Amazing FBA Amazon and ECommerce Podcast, for Amazon Private Label Sellers, Shopify, Magento or Wooc

Amazing FBA Amazon and ECommerce Podcast, for Amazon Private Label Sellers, Shopify, Magento or Wooc


Product Research for Amazon with Stephen Somers of Marketplace Superheroes

February 25, 2020

Doing product research for Amazon needs to be done carefully. Get yourself up and running with PL on Amazon with Stephen Somers.

How to do Product Research for Amazon (amazon.com figures)
PL Winner Percentage 

6-7 out of 10 in Stephen’s case succeed. 

Out of the 3, 1 sells slowly.

One is a loser. It will take 18 months to sell through. 
Defining a winner
They define a double initial investment within 9 months

Even a product that is selling 1 unit a day. 
BEST products

* Boring
* Established
* Sustainable
* Tangible - if you do a bonus item, it’s always physical (no ebooks or downloads).
* Start at a category level
* Then look at the top 100 products to get you started

Filter 1 avoid list
Click into products that don’t have reasons to avoid (checklist of 15)

Sharp edges
Hazardous 

Look at generic keyword/search term eg “plastic shoebox”. 

Look at what number of results does Amazon return eg 1 of 2000 results.

Typically they like to have sub-1000 results. 
 Filter 3 DS Amazon quick view
Shows you the BSR of different products scrolling down the page. 

What BSRs are the products on the first page

Sub 30,000 BSR 

They don’t bother with tools that estimate sales data. 

They want real data from own sales. 

If everything is 100, 500 BSR, they get nervous because the market is big. 

When the Results are low and the BSR is low, they get excited (big demand, modest competition).

But if BSR is around 40,000, 200,000 not so exciting. 
Sweet spot
Roughly 1200, 5000, 6000 BSR  means…

Decent demand
Manageable competition. 

Subcategories and related items
Do the same with subcategories and related items:

Sponsored
Also viewed
Also bought

Then you find “hidden gem” products. 

It does take time- but by using those filters…

Putting in a generic/short tail keyword 

You start to see opportunity with bad listings. 
“Too big” BSR cf Units sales
They used to sell a wholesale item (satellite box from Labgear) that was BSR 2 and literally hundreds of units a day sold. 
Stephen considers a decent product - sells out in 6-9 months
Say it does £1000 in revenue per continent (US or EU), it’s still of interest!

That's £30 a day!

It’s still making you £300 profit at 30% 

It is better to build a business with 100 SKUs doing £1000 each month than one with 2 SKUs with the same revenue. 
Rolling with changes
They follow Amazon’s TOS -one day the all caps etc. will get wiped out by Amazon. 

Because selling lower competition products. 

Conversion rates can be as high as 60% 

Why?

No fitting issues
Don’t have to consider forever  
Not that much competition. 

Odd Niches work
For example a hunting mount (like a moose’s head) - a member had 60% conversion rate 

“Bacon bandages” - had something like 7,000 searches a month
Supplements 
Yes, you can make outrageous money selling supplements. 

But everyone is competing with you. 

You have to bid against others for Amazon ads space. 
Brand building
Their volume on Amazon is really high BUT had to build a massive brand off Amazon to start with. 

Ryan has a hair-replacement company

Amazon is just a distribution platform 

Website building