Super Vendor Accounts: Unlocking Growth for Amazon Agencies

Overview

Imagine unlocking Amazon Vendor Central benefits for multiple brands under one umbrella—without each brand needing its own vendor account. That’s exactly what some forward-thinking agencies are achieving with a “Super Vendor Account” model.

In an episode of the Marketplace Masters webinar by MerchantSpring, Louise Armour of Rosetta Brands shared how her agency uses a single Vendor Central account to run over 300 brands, effectively acting as the merchant of record for all of them. This innovative approach is reshaping how Amazon agencies operate, offering smaller brands access to first-party (1P) selling advantages and giving agencies new revenue streams.

For Amazon agency professionals, the Super Vendor model opens up game-changing possibilities—but it also comes with unique challenges and responsibilities. In this article, we’ll explore how this model works, the strategic advantages it offers, the criteria for success, and what it means for the future of agency services on Amazon.

Understanding the “Super Vendor Account” Model

At its core, a super vendor account model means an agency owns and operates a single Amazon Vendor Central account that serves multiple brand clients. In a traditional vendor arrangement, each brand would need its own invite-only Amazon vendor account. Here, the agency’s account becomes the vendor of record for many brands’ products. The agency purchases inventory from the brands (based on Amazon’s purchase orders) and sells it to Amazon, which then sells to consumers as usual. The brands’ role is largely to produce and supply products to Amazon’s fulfillment centres as requested, while the agency handles everything else – from listing setup and content optimisation to managing purchase orders, logistics, advertising, and account health.

“We basically purchase the stock from our clients based on demand from Amazon... and we deal with everything else, for multiple brands.” — Louise Armour, Rosetta Brands

In practice, the agency operates like a hybrid of a distributor and a full-service Amazon agency. However, unlike a generic distributor, a super vendor partner works closely with each brand and maintains Brand Registry ties so that Amazon recognises the agency as an authorised brand representative. This is crucial – Amazon has explicitly moved away from dealing with third-party distributors without brand authorisation. Every client brand must enroll in Amazon Brand Registry (with a registered trademark) and grant the agency access, ensuring Amazon sees the agency’s vendor account as aligned with the brand owner. In effect, the agency’s Vendor Central account becomes a centralised hub through which dozens or hundreds of brands can sell on Amazon’s 1P platform under one roof.

It’s important to note that Amazon remains the retailer to the end consumer in this model (as with any Vendor Central relationship). The difference is who Amazon’s “vendor” is – instead of 300 separate vendor accounts, Amazon issues purchase orders to one agency-owned account, which in turn coordinates with 300 brands to fulfill those orders. This consolidation introduces efficiency and scale, but it also means the agency carries significant responsibility for performance, compliance, and risk across all the brands it represents.

Benefits of the Merchant-of-Record Model for Agencies and Brands

Why adopt this consolidated vendor approach? Done right, the super vendor account model can be a win-win for both the agency and its client brands. Here are the key benefits and strategic advantages of the merchant-of-record style model:

  • Access to Vendor Central for Smaller Brands: Gaining an Amazon vendor account is notoriously difficult today – Amazon typically only invites well-established brands it “needs,” and many growing or niche brands will never get an invite. This model gives small and mid-sized brands a chance to enjoy first-party selling benefits via the agency’s account. The agency essentially unlocks Vendor Central for brands that would otherwise be limited to third-party (3P) marketplace selling. “We’re giving them access to a platform they might not ever get the chance to be on,” Armour explains, levelling the playing field with larger competitors. Even some larger brands use the model to improve their terms or offload vendor management hassles.

  • Pre-Negotiated Programs & Better Terms: Agencies operating a super vendor account can negotiate favourable Amazon terms and program access that individual brands often can’t. For example, Rosetta Brands’ account has access to Vendor Central perks like Born to Run (for launching products with initial POs), Subscribe & Save discounts, Amazon Vendor Services (AVS) support, and the Pallet Ordering (PICS) program. These programs can boost sales and reduce operational friction, yet many small vendors or new vendor accounts wouldn’t qualify for them initially. Clients piggyback on the agency’s robust terms – without paying the hefty fixed co-op or variable fees Amazon might normally charge for things like AVS. In fact, brands working through the agency avoid most Amazon fees altogether: there are no surprise chargebacks or accrual fees deducted, since the agency handles those costs in their own margin structure.

  • Cost Efficiency & Predictable Profitability: The merchant-of-record model can dramatically improve cost predictability for brands. Instead of navigating Amazon’s complex fee structure (which can include marketing development funds, damage allowances, chargeback penalties, etc.), brands simply sell their product to the agency at an agreed transfer price. The agency makes a small margin on each unit and often charges a flat monthly management fee. This means brands know exactly what they’ll earn per unit and pay per month, allowing for clear forecasting. “They have a fixed fee with us that’s not going to change – there’s no surprise costs coming out of nowhere, so it just streamlines it,” Armour notes. The agency, meanwhile, achieves economies of scale by spreading operational costs across many brands. Running one big account for multiple brands yields efficiencies in staffing and systems that individual brands or smaller agencies can’t match.

  • Full-Service Amazon Expertise: When brands partner via a super vendor account, they effectively get a full Amazon team on demand. The agency provides end-to-end service, including onboarding, item setup, inventory management, advertising, content creation, compliance, finance/chargeback reconciliation, and more. Many brands – especially smaller ones – lack in-house resources or expertise in these areas. With this model, a brand can outsource the entire Amazon operation to specialists who “live and breathe Amazon.” 

    Rosetta Brands, for instance, has dedicated staff for each function (account managers, ops, graphic designers, ad specialists, etc.) that clients wouldn’t otherwise have access to. This often translates into stronger sales performance and fewer mistakes. As Armour puts it, if you’re going to do Amazon vendor, “you’ve got to be on it. Amazon [is] changing things all the time. They don’t make it easy. Using us to support them can make a big difference and actually help make Amazon profitable” for the brand.

  • Chargeback and Compliance Shield: A huge pain point for vendors is Amazon’s strict compliance rules – missed shipping windows, improper labelling, or data errors can trigger costly chargebacks and shortages. In this model, the agency typically absorbs those chargeback costs as part of its service. “We don’t just reduce chargebacks, we absorb chargebacks from Amazon on our end so you don’t have to pay them at all,” Armour says of their approach. Of course, the agency works hard to minimise these fees (since they hit its own bottom line), but the brand is largely insulated from unexpected deductions. The agency also manages claims, disputes, and vendor scorecard compliance, sparing brands the headache of navigating Amazon’s vendor chargeback system. This risk-sharing arrangement is a major incentive for brands to partner up, and it forces the agency to maintain high operational standards across all clients.

  • Simplified Logistics – “Ship to One Warehouse”: A perhaps underappreciated benefit is logistic simplicity. Rather than each brand shipping to various Amazon fulfillment centres for each PO, a consolidated vendor account often allows batched, streamlined shipments. Rosetta’s model has clients send one consolidated delivery per week to a designated Amazon warehouse, which can dramatically reduce freight complexity and cost. Amazon aggregates orders, and the agency’s infrastructure handles distributing those products within Amazon’s network as needed. For brands, this means less frequent pick-pack-ship cycles and a more efficient supply chain integration with Amazon.

  • Aligned Incentives for Growth: Finally, the financial structure of this model aligns the agency’s incentives with the brands’ success. Because the agency typically earns a percentage margin on each unit sold (instead of a flat retainer or ad spend commission alone), it is “on the hook to drive success,” as host Paul Sonneveld noted. The agency makes more revenue only if it grows the brands’ sales on Amazon, which encourages proactive optimisation and marketing. This contrasts with some traditional agency models where fees are fixed regardless of outcome. The result is a true partnership mentality – the agency essentially acts as an invested distributor, not just a consultant, which can lead to more aggressive promotion and problem-solving to grow sales.


What Makes a Brand a Good Fit? Key Criteria for Success

While the super vendor approach can accommodate brands of all sizes, certain criteria increase the likelihood of success (and acceptance) in this model. Louise Armour notes that Rosetta Brands works with everything from startup products to household names, but they evaluate each prospective client for a few fundamental qualifications:

  • Reliable Product Supply: The brand should have a steady, year-round supply of its core products. Consistency is key – items that frequently go in and out of stock will “mess with Amazon’s algorithm” and undermine sales momentum. A tight core range of products that can be kept in stock is preferable to a sprawling catalogue with sporadic availability. Before onboarding, the agency will ensure the client can forecast and maintain inventory for Amazon demand.

  • Sufficient Pricing and Margin: Products need a healthy retail price (RRP) that leaves Amazon (and the agency) enough margin to make a profit. If an item is too low-cost or has razor-thin margins, Amazon’s retail algorithms may eventually suppress it for lack of profitability. In practice, this means brands should focus on products with an appropriate price point for Vendor Central. The agency can advise on minimum pricing thresholds; very cheap or low-margin items might be better suited for Seller Central (3P), where the brand controls pricing.

  • Willingness to Invest in Advertising: Amazon is “a pay-to-play platform” for new and growing brands. Success under this model typically requires the brand to allocate budget for Amazon Advertising (PPC campaigns, Sponsored Brands, etc.). The agency will run campaigns on the brand’s behalf, but the brand must fund the ad spend and be prepared to scale it as sales grow. Advertising drives the demand that generates Amazon purchase orders, especially in competitive categories or for brands without prior Amazon presence. In short, brands need to be ready to support their products with marketing funds – those that do are rewarded with faster growth and more purchase orders from Amazon.

  • Trademark & Brand Registry: A registered trademark and enrollment in Amazon Brand Registry are mandatory. Brand Registry not only legitimises the relationship (as discussed, Amazon wants to see the agency tied to the brand’s IP), but it also grants access to enhanced content, brand protections, and certain marketing programs. Agencies will typically require proof of trademark and access to the brand’s Registry account during onboarding. This allows them to control content and address listing issues or infringements swiftly on the brand’s behalf. Brands without a trademark will need to obtain one (or use Amazon’s IP Accelerator program) before joining the program.

  • Quality Assets & Reviews: The brand should ideally have high-quality product content (images, descriptions, videos) or be willing to collaborate to create them. Since the agency will optimise listings, starting with good imagery and product data expedites the ramp-up. Additionally, existing customer reviews (if the product has been sold elsewhere or on 3P) can help establish credibility once the 1P listing goes live. While lack of Amazon reviews isn’t a deal-breaker (many brands start from zero on Amazon via this model), the brand should be prepared to support review generation efforts (e.g. Amazon Vine or email follow-ups) as part of the launch strategy.

  • Operational Readiness: Even though the agency absorbs much of the operational burden, brands still need to deliver products on time and in compliance with Amazon’s requirements. This means having proper GS1 barcodes for all products, ensuring packaging meets Amazon’s prep and labelling standards, and being able to ship orders into Amazon’s fulfillment centres within the specified window (often just a few days after a purchase order). The agency will educate new clients on these expectations up front and even do test shipments or sample checks. But if a brand consistently struggles with supply chain reliability or quality control, it will jeopardise the relationship. In sum, a strong operational backbone – or willingness to improve in that area with the agency’s guidance – is necessary for success.

Armour confirms that brands who meet these basic criteria can thrive under the model, whether they are completely new to Amazon or have tried Vendor/Seller Central before and hit roadblocks. The beauty of the approach is its inclusivity: “Any size business can fit into this, which is the beauty of it,” she says. Smaller regional brands get a chance to play in the big leagues of 1P, while larger brands can refocus their resources elsewhere and let the agency optimise Amazon for them. The key is that both parties commit to a growth mindset – the brand provides the product, basic assets, and investment, and the agency provides the Amazon expertise and elbow grease to scale up sales.

Challenges, Risks, and How to Mitigate Them

Running a multi-brand vendor account is not without challenges. Agencies considering this model must be prepared to tackle a unique set of risks and operational complexities. Louise Armour shared several hard-won insights about what it takes to make a super vendor account run smoothly:

  • Ensuring Brand Registry & Authorisation: As noted, one of the biggest challenges is making sure every client has proper trademark protection and brand registry in place. Amazon will not hesitate to shut down vendor sales if it suspects a reseller scenario without brand approval. Rosetta Brands learned early that “Amazon doesn’t want to work with [distributors] that aren’t linked directly to a brand”, so they now insist on having that direct link for all clients. For agencies, this means educating prospects that brand authorisation is non-negotiable and often assisting them in the Brand Registry enrollment process. The upside is, once Amazon sees the agency as an official brand agent, many potential listing and buy box issues simply vanish. Mitigation strategy: check trademark status at the start, help brands get registered, and maintain updated Brand Registry roles for the agency.

  • Vendor Central’s Daily Quirks: Even at a large scale, agencies are “not immune” to the daily frustrations of the Amazon platform. Listing errors, catalogue inconsistencies, sudden requirement changes, and the like still occur across different brands. The difference is that a specialised agency is more equipped to deal with them. Since “all we do is Amazon,” Armour notes, her team can resolve issues faster and more systematically than a typical brand could. They also have direct Amazon vendor manager support (especially for new initiatives like expanding into Europe) to escalate problems when needed. Still, running one account that spans many brands means any Amazon policy change or glitch can have a multiplied impact. The mitigation here is having a robust internal process: dedicated team members monitoring the account health dashboard, responding to Amazon notifications immediately, and sharing knowledge of fixes across all brand ASINs.

  • Supply Chain & Compliance Risks: With the agency as the sole vendor on record, its account health depends on each client’s fulfillment performance. Amazon is very strict about on-time shipment, proper case packaging, and delivery accuracy. A single brand repeatedly delivering late or short could jeopardise the entire vendor account’s metrics. To control this, Rosetta Brands invests heavily in client onboarding and education. They set clear expectations with brands from day one about Amazon’s requirements, often having the operations team personally guide the client through the first shipments.

    They may request product samples to verify packaging compliance, and they “flag with the client” any issue that arises so it can be fixed before the next order. In essence, they train brands to become good Amazon vendors under their umbrella. If a particular metric starts sliding (e.g., chronic late deliveries), the agency addresses it with the brand quickly, up to and including passing along certain charges if absolutely necessary (Louise mentions late delivery fees might be one of the few passed back to the brand). Overall, however, the agency shoulders most of the compliance burden – and bears most of the financial risk.

  • Absorbing Fees and Chargebacks: One bold aspect of this model is the agency’s assumption of many vendor fees to make the experience seamless for clients. Armour confirms that Rosetta “absorbs a lot of the chargeback costs. It’s one of our USPs (unique selling points)”. Everything from carton content label misses to small data errors – the agency covers those penalties rather than billing the brand. The only exception might be egregious, avoidable issues like consistently late deliveries, which they’d discuss with the client. Carrying these costs incentivises the agency to continuously improve internal processes (to minimise fees) and puts pressure on them to “do a fantastic job” operationally.

    For brands, it’s obviously a great benefit – no surprise deductions eating into their Amazon receivables. However, new agencies adopting this model need to price their margins correctly to account for these potential costs. It’s a volume game: with enough brands, the occasional chargeback fee is offset by the aggregate revenues. Still, agencies must rigorously track chargebacks and root causes. Many have implemented automated checks (or even AI tools) to catch issues before they result in fees, from validating shipment labels to monitoring delivery appointments.

  • Navigating International Expansion: If the agency expands the vendor account to new Amazon regions, there can be complex regulatory hurdles. Armour mentioned that launching their UK-based vendor account into European Amazon markets was “more challenging than we initially thought,” due to country-specific regulations and post-Brexit complications. They leaned on Amazon’s support and eventually saw growth, but any multi-brand vendor model looking to operate across multiple geographies needs to be mindful of compliance in each locale (for example, E.U. packaging laws, VAT registration for the agency, import/export rules for client products, etc.). The lesson is to expand cautiously and leverage Amazon’s internal teams or local experts when available.

Despite these challenges, Armour is confident that with the right systems in place, the super vendor approach is manageable and scalable. The risk factors largely centre around maintaining quality control and consistent service across a large portfolio of brands. By setting clear expectations, investing in client training, and proactively addressing problems, an agency can protect both its own interests and those of its brands. In Louise’s words, communication and education at the start of the journey are critical – it prevents surprises down the line and keeps everyone aligned. When done well, the result is a stable, efficient operation that truly feels “win-win” for the brands and the agency alike.

We absorb chargebacks on our end so you don’t have to pay them.” — Louise Armour on one of the key advantages of the model

Driving Growth through Advertising and Analytics

A cornerstone of succeeding with a multi-brand vendor account is expert Amazon Advertising and careful performance analytics. Because the agency is accountable for selling through inventory purchased from clients, it must actively drive demand on Amazon – simply having products listed is not enough. Here’s how advertising and data come into play in the super vendor model:

“Pay-to-Play” Advertising: As mentioned, Amazon’s marketplace heavily favours brands that invest in advertising. Rosetta Brands makes advertising virtually mandatory for its clients, often as a condition of working together. The agency manages advertising centrally (using Amazon’s ad console for Vendor Central, which allows handling campaigns across all products in the account). Each brand contributes an agreed ad budget, and the agency’s PPC specialists allocate that budget to Sponsored Product ads, Sponsored Brands, and other campaign types to maximise visibility. By aggregating this activity, the agency can optimise across a vast portfolio, learning what strategies work in one category and applying them to others. Brands receive reports (often monthly) showing ad spend, sales attributed, ACOS, etc., to keep transparency. The key benefit is that brands get professional campaign management and optimisation without hiring their own teams. From day one, new products are put into Amazon’s advertising auction to start generating the sales velocity Amazon expects for increased purchase orders.

Content Optimisation & Retail Readiness: Advertising might bring traffic, but converting that traffic is equally important. Agencies, therefore, put strong emphasis on retail readiness – ensuring product pages have effective titles, bullet points, images, A+ Content, and are in the right categories. Louise Armour emphasises having “fully optimised titles, great imagery”, and all the basics right, especially for year-one launches. Often, the agency will revamp a brand’s Amazon content on onboarding, using its in-house content team. This sets the foundation so that when ads drive shoppers to the page, they are more likely to buy, improving conversion rate and sales rank. It’s a virtuous cycle: better content -> higher conversion -> more Amazon retail orders -> even better organic placement over time.

Measurement & Key Metrics: Operating at scale requires robust analytics. Successful multi-brand vendors monitor a mix of retail and marketing metrics to gauge performance. Armour notes that her team tracks Net PPM (Net Pure Profit Margin) on the Amazon retail side – essentially the true profitability after Amazon’s terms – as a primary health metric. They also watch Subscribe & Save subscription rates and operational performance metrics (like chargeback rates or fill rates) closely. On the advertising front, they focus on TACoS (Total Advertising Cost of Sales) and ROAS (Return on Ad Spend) to ensure ad spend is efficient relative to total sales. A declining TACoS, for instance, indicates organic growth outpacing ad spend, a positive sign for a maturing product. These metrics are often aggregated at both the brand level (to report to clients) and the account level (to manage overall account health). Many agencies, including MerchantSpring’s clients, use specialised analytics platforms to consolidate Vendor Central data across brands for easier reporting and insights.

Impressive Growth Trajectories: When all the pieces come together – solid supply, aggressive advertising, optimised content, and diligent analytics – the growth can be dramatic. Armour shared anonymised examples of brand outcomes to illustrate the model’s potential. In one case, a small brand that had never sold on Amazon before joined Rosetta’s platform; from its first year to its second year, its Amazon sales jumped ≈1,700%. (Yes, 17x growth – essentially going from near-zero to a substantial new revenue channel.) Even after that explosive first full year, they expect another ~80% growth in year three. In another case, a larger brand that already had some Amazon presence still saw a 50% increase in sales in its first year under the agency’s management. These numbers underscore a common pattern: the biggest gains often occur in the first 12-24 months of switching to the super vendor model, as the agency fixes prior inefficiencies and scales up advertising from a standing start.

It’s worth noting that not every brand will see quadruple-digit growth – results vary by category and how under-optimised the starting point is. But across the board, brands typically experience a significant “level up” in sales and profitability when an expert team is handling their Amazon retail relationship. Even brands that tried to go it alone on Vendor Central often realise they were leaving money on the table. Armour mentions that some clients left to attempt running Amazon themselves, only to return within a year upon seeing the complexity and slower growth they faced solo.

Finally, both agencies and brands should maintain realistic expectations. “Amazon is definitely a journey. It’s not a get-rich-quick overnight situation,” Louise Armour reminds us. The super vendor model can accelerate and smooth that journey, but it still requires patience and consistency. Some products take time to gain traction; some months will be better than others. The agency’s role is to keep executing the playbook – optimising listings, refining ad campaigns, ensuring in-stock rates, and leveraging any available Amazon programs (like deals or Vine reviews) to boost momentum. Brands, for their part, need to consistently fulfill orders and collaborate on marketing opportunities (e.g. sharing social media traffic during big Amazon events). Together, they build a sustainable Amazon channel that continues to grow year after year. The data-driven approach agencies bring means small improvements are constantly identified – whether it’s tweaking keywords for SEO, adjusting pricing, or dialling up ad spend on a high-ROI keyword. Over time, these incremental gains compound into dominant performance.

The Future of Multi-Brand Vendor Models in the Amazon Ecosystem

The emergence of the super vendor account model comes at a fascinating time in the Amazon landscape. Amazon has publicly signalled a tightening of its Vendor Central program, focusing on larger brands and nudging others toward the third-party marketplace. In fact, in early 2024 and 2025, many vendors with under $10 million in annual Amazon sales were dropped from Vendor Central as part of Amazon’s strategic realignment. On the surface, this trend might seem at odds with the multi-brand vendor concept – if Amazon “doesn’t want distributors,” why would it work with an agency acting as an aggregated vendor?

The reality is that Amazon appears to welcome these agency-led models when done properly. From Amazon’s perspective, an agency like Rosetta Brands essentially transforms a collection of smaller brands into one large, professionally managed vendor. Amazon gets the best of both worlds: it still deals with a single entity (simplifying its vendor management), and it knows that entity is tightly linked to brand owners via Brand Registry and transparent agreements. Louise Armour argues that the model is “favourable to Amazon because we’re giving them what they want. We’ve got the brand registry… they’re getting the service that they want as well”. Rather than resisting the trend, Amazon has continued to work closely with super vendors, even providing dedicated vendor managers to support them in growth and compliance efforts.

Looking ahead, we can expect more agencies and service providers to adopt the merchant-of-record strategy, especially in regions like Europe and Australia, where vendor opportunities still exist for emerging brands. The competitive differentiation for agencies is clear: operating a super vendor account requires significant investment and expertise, so not every agency will do it – those that can successfully build the model have a compelling value proposition to attract clients. In essence, these agencies become aggregators of brand retail operations, somewhat akin to how Amazon aggregators buy and consolidate third-party sellers, but here it’s done via service contracts and a shared account rather than ownership. Over the next 2-3 years, we may see a handful of leading Amazon agencies in each region running large multi-brand vendor accounts, while others stick to traditional 3P account management. The ones that venture into this space will likely develop deeper relationships with Amazon’s retail teams and possibly even negotiate exclusive programs or terms as their scale grows.

Another dimension of the future is technology and automation. Handling hundreds of brands and thousands of ASINs in one account is a massive operational undertaking. Armour predicts that “AI and automations” will play an increasing role in managing tasks that are currently manual. We might see AI tools for automatic listing optimisations, predictive ordering (forecasting Amazon’s POs more accurately to help brands plan production), instant translation and localisation for expanding listings globally, and intelligent alert systems that catch anomalies in sales or account health in real time. In fact, Rosetta Brands has already begun implementing automations for aspects of their workflow and plans to expand these efforts. Amazon itself is introducing more automation in Vendor Central (e.g. the Born to Run program is a step toward algorithm-driven ordering for new products). Agencies that leverage advanced tools will maintain an edge in efficiency and scalability, allowing account managers to focus on high-level strategy while machines handle the number-crunching and routine fixes.

One open question is how Amazon’s own policies might evolve. If Amazon in the future decided to further restrict Vendor Central or enforce even stricter requirements (say, a higher revenue threshold), super vendor accounts could face new hurdles. However, the consensus seems to be that Amazon will always need a 1P vendor component for certain categories and customers, and they value partners that help them manage it smoothly. By consolidating smaller brands under an expert intermediary, Amazon actually reduces its workload – it’s easier to manage one big vendor than 300 small ones. As long as the agency model continues to deliver consumer satisfaction (in-stock products, Prime-eligible fulfillment, strong content) and commercial value (profitable terms for Amazon, increased selection), it’s likely to remain not just viable but increasingly important.

In summary, the super vendor account approach aligns with Amazon’s drive for efficiency and high standards, even as it bucks the traditional one-vendor-per-brand norm. We’re witnessing a reshaping of the agency landscape: agencies are no longer just advisors but actual commerce operators on Amazon. This blurs the line between retailer and service provider in intriguing ways. It also offers a lifeline to brands caught in Amazon’s Vendor Central purge – through an agency, they can essentially outsource their first-party sales rather than abandon them entirely.

Conclusion: A New Path for Amazon-Focused Agencies and Brands

The Super Vendor Account model represents a powerful new path for Amazon agencies looking to differentiate and add value. By becoming the merchant of record, agencies can unlock Vendor Central’s full potential for clients, drive rapid growth, and create a scalable revenue stream for their own business. Brands, in turn, get to enjoy the benefits of first-party selling – from Prime distribution and higher conversion rates to relief from operational burdens – without the usual barriers to entry or resource drain. It’s a classic example of innovation in the marketplace: as Amazon’s ecosystem matures, service models adapt to fill gaps and seize opportunities.

For agencies contemplating this approach, the takeaway from Louise Armour’s experience is clear: success requires deep Amazon expertise, robust processes, and a commitment to partnership with your brands. It’s not enough to simply sign up multiple brands; you must invest in infrastructure, risk management, and continuous optimisation to keep that consolidated account healthy and profitable. The rewards, however, can be substantial – for many agencies, this is a chance to elevate themselves from being one of many service providers to an indispensable growth engine for their clients.

For brands, especially those stuck on the sidelines waiting for a Vendor Central invite or struggling with their 3P efforts, the message is equally encouraging. The door to Amazon’s first-party channel isn’t closed if you find the right partner to walk you through it. A super vendor agency can effectively “incubate” your brand on Amazon, fast-tracking you to capabilities and scale that would take years to build alone. And they do so while insulating you from common pitfalls and unpredictable costs that have frustrated many vendor sellers.

In the end, the Super Vendor Account model underscores a broader theme: collaboration is key in the Amazon era. Brands, agencies, and Amazon itself each stand to gain by pooling their strengths – brands bring great products, agencies bring operational and marketing excellence, and Amazon brings the retail platform and customer base. Together, they can create a consumer experience that drives sales and mutual success.


If you’re intrigued by this model and want to learn more, we highly recommend watching the full webinar with Louise Armour for a deeper dive into the nuances of running a multi-brand vendor account. It’s packed with practical insights and real-world Q&A on the topic. And if your agency is looking to innovate or your brand is seeking help to thrive on Amazon, don’t hesitate to reach out for a conversation. At MerchantSpring, we’re passionate about equipping Amazon agency professionals with the tools and knowledge to excel – whether through thought leadership content like the Marketplace Masters series or our analytics platform that supports both agency and merchant-of-record models.

Watch the on-demand webinar for more insights, subscribe to our Marketplace Masters podcast for future expert discussions, or contact us at MerchantSpring to discover how our solutions can support your Amazon growth journey.


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