address in my invoice and my seller account
I saw the invoice video on seller Uni. no mentions on prep center address
Can someone please explain it to me as if i was 10 years old.
*correct me if im wrong for the following....
On the retail website (ex. nike) before checking out, i put my business address in the billing section right?
And then in the shipping section i put my prep center address right?
my business address aka is my home address (And is is the only address registered in my seller account) do i need to add my prep center address aswell in my seller account?
ty
address in my invoice and my seller account
I saw the invoice video on seller Uni. no mentions on prep center address
Can someone please explain it to me as if i was 10 years old.
*correct me if im wrong for the following....
On the retail website (ex. nike) before checking out, i put my business address in the billing section right?
And then in the shipping section i put my prep center address right?
my business address aka is my home address (And is is the only address registered in my seller account) do i need to add my prep center address aswell in my seller account?
ty
0 replies
Seller_rI7BZIczK8iAC
I hope "NIKE" is just an example. If not, know that you cannot sell NIKE on Amazon. If you send Nikes to FBA, Amazon will confiscate and destroy your items and suspend your account.
(Btw. a retail webseite NEVER gives invoices but only receipts. And Amazon will ask you an INVOICE from a authorized distributer and a "Letter of Authorization" from the brand owner)
Seller_nRFmxiQg4EGrw
Doesn't really matter what you do on any retail website.
That's NOT how you source inventory to sell on Amazon. Even without brand restrictions (such as you would face from Nike), Amazon doesn't want people selling stuff here that customers can buy elsewhere for less.
If you source from a retail website to sell on Amazon, best case is that you'll face "High Price Alerts" for selling higher than the same product is available elsewhere on the web (you can be a little higher; but not enough to cover fees and additional costs and still make a profit). Worst case is that you will get a complaint, you won't have proper invoices, and Amazon will keep all your inventory AND all your money; you'll be left with nothing.
If you are considering buying retail to sell on Amazon, I suggest you put your account on vacation, go through Seller U, spend a couple of weeks reading through the forum, and forget everything you learned on YouTube or TikTok.
Topher_Amazon
Hi @Seller_YoD89cShnLySl, I'm strongly underscoring the above replies here. If you're using a retail website I would strongly advise you to stop and review all policies for selling on the platform.
Guidelines to source products to sell on Amazon (Seller University) would be a good place to start as well as Invoice requirements for when you apply to sell.