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Businesses

Amazon is Raising Seller Fees For the Holidays To Manage Through Surging Inflation (cnbc.com) 49

In its latest effort to contend with soaring inflation, Amazon is planning to raise fulfillment fees during the holiday season, passing off some of its increased costs to the millions of merchants who rely on the site to sell their products. From a report: Starting Oct. 15, and running through Jan. 14, third-party sellers who use Fulfillment by Amazon, or FBA, will have to pay 35 cents per item sold in the U.S. or Canada, the company said Tuesday in an email to sellers. For merchants using FBA, Amazon handles the process of picking, packing and shipping items. The holiday fee comes on top of existing charges that sellers pay for using FBA services. Those costs vary depending on an item's size, category and weight.

Amazon said it's implementing an added holiday surcharge for the first time as "expenses are reaching new heights," making it harder for the company to absorb costs tied to the peak shopping season. "Our selling partners are incredibly important to us, and this is not a decision we made lightly," Amazon said in the email. Amazon's third-party marketplace has become the centerpiece of its dominant e-commerce business, as it now accounts for more than half of online retail sales. Because of Amazon's global reach and massive customer base, many retailers count on the company for the majority, and in some cases the entirety, of their business.

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Amazon is Raising Seller Fees For the Holidays To Manage Through Surging Inflation

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  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by butlerm ( 3112 )

      A 35 cent fee is so small it is hard to see why it would matter very much to anyone except an Amazon seller. Ordinary inflation is a much bigger deal that affects everyone, even those people already willing to pay the extra costs associated with purchasing small dollar items on Amazon - and those aren't trivial, more like a good way to pay twice as much as at the local store.

  • Cry me a river (Score:1, Insightful)

    God forbid the corporations that make BILLIONS settle for less profits when things get more expensive.
    • God forbid the corporations that make BILLIONS settle for less profits when things get more expensive.

      Why should they? Inflation means broadly higher prices that affect everyone. There is no reason that Amazon's sellers should be an exception.

    • That wouldn't be a successful corporation, and it wouldn't survive; it wouldn't have money to reinvest. This is a big part of Amazon's success, they keep plowing the money back into the business, creating better software systems, data centers, fulfillment, etc. The efficiencies they've created have brought down prices for their sellers, which is a big part of why the sellers use Amazon.
  • Record profits tho....

  • by zenlessyank ( 748553 ) on Tuesday August 16, 2022 @05:32PM (#62794945)

    Corporations try to make money and water is wet.

    • Corporations try to make ALL the money. FTFY
      • The corporations create goods and services people are willing to pay for, and they only make money if people keep supporting them; people value what the corporations provide enough to work to get it.

        Increasingly, I find this retarded.

        More consumer crap doesn't make people happy. Constant desire for cars, houses, trips, etc. just leads to more desire, more unfulfillment, and environmental problems.

        Corporations are people working for money to buy stuff from corporations.

        • Unfortunately, those that make the decisions that cause people to stop paying the corporation usually can be found at another corporation with 25% higher pay six months later.

          Besides maybe for Artisanal Builds, those that screw up won't be held accountable. Sigh.

  • by Fly Swatter ( 30498 ) on Tuesday August 16, 2022 @05:40PM (#62794967) Homepage
    Add it to the one for trash pickup, HVAC service calls, and just about everything else that uses vehicles. Ironic that fuel is currently dropping.
  • WTF Bezos (Score:1, Insightful)

    You have a rocket company, which is just the pinnacle of personal wealth excess.
  • This is the key (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 16, 2022 @05:42PM (#62794975)
    "Amazon's third-party marketplace has become the centerpiece of its dominant e-commerce business" - this is the most important phrase. Amazon has pushed all product liability to the 3rd Party Merchants, as well as responsibility for authenticity and legal compliance. This has given Amazon the ability to profit, risk-free, from counterfeits and knock offs, grey-market imports, the sale of stolen goods, etc. They managed to beat Walmart in the race to the bottom.

    They even have a scheme they enable to profit from stolen credit card data. Our online store gets dozens of "sales" from crooks trying to pay us with stolen credit cards, to fulfill orders that they've received through their Amazon listing for some popular product at half-price. It's a great scheme - Amazon gets their cut, the fraud seller gets paid, and if we don't detect the fraud then the end-user even gets their product. Only my company is left holding the bag. We've reported it to Amazon many times and it is never addressed.
  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Tuesday August 16, 2022 @05:44PM (#62794977)

    All they had to do was put their foot down and require nearly all their vendors and suppliers to use robot-friendly packaging instead of retail packaging. If all their suppliers provided products in various standardized boxes, the robots could handle pick and place instead of humans. I am sure vendors would rather package their products in bot-handleable formats instead of paying a higher seller fee.

    • Even if they could replace all human workers in the warehouses, data centers, and in the delivery trucks, the extra work will still cost more; they'll need to bring more robots online to meet the holiday surge. Maybe they'll rent robots that were being used for some other purpose, outbidding the other renter to get them... the busier times will always cost more.
  • Say what? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Tuesday August 16, 2022 @06:06PM (#62795005)

    Inflation is the rise in price of the cost of goods and services. To manage this, Amazon is going to . . . raise fees on sellers who will pass this on to the buyers.

    Sounds like a perfect plan to beat inflation.

  • by King_TJ ( 85913 ) on Tuesday August 16, 2022 @07:30PM (#62795159) Journal

    Even the US Post Office has historically done rate increases over the Christmas holiday season, and announced a couple weeks ago that they'd do it again this year. So paying more to ship during this peak time of year is pretty standard stuff.

    Can't really fault Amazon here for applying the same charges other shippers do.

  • Amazon has become in the last 10 years two things:
    1) Over priced
    2) Over priced flea market

    Why would I pay 1000% markup on an item, when I can walk into a brick & mortar shop and pay less than recommended retail?

    • I shop on Amazon so I don't have to spend my time or money getting to a store; if my car costs $.60/mile, and a round trip is 10 miles, it's often much cheaper for me to buy from Amazon.
  • Best way to deal with China taking over your listings and turning your inventory into a joke of plastic garbage and fakes is to cut profits for your sellers even more so that only China with shipping subsidized by our tax dollars can compete on your shitty fraud website.

  • by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Tuesday August 16, 2022 @07:53PM (#62795221)
    For anything I can't find in shops, whatever I find on Amazon, I look at the company's website to see if they sell directly online. I mean, why pay the middleman? A lot of companies have really improved their online sales & service, e.g. warehousing their goods within the same economic area so there are no customs & import duties to deal with, which can be unpredictable at best, so in many cases it works out pretty well. Anything to avoid giving money to Jeff Bezos.
    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <[ten.frow] [ta] [todhsals]> on Tuesday August 16, 2022 @08:51PM (#62795323)

      For anything I can't find in shops, whatever I find on Amazon, I look at the company's website to see if they sell directly online. I mean, why pay the middleman? A lot of companies have really improved their online sales & service, e.g. warehousing their goods within the same economic area so there are no customs & import duties to deal with, which can be unpredictable at best, so in many cases it works out pretty well. Anything to avoid giving money to Jeff Bezos.

      Works great if you're in the US, lousy if you're in Canada as most companies have really lousy international shipping options. Often they don't even tell you how they ship - and using UPS is a great way to tack on 40% in fees and things UPS loves to ding you for. Whereas on Amazon the shipping can be a lot cheaper and you can often pre-pay the taxes (the "Amazon Import Fees" so you get charged nothing.

      Now, if you can get them to do express shipping things are much different as most of those fees go away - UPS and FedEx figure if you're paying for premium delivery, they won't nickle and dime you on a million fees. It's stupid, but it's often cheaper that way - you pay like $20 more and it'll come the next day and be cheaper than if you went the slow way. But that's only if the company allows you to pick a shipping option - not really an option for international.

      The number of companies that do it well - including pre-paying the duties and taxes, is increasing so it just comes to your door, along with non-ridiculous overpriced shipping and all that is slowly increasing. But we're not there yet, and there's still way too many companies that refuse to ship internationally, forcing one to use Amazon and others.

      • Yeah, I live in Canada for a bit. It is shitty in many ways. In other parts of the world, buying from the manufacturer works pretty well.
  • All the top economic experts, including the brightest person I know, agree on that. So get your facts straight, man!

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