0:23 - I need to set up a Roku in my workspace. I always try to have something interesting/informative/motivational streaming in the background while my hands are busy.
Love having it in there! Can be a distraction when something finishes though so i will usually make a playlist of stuff i want to watch for the day and let it cycle through that
Thanks for the breakdown of how it all works. As a fellow Etsy Seller, when you mentioned Amazon in a previous video, I was intrigued. Any chance you could do a video breaking down how the cost compare between Amazon, Etsy, etc?
Learned a lot and would appreciate a how to get first time setup with fba for 3d printing. How many units to start with and expected time frame fom shipped to live on prime the first time. Would not hurt to have some tips on the cards you sent with the package. Like your style of videos. Thank you and keep up the great work.
I would be interested in something like that too. I used to do FBA retail clearance arbitrage years ago. Inventory was too hit or miss to be consistent. Do you do it through Amazon Handmade?
@@TheMountainMaker Honestly after looking into handmade the way you are currently doing it seems like a better option for me. It's also pretty much the same as what I used to do.
I don't, I honestly just find and print items that I believe will sell or that I think are fun or serve a purpose to me. The beauty of 3D printing is I don't have any additional upfront costs to print and take some photos for the listing. If it doesn't sell, then I will eventually give it away or include it in an order of a like item for free.
nice videos. i like your process. I download the dumbbel model to print for myself for my desk but every time I try to screw the bar into the weight it stocks half way and breaks off! do you have your remix anywhere so I can download it? thanks
I just modified the dumbbell rod in OrcaSlicer to be slightly smaller, maybe by .20mm in the x and y. Then I added a negative modifier for the dumbbell ends that was the same depth as the slot that are already there, and the diameter was just large enough to cut off the threads. I can upload the 3MF file from Orca but keep in mind, the modifications i made can still be moved around as they are not baked into place. I will post a link when I am able to upload it. Likely on the free section of my Patreon.
In my case, they will keep them as long as I want them to because I pay for the Professional Plan, im sure there are some limitations or fees if it goes too long, but for the Individual it will allow you to keep them there for 6 months I believe without any sales and then you incur added fees. I will dive a little deeper into that though as I plan for the next FBA video. Thanks for the support!
Keep in mind, I know nothing about the Australian markets, or the cost of living/doing business over there, but from an outsiders perspective, I would think getting items to Amazon and having them handle your logistics would save a lot of money in the long run, especially if your orders tend to be from outside of Australia, as i've heard shipping to and from can be expensive. I have shipped a handful of items there with etsy and those rates are discounted pretty heavily so I would imaging sending one large shipment to the US or UK would be far cheaper than sending out say 50 individual items, even with FBA fees and such.
Super fun to watch your videos, i have my own amazon products listed with FBA but i cant really seem to get any sales. Do you have any tips? And these products i sell i have made sure theres no competiors too
I plan to go a little more in depth at the end of the year into both etsy and amazon sales vs expenses, profit margins on each platform, etc. What I can say, is make sure your listing photos are clean and show exactly what the product is and for. For instance, my Festool/Orbital Sander Mounts, the listing photo is 2 photos blended together to show the holder both in use with a sander in place, as well as the individual holder itself. For the Dumbbells, I show an image of the Card Holder in use with one of my customers review photos, then make sure on the following few images to show it in use, as well as dimensions, use cases, etc. If I have more than one color or variation, I will make sure all of those get shown as well in the following images. With all that said, I am fairly new to amazon myself, having only been selling on there for 3 or 4 months so I am still definitely in the learning stages myself. Thanks for the support and be on the lookout for those other videos!
This is exactly the video I've been looking for. I already sell Amazon FBM, but looking to do Prime shipping for a few of my 3D printed items. I tried to set it up once, but it completely removed my FBM listing not what I wanted to do. I want to keep FBM and FBA active incase I have issues getting my replacement stock accepted by Amazon.
I’ve never tried selling both FBM and FBA for the same product as I setup amazon as more of a way to gain more passive sales that I don't have to worry about in a sense. Ship a batch once, and let them handle those orders while I take care of Etsy and my website.
@@TheMountainMaker There's a way to do both and I'd have to research how again. When your FBA is active you can disable the FBM, but if there are delays in acceptance or just Amazon delays I'd like to activate FBM. My holdup has been how to handle 3D printed items and the packaging/shipping to Amazon. I think I've hashed out all the issues in my products (my own designs) I sell and now want to do FBA to potentially get more sales, but less hassle having to mail everything out myself. Thanks for posting this video.
What are your print settings for the dumb bells? I tried printing one for myself on my P1S and it's really difficult to get the parts to screw together.
I explained it in a previous comment, but I am currently working on a short video showing my print settings and how I modified the original file to get it to where its easy to assemble
Careful using scales that go up to large amounts. Unless you invested a fortune in one, they commonly can be skewed to one end or the other. Either very accurate at the higher end, or the lower end. I have seen even high end scales be up to 30% off at the far ends of their ranges. This became highly annoying when it came to doing inventory at a factory for example, where we had to use 3 scales. One to do a per item weight, one to do a medium bulk count (using the per item to then get a count of 100 or 1000 of an item), then on our large scale we could use the medium bulk weight to do larger item counting at higher accuracy. Your 25lb box on a 400lb rated scale for example could be 24lbs, which while not numerically seeming far off, when hits a shipper, you get hit with fees for not reporting high enough weight. Amazon seems to account for this and overestimates the weight a bit.
Thanks for the heads up! The larger one I had was from uline, although it wasn't not an expensive one, I think around $199 or so. I know the weight on that little one I was using is off by a few ounces from what the post office tells me so I will usually account for that but that one only goes up to 11 or 12 lbs so its pretty limited
@@TheMountainMaker Its well worth it to invest in some weight gauges. You can get them relatively cheap (and 3d print a nice storage box to keep them clean and organized). I used to have a set that went from 1oz to 10lbs (was not cheap as usually that is like 4 separate sets of gauges, but found at an industrial closeout sale) and would give me a great idea where the scales sweet spot were. If you have a common weight you seem to ship, you can get a set that focus around that range or even individual gauges. Ive scrapped some scales immediately and the set paid for themselves in shipping savings just by knowing "Oh this scale is reading 6 oz higher than actual weight, so I can say buffer my weight input when I put it on this shipping info 4oz and save a buck. Or vise versa and find the scale is reading light and prevent risk of not paying enough for shipping.
@@TheMountainMaker thank you and that's good to know. I sent my package about week and a half ago and it still not showing yet. Hasn't closed in seller central yet. But also the note abiut west coast warehouse.. it's still more expensive to sent there I'm a westcoast here in seattle and it was cheaper to send it east for me. I sent a packaged east and here west to see which one would be faster for me to get checked in. Thank you for the advice Def something I fumbled with at the beginning.
I have had it take almost 3 weeks before, and with all that said, I am fairly new to selling on Amazon so have only sent 8 or so shipments total to them for various items. The dumbbells, I have sold 72 of them on amazon in the last 3 months and have the 60 more heading in there now from this video so I will do an update when everything has been processed and accepted to show the exact timeframe from shipment to Prime Ready.
I recommend them for a one time special use item and also have care instructions on the card. Assuming they are washing them with soap and hot water, they shouldn’t be any worse than your standard plastic kitchen utensils, aside from the layer lines but i use a .16mm layer height and ironing on the top surfaces to close any of the gaps
To add to that, i would also recommend soaking them in soap and hot water. The beauty of that QR code is when customers scan it, it will also take them to our website with care instructions
@@TheMountainMaker Not sure how much .16mm and ironing helps, but it's something. I appreciate the way you instruct the customers on how to use the product. Makes a lot of sense to me. Thanks for answering! 🙇♂
I've looked through most of your comments and couldn't find anyone else curious about it, so I'll ask: On the box you shipped with all the dumbbells and sander holders and cookie cutters, what was the cost to make and ship them and how much did you collect from Amazon as they were sold? In other words, do you actually make any money, or is it just something to do? China keeps all the prices down so it's hard for me to imagine someone at home in the US being able to price such things at a price that would provide a profit. Thank you
I’d heard using 3D prints for food purposes was a problem because you could get microbe growth in between the layer lines. Did you find a way to fix that?
I would recommend them for one time use or to soak/wash with soap and hot water immediately after use. The card included has care instructions as well as the qr code to our website where there are further care instructions.
@@TheMountainMaker I signed up for a Handmade account but it's been a struggle to learn and figure out. I think the normal seller is the way to go. Thanks for the reply.
The normal seller account i think takes a little bit more to get setup versus handmade but from what I’ve seen the selling and business side of it is better setup on the normal seller side. Honestly haven’t dug into it enough to say for sure though.
I sell on amazon a 3D printed product that I make in 2 different colors (Black or White). I never ship more than 30 at a time and only ship the same color in a box. Amazon still messes up my inventory count way too often. It's the most frustrating part of dealing with them. They say I only shipped 28. I'll send them a picture of the 30 in a box ready to ship and I still lose the dispute. Hope you have better luck with them. I sell most of my products through Amazon so I can't drop them. Also, I never get a sale through FBM, only FBA. Have the product listed on both.
It is frustrating for sure. I have yet to encounter the inventory count issues except for my first shipment and everything since then has been on track but I will definitely keep my eye out for missed items. I think with amazon, FBM is very difficult to succeed in unless you are either selling a boat load of items or a popular item and customers don't mind waiting for extra delivery times, or if its a larger item that simply cannot be fulfilled by FBA. We are definitely too used to Prime Shipping when shopping on Amazon and without FBA, you don't get that Prime Shipping option.
This is good info but also I'm a bit skeptical. Has partnering with them really been worth it? Looking at the "dumbell business card holder" section, it looks like your 2 shipments were to amazon vine reviewers and you've been underpriced by everyone else already selling the same models.. maybe that's just the cost of getting established, I think the tool holders will sell better at least. I'm just genuinely curious, so I ask things at face value of 'is this viable?' Also as someone who shops a good deal on there and reviews things, I think it would absolutely be worth NOT being listed as 'generic' so you have an actual click-through storefront of sorts, but have no idea what sort of fees that could accrue.
I’m fairly new to selling on Amazon, only been on there since September so things are starting off slower as for reviews. So far I’ve had 73 sales of the card holders on Amazon and we’ve done over 300 sales of the card holders alone on Etsy totaling over $5k this year so far. If you watch my previous video about finding models to print, i go through my Etsy backend to show a couple of my top sellers.
Also, the Crafty, more unique and less functional items seem to sell far better than the parts already available for people to purchase such as the tool holders, at least in my case. Thanks for the comment
@@TheMountainMaker thanks for the in-depth replies! I'm glad the numbers are working out for you then. I'm surprised crafty sells better, but maybe it's somewhat because those with tools know how to make their own solutions, more often than not. Always glad to get some insight on things like this, have sold a few printed things I designed myself, but certainly not enough to even pay off my printers. More a curiosity of what can sell, and why it does. I tend to design things that are mostly practical, or augment an existing thing.
Hey boss be really careful with your inserts. Amazon has a very strict policy against pulling customers away from their website by pointing to yours. I worked with a company who had their store shut down because of this. Just some advice, you do you. Love the channel and videos!
@TheMountainMaker I looked into it deeper once I wrote that and it appears the biggest culprits are trying to contact customers for reviews or review changes and sending them someone else for discounts or lower prices. Those will get you banned for sure. Just branding, not sure, may be safe but stay frosty
Yeah i definitely remember seeing things about asking for reviews and getting your shop shutdown. I may just remove the coupon code part of it and keep it as a care guide/thank you card
@TheMountainMaker should be good then according to their policies. Id just keep their policy close by incase they ask you about it 🤙 keep up the great work bro!
Hey there, Im not sure how much I have to offer in regards to the market in India. For anything Amazon related, I would suggest reaching out to an Amazon support specialist over there who Is more familiar with that region as they would be better suited to handle your question than I can be. If its not related to the Amazon side of it, I'll do my best to help you out so ask away!
Really appreciate the “walk with me” approach to show all the details on the FBA shipping process!
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for the support!
Thank you! I have learned a lot how to ship to Amazon from your video.
I am glad that the video was helpful to you!
This is a great video. It has given me lots to think about. Thank you
Glad it was helpful!
Thanks for sharing this info. I am not ready to go this far but it is good info to have for the future.
Glad it was helpful!
0:23 - I need to set up a Roku in my workspace. I always try to have something interesting/informative/motivational streaming in the background while my hands are busy.
Love having it in there! Can be a distraction when something finishes though so i will usually make a playlist of stuff i want to watch for the day and let it cycle through that
Thanks for the breakdown of how it all works. As a fellow Etsy Seller, when you mentioned Amazon in a previous video, I was intrigued. Any chance you could do a video breaking down how the cost compare between Amazon, Etsy, etc?
Video is in the works!
Thats a great idea
Learned a lot and would appreciate a how to get first time setup with fba for 3d printing. How many units to start with and expected time frame fom shipped to live on prime the first time. Would not hurt to have some tips on the cards you sent with the package. Like your style of videos. Thank you and keep up the great work.
Thanks for the support! I plan on making a video like that soon, was actually thinking about it last night when packing up orders! So stay tuned!
I would be interested in something like that too. I used to do FBA retail clearance arbitrage years ago. Inventory was too hit or miss to be consistent. Do you do it through Amazon Handmade?
@@WattsLane I don't, I use a normal Seller account and sell Generic but may look into Handmade
@@TheMountainMaker Honestly after looking into handmade the way you are currently doing it seems like a better option for me. It's also pretty much the same as what I used to do.
I’m going to watch this video probaby another 100 times
I appreciate the support!
I recommend setting up FBM and FBA for each item you sell.
Great idea! Thanks for the tip
Love your videos. Keep up the great work. Quick question. Do you use any research tool to find out what products to sell?
I don't, I honestly just find and print items that I believe will sell or that I think are fun or serve a purpose to me. The beauty of 3D printing is I don't have any additional upfront costs to print and take some photos for the listing. If it doesn't sell, then I will eventually give it away or include it in an order of a like item for free.
learned a lot. thanks!
I'm glad you found the video useful!
nice videos. i like your process. I download the dumbbel model to print for myself for my desk but every time I try to screw the bar into the weight it stocks half way and breaks off! do you have your remix anywhere so I can download it? thanks
I just modified the dumbbell rod in OrcaSlicer to be slightly smaller, maybe by .20mm in the x and y. Then I added a negative modifier for the dumbbell ends that was the same depth as the slot that are already there, and the diameter was just large enough to cut off the threads. I can upload the 3MF file from Orca but keep in mind, the modifications i made can still be moved around as they are not baked into place. I will post a link when I am able to upload it. Likely on the free section of my Patreon.
How long will amazon keep your items if they don't sell? Yes, please do,a step by step setup vid on the amazon sellers programs
In my case, they will keep them as long as I want them to because I pay for the Professional Plan, im sure there are some limitations or fees if it goes too long, but for the Individual it will allow you to keep them there for 6 months I believe without any sales and then you incur added fees. I will dive a little deeper into that though as I plan for the next FBA video. Thanks for the support!
thanks for the video! I am in Australia but will give amazon a crack!
Keep in mind, I know nothing about the Australian markets, or the cost of living/doing business over there, but from an outsiders perspective, I would think getting items to Amazon and having them handle your logistics would save a lot of money in the long run, especially if your orders tend to be from outside of Australia, as i've heard shipping to and from can be expensive. I have shipped a handful of items there with etsy and those rates are discounted pretty heavily so I would imaging sending one large shipment to the US or UK would be far cheaper than sending out say 50 individual items, even with FBA fees and such.
Super fun to watch your videos, i have my own amazon products listed with FBA but i cant really seem to get any sales. Do you have any tips? And these products i sell i have made sure theres no competiors too
I plan to go a little more in depth at the end of the year into both etsy and amazon sales vs expenses, profit margins on each platform, etc.
What I can say, is make sure your listing photos are clean and show exactly what the product is and for. For instance, my Festool/Orbital Sander Mounts, the listing photo is 2 photos blended together to show the holder both in use with a sander in place, as well as the individual holder itself. For the Dumbbells, I show an image of the Card Holder in use with one of my customers review photos, then make sure on the following few images to show it in use, as well as dimensions, use cases, etc. If I have more than one color or variation, I will make sure all of those get shown as well in the following images.
With all that said, I am fairly new to amazon myself, having only been selling on there for 3 or 4 months so I am still definitely in the learning stages myself. Thanks for the support and be on the lookout for those other videos!
This is exactly the video I've been looking for. I already sell Amazon FBM, but looking to do Prime shipping for a few of my 3D printed items. I tried to set it up once, but it completely removed my FBM listing not what I wanted to do. I want to keep FBM and FBA active incase I have issues getting my replacement stock accepted by Amazon.
I’ve never tried selling both FBM and FBA for the same product as I setup amazon as more of a way to gain more passive sales that I don't have to worry about in a sense. Ship a batch once, and let them handle those orders while I take care of Etsy and my website.
@@TheMountainMaker There's a way to do both and I'd have to research how again. When your FBA is active you can disable the FBM, but if there are delays in acceptance or just Amazon delays I'd like to activate FBM. My holdup has been how to handle 3D printed items and the packaging/shipping to Amazon. I think I've hashed out all the issues in my products (my own designs) I sell and now want to do FBA to potentially get more sales, but less hassle having to mail everything out myself. Thanks for posting this video.
What are your print settings for the dumb bells? I tried printing one for myself on my P1S and it's really difficult to get the parts to screw together.
I explained it in a previous comment, but I am currently working on a short video showing my print settings and how I modified the original file to get it to where its easy to assemble
Careful using scales that go up to large amounts. Unless you invested a fortune in one, they commonly can be skewed to one end or the other. Either very accurate at the higher end, or the lower end. I have seen even high end scales be up to 30% off at the far ends of their ranges. This became highly annoying when it came to doing inventory at a factory for example, where we had to use 3 scales. One to do a per item weight, one to do a medium bulk count (using the per item to then get a count of 100 or 1000 of an item), then on our large scale we could use the medium bulk weight to do larger item counting at higher accuracy. Your 25lb box on a 400lb rated scale for example could be 24lbs, which while not numerically seeming far off, when hits a shipper, you get hit with fees for not reporting high enough weight. Amazon seems to account for this and overestimates the weight a bit.
Thanks for the heads up! The larger one I had was from uline, although it wasn't not an expensive one, I think around $199 or so. I know the weight on that little one I was using is off by a few ounces from what the post office tells me so I will usually account for that but that one only goes up to 11 or 12 lbs so its pretty limited
@@TheMountainMaker Its well worth it to invest in some weight gauges. You can get them relatively cheap (and 3d print a nice storage box to keep them clean and organized). I used to have a set that went from 1oz to 10lbs (was not cheap as usually that is like 4 separate sets of gauges, but found at an industrial closeout sale) and would give me a great idea where the scales sweet spot were.
If you have a common weight you seem to ship, you can get a set that focus around that range or even individual gauges. Ive scrapped some scales immediately and the set paid for themselves in shipping savings just by knowing "Oh this scale is reading 6 oz higher than actual weight, so I can say buffer my weight input when I put it on this shipping info 4oz and save a buck. Or vise versa and find the scale is reading light and prevent risk of not paying enough for shipping.
How long does it take from receiving the package to it showing prime elegable?
It depends on how many items you send and how many different skus but typically 2 weeks or 14 business days in my experience
@@TheMountainMaker thank you and that's good to know. I sent my package about week and a half ago and it still not showing yet. Hasn't closed in seller central yet. But also the note abiut west coast warehouse.. it's still more expensive to sent there I'm a westcoast here in seattle and it was cheaper to send it east for me. I sent a packaged east and here west to see which one would be faster for me to get checked in. Thank you for the advice Def something I fumbled with at the beginning.
I have had it take almost 3 weeks before, and with all that said, I am fairly new to selling on Amazon so have only sent 8 or so shipments total to them for various items. The dumbbells, I have sold 72 of them on amazon in the last 3 months and have the 60 more heading in there now from this video so I will do an update when everything has been processed and accepted to show the exact timeframe from shipment to Prime Ready.
I'm curious about the cookie cutters. FDM is complicated to be food safe. How are you handling this with your prints?
had the same question
petg, and pla are mostly food safe
I recommend them for a one time special use item and also have care instructions on the card. Assuming they are washing them with soap and hot water, they shouldn’t be any worse than your standard plastic kitchen utensils, aside from the layer lines but i use a .16mm layer height and ironing on the top surfaces to close any of the gaps
To add to that, i would also recommend soaking them in soap and hot water. The beauty of that QR code is when customers scan it, it will also take them to our website with care instructions
@@TheMountainMaker Not sure how much .16mm and ironing helps, but it's something. I appreciate the way you instruct the customers on how to use the product. Makes a lot of sense to me. Thanks for answering! 🙇♂
I've looked through most of your comments and couldn't find anyone else curious about it, so I'll ask: On the box you shipped with all the dumbbells and sander holders and cookie cutters, what was the cost to make and ship them and how much did you collect from Amazon as they were sold? In other words, do you actually make any money, or is it just something to do? China keeps all the prices down so it's hard for me to imagine someone at home in the US being able to price such things at a price that would provide a profit. Thank you
I was wondering how that work... Thanks!
Glad the video was helpful!
I’d heard using 3D prints for food purposes was a problem because you could get microbe growth in between the layer lines. Did you find a way to fix that?
I would recommend them for one time use or to soak/wash with soap and hot water immediately after use. The card included has care instructions as well as the qr code to our website where there are further care instructions.
Are you selling on Amazon using a Handmade account or just normal Amazon seller account?
I’m using a normal Seller Account but have looked into Handmade in the past
@@TheMountainMaker I signed up for a Handmade account but it's been a struggle to learn and figure out. I think the normal seller is the way to go. Thanks for the reply.
The normal seller account i think takes a little bit more to get setup versus handmade but from what I’ve seen the selling and business side of it is better setup on the normal seller side. Honestly haven’t dug into it enough to say for sure though.
I sell on amazon a 3D printed product that I make in 2 different colors (Black or White). I never ship more than 30 at a time and only ship the same color in a box. Amazon still messes up my inventory count way too often. It's the most frustrating part of dealing with them. They say I only shipped 28. I'll send them a picture of the 30 in a box ready to ship and I still lose the dispute. Hope you have better luck with them. I sell most of my products through Amazon so I can't drop them. Also, I never get a sale through FBM, only FBA. Have the product listed on both.
It is frustrating for sure. I have yet to encounter the inventory count issues except for my first shipment and everything since then has been on track but I will definitely keep my eye out for missed items. I think with amazon, FBM is very difficult to succeed in unless you are either selling a boat load of items or a popular item and customers don't mind waiting for extra delivery times, or if its a larger item that simply cannot be fulfilled by FBA. We are definitely too used to Prime Shipping when shopping on Amazon and without FBA, you don't get that Prime Shipping option.
This is good info but also I'm a bit skeptical. Has partnering with them really been worth it? Looking at the "dumbell business card holder" section, it looks like your 2 shipments were to amazon vine reviewers and you've been underpriced by everyone else already selling the same models.. maybe that's just the cost of getting established, I think the tool holders will sell better at least. I'm just genuinely curious, so I ask things at face value of 'is this viable?' Also as someone who shops a good deal on there and reviews things, I think it would absolutely be worth NOT being listed as 'generic' so you have an actual click-through storefront of sorts, but have no idea what sort of fees that could accrue.
I’m fairly new to selling on Amazon, only been on there since September so things are starting off slower as for reviews. So far I’ve had 73 sales of the card holders on Amazon and we’ve done over 300 sales of the card holders alone on Etsy totaling over $5k this year so far. If you watch my previous video about finding models to print, i go through my Etsy backend to show a couple of my top sellers.
Also, the Crafty, more unique and less functional items seem to sell far better than the parts already available for people to purchase such as the tool holders, at least in my case. Thanks for the comment
@@TheMountainMaker thanks for the in-depth replies! I'm glad the numbers are working out for you then. I'm surprised crafty sells better, but maybe it's somewhat because those with tools know how to make their own solutions, more often than not. Always glad to get some insight on things like this, have sold a few printed things I designed myself, but certainly not enough to even pay off my printers. More a curiosity of what can sell, and why it does. I tend to design things that are mostly practical, or augment an existing thing.
Hey boss be really careful with your inserts. Amazon has a very strict policy against pulling customers away from their website by pointing to yours. I worked with a company who had their store shut down because of this. Just some advice, you do you. Love the channel and videos!
Thanks for the heads up, I’ll look into it. I’m always learning!
@TheMountainMaker I looked into it deeper once I wrote that and it appears the biggest culprits are trying to contact customers for reviews or review changes and sending them someone else for discounts or lower prices. Those will get you banned for sure. Just branding, not sure, may be safe but stay frosty
Yeah i definitely remember seeing things about asking for reviews and getting your shop shutdown. I may just remove the coupon code part of it and keep it as a care guide/thank you card
@TheMountainMaker should be good then according to their policies. Id just keep their policy close by incase they ask you about it 🤙 keep up the great work bro!
I am from India and need your help
Hey there, Im not sure how much I have to offer in regards to the market in India. For anything Amazon related, I would suggest reaching out to an Amazon support specialist over there who Is more familiar with that region as they would be better suited to handle your question than I can be.
If its not related to the Amazon side of it, I'll do my best to help you out so ask away!