show wherever you get your podcast from.
Matt Edmundson:We have great conversations like this with Adam every week.
Matt Edmundson:Yes we do.
Matt Edmundson:And I really don't want you to miss any of them.
Matt Edmundson:So do come and join them.
Matt Edmundson:And in case no one has told you yet today you, my friend are awesome.
Matt Edmundson:So thank you for being with us.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, the thank you very much.
Matt Edmundson:Just love it.
Matt Edmundson:Love it, love it.
Matt Edmundson:Love it.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, the eCommerce podcast is produced by Aurion Media.
Matt Edmundson:You can find our entire archive of episodes on your favorite podcast app.
Matt Edmundson:The team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon, Josh Catchpole,
Matt Edmundson:Estella, Robin, and Tim Johnson.
Matt Edmundson:Our theme song is written by me and my son, Josh,.
Matt Edmundson:So say nice things about it.
Matt Edmundson:if you would like to read
Adam Shaffer:I on my playlist, man.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, yeah, absolutely do man.
Matt Edmundson:uh, if you would like to read the transcript or the show notes,
Matt Edmundson:head on over to our website, eCommercepodcast.net, where you can
Matt Edmundson:also sign up for, our, newsletter.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, and we can also be reached at matt@ecommercepodcast.net,
Matt Edmundson:uh, from myself from Adam.
Matt Edmundson:Thank you so much for joining.
Matt Edmundson:Uh, it's been great to be with you this week, uh, until next time.
Matt Edmundson:Bye.