Look out, Vendors. Here comes Amazon. Photo courtesy of Shutterstock
It’s that time of year again (groan) – annual negotiations. Here are a few big mistakes we see vendors make, updated for 2019. Don’t get taken!
1. Not knowing your cost to serve Amazon
Amazon only includes selected terms in their email asks for a reason – hoping you’ll forget about the other terms they aren’t mentioning. Example: The email might mention the MDF and damage allowance, but not the freight allowance. As a result, the vendor doesn’t include the freight allowance when assessing their total cost to serve and signs up for more increases than they would have. It’s a trick Amazon uses to dupe you.
Create a comprehensive list of your current terms with Amazon…or you’ll wind up paying more than you should. Make sure you use a tracker to understand your total cost to serve.
2. Signing up for unlimited funding, such as Margin Guarantees and CRaP allowances
Instead of asking for back-payment for lost profits, or to keep CRaP items alive, Amazon’s come up with a nifty new agreement type – Margin Guarantees – and they’re handing them out like free candy. In addition to signing up for unlimited funding, these agreements will drive a disproportionate amount of sales to items that are lower profit for you.
Who wants to write Amazon a blank check? Not me.
3. Responding too quickly
Unless Amazon is threatening to stop orders, stall away. If you’re not a top brand in your category, they may forget about you. I worked with several mid-market clients last year who stalled long enough that Amazon simply extended their current terms for another year. Ask a great many questions, request supporting data from Amazon, and tell them you need time to review with your leadership. You may get out of negotiating altogether.
4. Trying to keep your CRaP alive
If you haven’t already transitioned away from sub $10 price points on Amazon, you’re behind, and you’d better start doing it now. You need e-commerce-friendly pack sizes that ship profitably for both you AND Amazon (and also Walmart.com, Target.com, etc.) Let’s face it, pretty soon all sub $10 items will be sold in two+ packs online.
If multi-packs don’t make sense for you, consider bunding different products together (the ball-launcher and the three balls, for example), or just decide you’re not going to sell the product on Amazon anymore. Also, request MOQs to be put in place for your sub $10 price point items (hey, it’s not your problem they killed the Add On Program).
5. Not calling them on their bullying
The only way a bully will stand down is if YOU stand up. Is Amazon holding your cost increase proposal hostage? Threatening to CRaP out half your assortment? Copying your product with Private Label? Putting Private Label ads on your pages? Annual negotiations are a great time to remind them about the ways they are unfairly controlling your business. Are they a platform, as they’ve tried to position themselves more as recently to avoid scrutiny, or are they a powerful retailer?
What has helped/hindered your annual negotiations with Amazon this year?