How to Make Money Starting an Amazon Private Label Products Business

In 2020, over half of the private-label sellers using Amazon FBA earned five thousand dollars or more in sales each month. In fact, this business model is so successful that roughly seventy-one percent of sellers on Amazon use private label products. A manufacturer creates private label products that allow you to put your own logo on them and then sell it to your audience for a profit. With this method, the products you can create are endless, from beauty products to pet treats to kitchen utensils and more. If there is a product you want to sell, a private label manufacturer is waiting to make it.

 

These five important tips to follow to grow a profitable Amazon private label products business will expand your understanding and get you started right.

 

Source the Right Product

Don’t list the first private label product you find just because you think the product or idea is popular. You must first ask for samples to test the product’s quality and find the best version while keeping costs low. Private label products require purchasing large quantities of an item to lower the price per unit costs and increase your profit margins.

 

Design an Attractive Logo and Packaging

Just like any physical product on Amazon or in stores, you need attractive packaging to educate and entice people to purchase your products. In addition, sophisticated packaging and logo insinuate that your products are more valuable, thus allowing you to increase the price of your product.

 

Create an Amazon FBA Account and Optimize Your Amazon Listing

You can offer private label products without starting an Amazon FBA account. Once you open your account and verify your identity, you will start listing your products or registering for the Amazon brand registry that gives you even more control of your products. From there, you can start listing your products. Be sure to fill everything in as specified to the best of your ability, and don’t skip a box. The more information you provide, the easier buyers can find you.

 

Strive for More Reviews

It’s simple, the more reviews your product has, the higher you appear on buyers’ search feeds. Include inserts or automatic emails that go out once a purchase is made or delivered to ask for their review. Be sure to avoid exchanging reviews for free products or discounts as this is against Amazon’s terms of service.

 

Price Your Products Correctly but Competitively

Take a moment to research your competition on the platform and see what prices they are offering. Unless you have an obviously superior product with the information to back it up, don’t expect to exceed these prices too much. Remember, competition is healthy, and starting a price war is the last thing you want to do.

 

Finding valuable products is the first step to starting a profitable business. If you don’t offer the right product based on your ideal audience’s wants and needs, it won’t matter what you do after, as the product is the most important part of this business model.

 

 

 

Set Up A Product Creation Schedule For Yourself And Your Team

Let’s talk about money. More importantly, let’s talk about how you profit from your online properties. You do it through ads, by making affiliate sales, or my personal favorite – by selling your own products. Those products are what we’ll be talking about today. More specifically, we’ll be discussing creating information products consistently. Why information products? Because you create them once and sell them again and again. No supply line, no storage, no overhead. When you make a sale, it’s almost pure profit.

 

I’m going to let you in on a secret it took me a while to discover when I first started out. It’s much easier to sell an existing customer a second product than it is to find a brand new customer. It’s even easier to sell them the third, fourth, fifth one. You get the idea. That’s because you’ve done all the hard work of earning this person’s trust already and if you’ve done your job right, the first thing they purchased from you is already helping them solve their problem. That’s what information products are all about. Solving a problem. To create that next product, look at where your customers are at and think about what they need to do next. What’s another problem they will face and how can you help them solve it.

 

For example, your first product may be an eBook or course on setting up a WordPress site. Next, your customers may need to learn about creating content that attracts the right type of reader. And then they need to learn about traffic, and list building, and effective social media strategies. Each one of these could be a new info product or new content for your paid membership site.

 

Once you have an idea of what types of products you want to create, it’s important to get them out consistently. You want to have a new product out there for your existing customers to buy. Of course, you’ll also attract new buyers along the way who will then not only buy the new thing you’ve come out with but hopefully also some of the other titles and courses you have out there.

 

Start with a list of products you want to create. Do your best to estimate how long it will take you to create the product and all the infrastructure that goes along with it like a sales page, a download page, autoresponders, and solo emails to promote it, a promotion schedule, etc. Make a list of everything you need to do before you can launch this new product. Then get to work. Chip away at it every day and continue to consistently work towards each of these new product launches, adjusting your timeframe as needed.

Outsourcing: The Key to Success for The Life Affirming Entrepreneur

In the beginning, it will probably be just you working on this product creation. Maybe you’re hiring out the graphics. Put that on the schedule and communicate with your graphic designer early to avoid bottlenecks. As time goes by, you may choose to outsource some of the product creation. Maybe you’re hiring an editor to proofread your work. Or a VA to help with the setup, infrastructure, and customer service. Eventually, you may even hire some writers to create these products for you. As your team expands, it’s even more important to have a schedule everyone works off to make sure these new products come out regularly.