How to Not Get Kicked Off Amazon Marketplace (And Get Reinstated If You Are)

Amazon, Amazon.com, Amazon Marketplace, marketplace, online marketplace, Marketplaces, ecommerce, ecommerce platforms, fulfillment, Fulfillment By Amazon, Shipping/Delivery, shipping, packagingIf some or all your livelihood comes from selling products on Amazon.com, it’s important to know what type of actions can lead to a temporary hold or even a suspension of your account. Equally important: what to do to get reinstated once Amazon takes action against you.

According to two online selling experts who spoke with Multichannel Merchant, the number-one reason for Amazon taking action against an account is if they suspect the seller is offering counterfeit goods.

“These days with so many people on Amazon selling new and used DVDs, and with counterfeits so good and the sources so plentiful, any merchant could think they’re selling legitimate versions when they’re not,” said Jordan Malik, founder of FindSpotter and author of several bestselling books on how to sell on Amazon.com and eBay. “The next thing you know Amazon gets five complaints from buyers who suspect they’re fishy, and that’s enough to lead to a suspended account, sometimes without warning.”

Malik said in some instances, Amazon may impose temporary holds against legitimate sellers who are posting items that have come under scrutiny, such as counterfeit consumer goods from overseas. This can take place when a manufacturer puts heat on Amazon because their brands are being damaged and revenues lost.

Another cardinal sin, according to Scot Wingo, founder and CEO of ChannelAdvisor: trying to remarket to Amazon users. “Those are Amazon’s customers; you’re just borrowing them,” Wingo said. “You can put information about your business in the box, but you can’t email them or call them, or solicit their business in any way. If you’re caught that’s a serious violation, one that’s hard to come back from.”

Both Malik and Wingo said a poor order defect rate, which can be caused by things like too many returns, shipping wrong products, bad customer reviews or poor shipping performance, often leads to an Amazon account hold or even suspension.

“If your performance falls into the pink zone and then into the red zone, you could have issues,” Wingo said. “But this can be remedied by conducting a root cause analysis. Is it your fulfillment system, are certain products getting bad reviews, is it your carrier? Usually there are things you can do to resolve all of those issues.”

If a seller is using Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA) to get their products to customers, various packaging issues can land them in jeopardy, Malik said, including scanning labels in the wrong place, cloth items that aren’t poly-bagged or grocery items too close to the expiration date set forth by Amazon’s requirements. “If they see you’ve had too many of those issues, they may place your account on hold until you remedy them,” he said.

The good news, Wingo said, is that Amazon gives merchants a fair amount of time to resolve their issues before being kicked off. Once an account is suspended, however, it could be months before Amazon lets the merchant back on. “In that case you have to have a strong business case as to why they should let you back into their ecosystem,” he said.

When Amazon does initiate an action against a seller, they should keep their tone professional and civil in all communications. The worst thing, Wingo and Malik said, is to get confrontational or nasty, or even threaten to take legal action – which is foolish in any event against a behemoth like Amazon.

“I’ve talked to sellers who have responded politely to Amazon and gotten reinstated, whether it was over a misrepresented product, customers not getting refunds or too much negative feedback,” Malik said. “Because of this approach, being polite and non-aggressive, those sellers have an opportunity to clean up the mess and continue selling on the platform.”

Other tips:

  • Gather all your facts, and make a business case for your reinstatement: highlight your track record on Amazon (tenure, volume of sales, quality of feedback, etc.); state specifically how the issues are being addressed and note they are a one-time event.
  • Be persistent: if seller support doesn’t get back right away, keep after them, restating your situation and how it’s being rectified.
  • Don’t put all your eggs in one basket: sellers should be active on other marketplaces (eBay, Etsy, Craigslist, etc.), so a temporary hold on your Amazon account is just a speed bump. Also consider creating a second account in a relative’s name as a fallback.

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