How To Create an Amazon Seller Central Account

By Buy Box Experts on August 26, 2015

You’ve worked through the question of whether you want to sell on Amazon. Now you’re ready to move forward with getting signed up or “registered” as a seller. So what happens when you register? What is now expected of you as an Amazon Seller? What steps should you take immediately to prepare your store for customers? We’ll walk you through setting up your account in Seller Central, and what you need to do before you list your first product on Amazon.

Getting Started as an Amazon Seller

To sign up, you can go through a few different self-service options:

  1. Go to services.amazon.com, then click on one of the “Start selling” links.
  2. Go to Sellercentral.amazon.com, then click on the “Register now” button or the “Selling on Amazon” link (both take you to services.amazon.com).
  3. Go to the bottom of the Amazon.com home page and click on “Sell on Amazon” under the “Make Money with Us” section.

It doesn’t really matter through which of these pages you start your registration process, as they all take you to the same signup page on services.amazon.com.

Next, you will need to decide what type of seller you want to be: a Professional Seller or an Individual Seller. Professional Sellers are typically sellers that plan to list more than few handfuls of products and expect to be regular sellers in the future, whereas individual sellers are typically sellers that have a small supply of product that they want to sell and then be done with selling. Being an Individual Seller makes more sense if you’re a college student wanting to sell some used textbooks at the end of term, or you’re cleaning out cupboards and found some old gifts you don’t want so you decide to sell them on Amazon, rather than selling them locally.

Differences Between an Individual Seller and a Professional Seller

There are five subtle but important tradeoffs between selecting a Professional Seller and an Individual Seller account on Amazon:

  1. Monthly fee:
    Professional Sellers pay a $39.99 monthly fee for their accounts to be active, even if they don’t list or sell anything. Individual sellers don’t have this monthly fee to contend with. (Amazon makes a decent amount of money from Professional sellers that keep their accounts active but don’t list any products for sale.)
  2. Listing fees:
    While Individual and Professional Sellers pay the same referral fees on product sales, Individual sellers are charged a $0.99/per item fee for each unit that sells. Professional sellers don’t have this fee. While an Individual Seller pays no monthly fee for your seller account, you will pay a per-item $0.99 fee on each sale in additional to the usual Amazon referral fees. Given that the Professional Seller monthly fee is $39.99, if you plan to sell more than 40 units a month, you may want to consider getting a Professional Seller account just for the purpose of saving on the per-item fee (plus there are many other advantages being a Professional Seller). Also keep in mind that you’re allowed to flip back and forth between being an Individual Seller and Professional Seller. This is worth remembering if you decide to stop selling as a Professional Seller for some period of time, and don’t want to be charged a monthly fee during that no-sales period.
  3. Shipping rates:
    Only professional sellers can set their own shipping rates they charge Amazon customers. If you plan to make shipping a profit center for you, it can be very important to be able to set your own shipping rates that you charge Amazon customers. But remember, Amazon charges you referral fees on the combined product price and shipping cost, so you’ll want to factor that referral fee into your shipping rates.
  4. Listing new products:
    Apart from a few minor exceptions, only Professional Sellers can create new listings for products never offered before on Amazon. Individual sellers can only add their offers to listings already created on Amazon.
  5. Gated categories:
    Only Professional Sellers can apply to be allowed to list and sell in the dozen or so categories of products that are currently gated on Amazon. These categories include Automotive & Powersports, Collectible Books, Collectible Coins, Entertainment Collectibles, Fine Art, Gift Cards, Jewelry, Music & DVD, Major Appliances, Sports Collectibles, Streaming Media Players, Video, DVD, & Blu-ray, and Watches.

Information You Need to Streamline Your Amazon Seller Registration

While the registration process is fairly straightforward and can be completed in under an hour, there are a number of pieces of information you want to have in advance in order to streamline the process. While the rules for signing up on Amazon differ from country to country, let’s focus on what it will take to get registered on Amazon.com, the US marketplace. While you can stop the registration process partway through and return to it later, it’s much easier to collect the following five pieces of information before you start the registration process:

  1. Your legal business name, address, and contact information.
  2. An email address that can be used for this company account. This email account should be set up already, as you will start receiving important emails from Amazon almost immediately
  3. An internationally chargeable credit card with a valid billing address. (If the credit card number isn’t valid, Amazon will cancel your registration.)
  4. A phone number where you can be reached during this registration process (so have your phone nearby during registration).
  5. Your tax identity information (your Social Security number or your company’s Federal Tax ID number). To submit your tax identity information, the registration process will take a brief detour to a “1099-K Tax Document Interview,” where your tax information is submitted and verified. Amazon is required by the IRS to collect your tax ID information so the IRS can be notified of any possible taxable earnings you make through your Amazon account. The actual responsibility of paying your taxes is strictly yours, but Amazon is required to report that you have been a revenue-collecting Amazon seller during the past tax year.

Once you’ve provided all of this information, you’re a registered seller on Amazon. Almost immediately, Amazon will encourage you to get started with listing your products, for once you list even a single product, you become a “Launched” seller, rather than just a “Registered, Not Launched” Seller. If you remain a “Registered, Not Launched” seller, Amazon will email you several times encouraging you to list products. While Amazon enjoys the $39.99 monthly fee it gets from you, Amazon is likely to make much more money from you on referral fees once you start selling products.

What to Know Before You Start Listing Your Products

Now before you start actually listing products on Amazon, there are some important administrative issues that are often overlooked by new sellers. These include:

Selling in Gated Categories

Amazon also calls these “Categories and Products Requiring Approval.” As we mentioned earlier, some dozen categories on Amazon are gated, meaning you need to get special permission to list/sell items in those categories. If you have products in those categories to sell, you should start the ungating request process immediately after getting registered, so you can take advantage of the “first 30-days free” program that is typically available on all new Professional Seller accounts. So if your request to sell in a gated category is turned down, you should still have enough time to decide whether to cancel your Professional Seller account before you are charged a monthly fee after the first 30 days has passed. If the majority of the products you plan to sell are in gated categories you don’t get permission to access, it may not make a lot of sense to continue efforts to be an Amazon seller.

Sign into Seller Central, and search for “Categories and Products requiring approval.” There you will see links to apply for permission to list your products in each relevant gated category. Depending on the category for which you are seeking approval, Amazon will ask you various questions or for various documents, images, or URLs to evaluate whether you should be ungated to sell in those categories. It is our experience that this process is one of meeting the bar rather than trying to surpass it. If Amazon asks you to show it a website on which you have at least 5 gated products available for sale, do just that, and make sure every single image you show Amazon meets Amazon’s image requirements. (You can learn more about image requirements by searching in Seller Central for that topic.) Answer all the questions honestly, and provide the requested documentation. If you can’t provide the necessary documentation, figure out how to get that documentation—but don’t try to get approved without providing all of the required information and answering all questions. We’ve seen sellers apply over and over to get approval, each time not properly completing the approval application process.

While you wait for your ungating request to be processed, you will not be able to list any products in those relevant categories, but can list products in any category that doesn’t require such ungating.

Setting Up Your Seller Profile

Once you are registered, you can access your seller account at https://sellercentral.amazon.com, Amazon’s portal for sellers. As a new seller, there are a number of settings to lock down—most that we recommend you do right up front as a newly registered seller. In the top right corner of the Seller Central home page, click on “Settings,” which will generate a drop-down list of options to discuss:

1. Account Info

In this section, please verify that all of your contact information is correct. You can edit information by clicking on the right-hand side “Edit” button.

If you plan to use an alternate Display Name rather than your legal name, here is where you enter that information.

Accurate “Return Information” is critical, especially if you plan to use any Fulfillment by Amazon services. Customers may return products to Amazon’s FBA facilities, and then if you designate Amazon to do so, it can ship those customer-returned items back to you; so make sure you have an appropriate place to which you can legitimately receive returned product. We have seen absurd situations where smaller sellers have generated decent volumes that generated enough returns that when returns were sent to their home address, they found that they didn’t have room to store all of the returned products at once.

If you plan to change the credit card in “Charge Method” section, please be aware that your account may be put on hold for 24 hours while the credit card number gets updated within Amazon’s systems. In fact, it is our recommendation that if you change your credit card settings, you should immediately call into Seller Support to talk them through this so as to shorten any time that your account is frozen while the new credit card number is verified.

2. Notification Preferences

Amazon is set up to send a lot of emails to sellers. But those emails are for many different purposes, so if you plan to have different people on your team address distinct issues, or you want to separate ORDER notification emails from all other emails (such as emails regarding reports, product recommendations, general news, or changes to your listings), this is the place to set your email preferences. It is worth carefully thinking through how you want to be notified of what’s happening in your Seller account. Because Amazon sends you a separate email for every single order you receive, it’s easy for a fast-growing Amazon seller to miss out on other interesting and relevant messages that got lost in the midst of all of these transactional emails.

The Listings Notifications and Report Notifications are critical to read, as you will be notified when one of your listings have been changed by another seller or merged by Amazon. Having your listings changed can be a very frustrating aspect of selling on listings shared with competitors, as a competitor may make an inaccurate change to the listing that results in your customers seeing the wrong information on a product that you are selling (if that happens, make sure to contact Seller Support asking for help getting the listing modified again).

3. Login Settings

In case you need to change your username or password to get into your Seller Central account.

4. Return Settings

Outline how you want your product returns to be handled. While FBA returns are handled already by Amazon, returns on any orders you fulfilled yourself will require you to have these instructions set up so the communication between you, Amazon and the customer returning the product is to your liking.

5. Gift Options

If you plan to offer gift messaging to customers that place orders that you fulfill yourself, you will want to fill this out. Customers like this functionality, but you may not the technical ability to handle this feature.

6. Shipping Settings

As a Professional Seller, you have the right to set your own shipping rates for orders that you will fulfill yourself. While you can set high shipping rates and long shipping times, keep in mind that these can reduce the likelihood that Amazon customers will select your offer over a competitor’s offer.

7. Tax Settings

While some of this will be useful background to have about your obligations to collect and pay taxes, our main call-out here is the “View/Edit your Tax Collection Obligations and Shipping & Handling and Gift Wrap Tax Settings” link – while you should check with your tax professional to get clarification, at a minimum you will need to pay state tax on any orders being shipped into the states where you have a physical business presence (“tax nexus”). Be sure to talk to your tax professional for clarification on this, though tax nexus usually includes states where your business has its own warehouses, offices, call centers. If you want Amazon to collect the state tax on orders shipped to those specific states where you have “tax nexus”, you will need to provide your state tax ID information here – if you don’t have your state tax ID setup, you will need to contact the specific state tax organizations immediately to get your state tax IDs. Please remember, while Amazon can collect your state tax for you, it remains your responsibility to pay your state taxes – it is up to you to find out the procedure for each state in which you will be paying state tax.

One common mistake by new Amazon sellers is to unknowingly not collect state tax on the Amazon transaction, and end up having to pay the tax out of pocket. While you may decide you are comfortable absorbing this tax cost yourself, most customers understand the need to collect state tax on their transactions and will pay it, so why not collect it explicitly! Furthermore, sales tax costs are NOT included in the calculation of the Buy Box algorithm, so you aren’t penalized as a seller if your customer happens to be in a state where you have to pay state tax.

8. User Permissions

In this section, you can allow people with other mail addresses to be able to access certain Seller Central sections or reports on your account. This is particularly useful if you have different people on your team supporting your Amazon account, but you don’t want them to see all of your information. On a need-to-know basis, you can provide people access to specific data they need, while restricting other information that they don’t see.

Keep in mind that if you have employees with access to Seller Central, and you let these employees go, it’s up to you to remove their access to Seller Central immediately. No one wants a disgruntled ex-employee to mess up your whole account.

9. Your Info & Policies

Take a few moments and describe your company for sellers in the “About Seller” here…this is helpful for customers that aren’t familiar with your company. While you may choose not to provide much usable information on your company, it helps to provide some high level overview of what you do / what types of products you specialize in. If you check other seller storefronts on Amazon, you can see how sellers choose to describe themselves.

If you have a company logo, upload it here. The logo will appear next to your company name on product detail pages.

If you have unusual characteristics to your products, you may want to address those in the “Frequently Asked Questions” section for customers to see. However, typically what happens is customers may send you one-off questions to clarify products or warranty terms. Realistically, you may choose to leave this section blank until you start to get the same types of product or warranty related questions from customers.

10. Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA)

If you are going to use FBA, you will want to fill in this information to make sure returns are sent back to the right place, and product return/disposal procedures with Amazon are in place in the way that you want them to be.

Feedback

As you get set up for customers and orders, keep in mind that Amazon keeps track of your performance metrics, including Customer Feedback. While you may piece together a scrappy process for asking Amazon customers to leave you feedback, we encourage you to consider using one of the inexpensive external tools like www.feedbackgenius.comwww.feedbackfive.comwww.feedbackexpress.com, or www.bqool.com/products/feedback-central so you can get the feedback engine running efficiently. While you want to have a good average feedback score, the number of pieces of feedback will also become an asset for your growing business, so it’s wise to streamline and automate the collection of feedback so you can focus on other parts of your business.

Buy Box Experts
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