Overview
Amazon Vendor logistics can make or break a vendor’s profitability. Yet mastering this aspect is notoriously complex – much of it isn’t even Googleable. In an episode of the Marketplace Masters webinar, host Paul Sonneveld sat down with Oliver Tomaschewski (Founder & Managing Director of DiCommerce GmbH) to demystify Amazon’s logistics programs and share how vendors and Amazon agency professionals can optimise supply chain operations. Oliver’s insights unveil a four-part framework of programs and best practices that can slash costs, reduce Amazon chargebacks, prevent those dreaded shortage claims, and ultimately boost your Vendor Central margins. This comprehensive guide synthesises those expert strategies – reframing them into a clear playbook for Amazon vendors and the agencies that support them. We’ll walk through each pillar of Amazon’s vendor logistics framework, highlight practical steps (and quick wins) to streamline your processes, and show how embracing these programs leads to a leaner, more profitable Amazon vendor business.
Why Amazon Vendor Logistics Matter More Than Ever 🚚💡
Amazon’s retail operations run on razor-thin timelines and strict compliance standards. Every inefficiency – whether a delayed pickup, mislabeled pallet, or missing data – can trigger vendor chargebacks, inflate your costs, or even hurt sales by causing stockouts. For Amazon agency professionals managing vendor accounts, logistics isn’t just a back-end concern; it’s central to vendor performance and profitability (Navigating 2024 Amazon Vendor Logistics Changes). Oliver Tomaschewski points out that while Amazon provides many 1P (first-party) supply chain programs, information is scarce. “It’s completely impossible to just Google these topics… we had to learn by collecting information over years,” he notes, reflecting on his decade of experience on both the vendor and agency side (Mastering Vendor Logistics for Greater Profit). The upside? Once you master Amazon’s logistics programs, you gain levers to reduce costs, improve on-time performance, and negotiate better terms with Amazon – ultimately giving your business or clients a competitive edge in the marketplace.
“As bigger you are and the more sales you have, the easier it is to negotiate. With a vendor manager, you can discuss larger delivery windows or minimum order quantities – at the end, it’s a win-win situation for both sides.” — Oliver Tomaschewski
In the current climate, with rising fulfillment costs and Amazon enforcing compliance strictly, optimising logistics is a must. From Amazon freight options to packaging mandates, vendors have to adapt or risk shrinking margins. Let’s break down the four key pillars of Amazon vendor logistics that Oliver outlined – and how to leverage them.
The 4 Pillars of Amazon Vendor Logistics Optimisation 🔑
Oliver’s framework segments Amazon’s vendor logistics initiatives into four main categories: (1) Inbound & Outbound Delivery Options, (2) Shipment Consolidation, (3) Order & Inventory Optimisation, and (4) Receiving, Packaging & Chargebacks. Each pillar encompasses several Amazon programs or best practices. Below, we explore each category in depth – including what programs exist, who can use them, and how they benefit your operation.
1. Expanding Inbound & Outbound Delivery Options 📦🚚
The first pillar covers how products get into Amazon’s fulfillment network and out to customers. Amazon offers multiple programs to tailor this flow:
- They Pay vs. We Pay (Collect vs Prepaid Freight): This setting determines who handles inbound shipping. In the default “They Pay” mode, the vendor arranges transport to Amazon and bears the cost. In “We Pay” (or We Pay the Freight), Amazon’s carriers pick up goods from you, and Amazon covers transport (in practice, your terms account for it). Larger vendors with an Amazon Vendor Manager can sometimes negotiate We Pay for smoother logistics. One big advantage of Amazon arranging pickup is easier scheduling of delivery appointments – Amazon’s own trucks have preferred access to FCs (fulfillment centres), reducing missed delivery windows and delays (Mastering Vendor Logistics for Greater Profit). Smaller vendors, however, typically won’t get this option without enough volume.
- Amazon Freight: Amazon Freight is an optional LTL/FTL (less-than-truckload/full-truckload) shipping service that Amazon offers to vendors. Think of it as Amazon acting like a 3PL carrier. You can book Amazon Freight on a per-PO basis as an alternative to, say, DHL or FedEx Freight. It’s especially suited for full truckloads of goods going to Amazon (How to Optimize Your Logistics in North America). Vendors report that using Amazon’s freight service can improve on-time pickup rates and reduce shortage claims, since Amazon has more control end-to-end. In Oliver’s experience, when Amazon handles transport (either via Amazon Freight or We Pay arrangements), “delivery slots and issues like shortages tend to improve” – Amazon’s carriers prioritise those loads.
- FC Direct: A program for high-volume shippers, FC Direct allows you to deliver full truckloads directly to a specific Amazon FC without intermediate hand-offs. Normally, a vendor’s full truck might stop at a carrier hub for sorting before final delivery to Amazon, which eats up precious time. Under FC Direct, a truck leaves your warehouse and goes straight to an Amazon fulfillment centre’s dock. This accelerates delivery, making it easier to hit tight ship windows. However, Amazon typically offers FC Direct only to sizable vendors regularly shipping full trucks of product – it’s a negotiated privilege, not a toggle in Vendor Central (Mastering Vendor Logistics for Greater Profit). If you’re big enough to fill trucks consistently, ask your Amazon contact about FC Direct to shorten lead times.
- Vendor Flex: Ever wish Amazon would handle fulfillment from within your own warehouse? Vendor Flex makes that a reality. Amazon sets up a mini-fulfillment centre in your facility – complete with Amazon staff and equipment – to pick, pack, and ship your products directly to customers (Mastering Vendor Logistics for Greater Profit). Your inventory stays on your shelves (improving stock flexibility) until a customer order comes in; then Amazon’s team at your site fulfills it. Vendor Flex effectively turns your warehouse into an Amazon node, saving Amazon storage space and often speeding delivery to nearby customers. It’s great for slow-movers or bulky items that you don’t want to constantly send to Amazon’s FCs. Amazon usually offers Vendor Flex to large vendors with significant volume and suitable warehouse space. Note: You retain ownership of goods until Amazon ships an order, at which point Amazon “buys” the item from you.
- Direct Fulfillment (Dropship): Direct Fulfillment (often called Amazon Dropship) is similar in spirit to Vendor Flex – your inventory stays with you – but you handle the pick and pack. When Amazon is out of stock or chooses not to pre-stock an item, it can route the customer order to you via Vendor Central’s Direct Fulfillment portal or EDI. You then ship the item directly to the end customer, but it shows as shipped by Amazon (Prime-eligible) to the buyer (Mastering Vendor Logistics for Greater Profit). This program is a lifeline for avoiding lost sales when Amazon FCs run dry; it essentially lets you backstop Amazon’s inventory. However, Amazon holds Direct Fulfillment vendors to high-performance SLAs – fast shipping, low defect rates, on-time tracking – since Amazon’s name is on the line. “Amazon is very KPI-driven. If you don’t deliver in time, they’ll extend the delivery promise on your product page. If it says ‘2–3 weeks’, no one will purchase the product,” Oliver warns, underscoring that Direct Fulfillment only works if you can meet Prime-level speed (How to Optimize Your Logistics in North America). Amazon will test your warehouse capabilities before fully enabling this.
- Direct Import: For vendors manufacturing in Asia, Amazon Direct Import can streamline your supply chain. Amazon arranges to pick up containers at the port of origin (e.g. in China) and handles international freight, customs clearance, and delivery into its FCs. Essentially, Amazon becomes your freight forwarder. This program reduces complexity and can lower shipping costs if you lack a global 3PL, but it usually requires negotiation and certain volume (e.g. full container loads) to implement. Direct Import is limited to imports from Asia to Amazon’s markets. If you qualify, Amazon taking charge of inbound international logistics can save weeks in lead time and potentially improve freight rates through their scale.
Key Takeaway: Evaluate which inbound/outbound programs fit your scale. Smaller vendors might stick to default freight terms, but larger ones can unlock big benefits by using Amazon’s logistic muscle – whether via Amazon Freight for domestic shipping or Direct Import for international. And Direct Fulfillment (dropship) is a no-brainer backup if you can meet the requirements, as it prevents stockouts on Amazon and keeps sales flowing.
2. Consolidating Shipments for Efficiency 🤝📦
The second pillar is all about consolidation – shipping smarter, not harder. Amazon’s ordering system can sometimes fragment purchase orders (POs) across dozens of fulfillment centres, which is a nightmare for your warehouse (imagine picking 50 small orders instead of 5 big ones). These programs help aggregate demand:
- Perfect Inbound Consolidation Service (PICS): PICS is a program designed to consolidate Amazon’s orders into fewer, larger POs (Mastering Vendor Logistics for Greater Profit). Without PICS, a weekly Amazon order might direct you to ship products to 10 different FCs in a country – forcing your team to break up and pack many small shipments. With PICS, Amazon instead aggregates demand into a single larger PO shipped to one primary FC (or a couple of FCs), which then redistributes to others internally. For example, instead of sending 10 pallets to 10 FCs, you send 100 pallets to one FC. This reduces your internal picking, packing, and admin costs dramatically. It also tends to reduce receiving errors – one big shipment to one warehouse is easier for Amazon to handle without mistakes. Oliver recommends PICS for almost any vendor that can negotiate it; it simplifies operations and often cuts shortage claims (since Amazon isn’t juggling dozens of small receipts). Note that certain product types (hazmat, very bulky items) may be excluded, but the bulk of sortable products can go through PICS.
- Super PICS (Pan-EU Fulfillment): Super PICS is an extension for European vendors selling across multiple Amazon EU marketplaces. It allows a vendor to send all their EU supply to a single Amazon fulfillment centre (like Dortmund, Germany, a major hub) instead of separate PICS orders per country. Amazon then distributes inventory across countries internally. For a pan-European vendor, Super PICS drastically simplifies logistics – essentially, you deliver to one Amazon location for the EU rather than maintaining stock in, say, France, Italy, Spain, etc. This requires high volume and Amazon’s agreement, but it’s the ultimate in consolidation. If you qualify, Super PICS can make your European supply chain far more efficient. (It’s like creating one giant EU-wide vendor central PO.)
- Pallet Ordering (Acapulco): In some cases, Amazon can place orders by full pallet quantities of your product. Instead of ordering 73 units, Amazon might order “1 pallet” (which might be, say, 72 units) of a given ASIN. This is often referred to internally as the Acapulco program. Pallet ordering can cut down on labour – your warehouse just moves full pallets – and ensure more efficient truck loading. However, Oliver views pallet ordering as somewhat redundant if you already use PICS. “If you have PICS, pallet ordering will come automatically,” he says, meaning Amazon will naturally order in larger quantities that fill pallets (Mastering Vendor Logistics for Greater Profit). He cautions against paying twice for overlapping services – PICS already encourages pallet-level shipments, so you shouldn’t need an extra fee for pallet ordering on top. That said, if you cannot get PICS, negotiating pallet-based PO minimums might still be useful. (Typical cost for Acapulco/pallet ordering can range ~2–5% of the cost of goods, but it varies(amzsummits.com).
- Full Truckload (FTL) Direct Shipments: At the extreme end of consolidation, Amazon may order full truckloads of a single product. This is generally only for top vendors with very high-volume ASINs (imagine Amazon ordering 20 or 30 pallets of one ASIN that fills an entire 53’ truck). If you’re shipping FTL regularly, you’re likely already deep in a PICS/Super PICS program. The benefit is maximal efficiency – your team loads one product once, and Amazon’s network takes it from there. While few vendors will reach this scale on more than a couple of SKUs, it’s good to know that as you grow, Amazon’s ordering can scale up accordingly.
Key Takeaway: Consolidation is low-hanging fruit for cost savings. If you’re eligible, PICS is often the single most impactful program to reduce internal logistics work and prevent errors. As Oliver emphasises, it’s better to invest in PICS than to pay for piecemeal fixes like pallet ordering alone. Consolidation leads to larger, more manageable shipments – which benefit both you and Amazon. In fact, Amazon often actively encourages high-volume vendors to adopt PICS or Super PICS because it simplifies their inbound operations (truly a win-win).
3. Optimising Orders, Data and Inventory 📊🤖
This third pillar zooms in on purchase order management and data accuracy. It’s not a single program, but a set of practices and tools to ensure every Amazon order is “clean” – meaning correct units, proper identifiers, and aligned expectations between you and Amazon. Here’s how to optimise orders and avoid supply hiccups:
- ASIN–EAN Data Alignment: A fundamental yet overlooked task is ensuring that your Amazon ASINs, EAN/UPC barcodes, and internal SKUs all match one-to-one. In Vendor Central, each listing (ASIN) should be tied to the correct EAN. If Amazon’s system thinks two different ASINs share one EAN, you can get duplicated orders or confusion. Oliver’s team always begins by auditing the ASIN/EAN catalogue for inconsistencies. Cleaning up these identifiers prevents a host of downstream issues – like Amazon ordering an EAN that you’ve retired or miscounting receipts. In short, master data management is step one to smooth operations.
- EAN “Gold” Catalogue (GDSN integration): If your products have multi-pack configurations or master cases, you should inform Amazon through the EAN Gold program (tied to the GDSN data pool). This means, for example, if one master carton EAN equals 12 single units, you register that with Amazon. Then when Amazon receives a carton with that EAN, their system automatically knows it contains 12 of your sellable units(Mastering Vendor Logistics for Greater Profit). Without this, Amazon might open boxes to count or, worse, mis-receive your quantities. Providing carton-level product data via the EAN Gold List or Global Data Synchronisation Network ensures Amazon’s systems accurately log received inventory – reducing discrepancies and shortage claims. It’s a simple one-time data upload (via a Vendor Central template or GDSN feed) that can significantly improve receiving accuracy.
- Proactive Inventory Availability Updates: Amazon can only order what it believes you have available. In Vendor Central, you have tools to update your Available to Promise inventory for each ASIN. Oliver mentions two approaches: a proactive push where you regularly update available quantities or lead times for each product, and a reactive method where you respond to each PO with adjustments (via EDI codes if an item is unavailable). The proactive route (setting your inventory levels in the system) helps Amazon plan and might avoid orders you can’t fulfill. The reactive route is more for when Amazon orders something, and you then inform them “actually, we’re out of stock” by rejecting those lines. To prevent chaos, maintain an accurate availability feed – it leads to “good orders” with the right quantities and ship windows, rather than constant cancellations or back-and-forth (Mastering Vendor Logistics for Greater Profit).
- Vendor-Initiated Orders (Allocated Ordering): What if you know you’re going to have a production downtime or seasonal gap? Amazon has a program for that called Vendor Initiated Allocated Offers. Essentially, you, as the vendor, can propose an order to Amazon now for future needs. For example, “We will overhaul our factory in July, so we won’t ship then; Amazon, please order 3 months of stock now.” You communicate this via your vendor manager or a template. If Amazon agrees, they’ll place a bulk order upfront to carry through your downtime (Mastering Vendor Logistics for Greater Profit). This prevents out-of-stock periods and is a collaborative way to handle known supply constraints. Not every vendor uses this, but in cases of big changes (catalogue transitions, factory moves, etc.), it’s a critical tool. It reflects a broader point: communication with Amazon on inventory planning can greatly reduce surprises. Don’t passively hope Amazon forecasts correctly – actively manage it together when possible.
Key Takeaway: Accurate data and proactive planning lead to smoother orders and fewer supply chain fires. By cleaning up product info (EAN/ASIN alignment, carton specs) and feeding Amazon realistic availability, you’ll get POs that you can actually fulfill as expected. This means less manual intervention, fewer out-of-stock issues, and better in-stock rates on Amazon. It’s all about being data-driven and forward-looking – a theme that echoes throughout Amazon’s approach.
4. Streamlining Receiving, Packaging & Chargeback Prevention 📥✅
The fourth pillar focuses on what happens when your shipment reaches Amazon, and how products are prepped for final delivery – essentially the “last mile” of vendor logistics on the fulfillment centre side. Mastering this area not only avoids costly chargebacks but also helps Amazon process your goods faster (which means your products become buyable sooner). Key components include:
- Advance Shipment Notifications (ASN) & EDI Integration: An ASN is an electronic notice to Amazon of what you’ve shipped, down to each carton’s contents. Vendors using EDI (Electronic Data Interchange) or API integrations will recognise this as the EDI 856 message. With Amazon now rolling out ASN version 2.0 (which requires mapping cartons to specific pallets and providing a license plate barcode for each pallet), getting your systems to provide detailed ASNs is crucial (Navigating 2024 Amazon Vendor Logistics Changes). A proper ASN means Amazon’s receiving dock can automatically scan and auto-receive cartons without opening each one (Navigating 2024 Amazon Vendor Logistics Changes). If you fail to send ASNs or they’re inaccurate, you will face shortage claims and “unreceived” inventory issues. Oliver stresses that at least 70% of his clients are using EDI/ASN and seeing far fewer discrepancies, while those that don’t often suffer hefty chargebacks for things like UPC/Item not found, or ASN errors. Setting up Vendor Central’s EDI for advance shipment data (or using Amazon’s web portal to upload carton contents) is a one-time IT project that pays off with long-term reduction in shortages.
- License Plate Receiving (LPR) & Carton Labels: License Plate Receiving is Amazon’s system of scanning a pallet or carton ID to know its contents. For this to work, every carton and pallet needs a scannable barcode label that ties back to the ASN data. Often this is an SSCC barcode (Serial Shipping Container Code) or Amazon’s unique carton ID label. Ensure you print and affix these correctly. Under the LPR process, Amazon aims to simply scan one code on the pallet and trust the data of what’s inside (Vendor Qualifications). If you’ve ever received a chargeback for “Missing Carton Content Label” or experienced Amazon opening boxes and miscounting, it means your carton labelling wasn’t up to spec. Follow Amazon’s Vendor Shipment Prep guidelines for labelling every box/pallet with the required codes (Vendor Qualifications). The payoff is faster check-in and fewer human errors during receipt.
- Prep-Free, SIOC & Frustration-Free Packaging: Amazon has been pushing vendors to adopt more sustainable, e-commerce-ready packaging. Programs like Frustration-Free Packaging (FFP), Ships in Own Container (SIOC), and Prep-Free Packaging (PFP) are tiers of certification for your product packaging (Vendor Qualifications). For instance, SIOC (Tier 2) means your product is shipped in its original box without Amazon needing to add an overbox – the packaging is sturdy and compact enough to serve as its own shipper (Vendor Qualifications). If you certify your ASINs under these programs, Amazon will waive certain prep fees or chargebacks (like those for not individually bagging or for overboxing) (Vendor Qualifications). In fact, in Europe, Amazon now levies chargebacks if your items are not in SIOC for applicable categories – effectively penalising vendors for excessive packaging. Conversely, sellers (3P) get small incentives for SIOC, but vendors get penalties if they don’t comply. The message: design your packaging so that Amazon can just slap a label on it and ship, with no additional prep. Not only will this avoid chargeback fees, it also reduces damage and improves sustainability. When developing new products, bake Amazon’s packaging standards into the process. (Amazon’s [Packaging Certification site][18] details the requirements and benefits at each level.)
- Chargeback Monitoring & Audits: Last but not least, every vendor should regularly analyse their chargebacks and shortage claims. This isn’t a program per se, but a best practice Oliver insists on. Amazon provides detailed reports of chargebacks – for things like late delivery, missing ASN, incorrect labels, etc. By auditing these, you can identify where your processes fail and fix them. More immediately, you can dispute invalid chargebacks and often reclaim significant money. “It’s always surprising when new vendors see how much Amazon could pay back,” Oliver says. His firm often starts engagements by auditing chargebacks; they’ve recovered tens of thousands of euros for vendors who never checked before. Don’t leave this money on the table. Make it a quarterly (if not monthly) habit to download your Vendor Central shortage and chargeback reports, investigate the root causes, and file claims for reimbursement where appropriate. Over time, your goal should be to address the root causes – many of which tie back to the topics above (ASN accuracy, proper labelling, on-time shipping, etc.). A successful logistics operation will see chargebacks trend down to a minimum, which gooses your profit and keeps Amazon happy too (Vendor Qualifications).
“Many vendors are shocked when they see how much Amazon might owe them in chargeback refunds. By digging into shortages and chargebacks, we often recover significant amounts – and then help fix the issues causing those fines in the first place.” — Oliver Tomaschewski
Key Takeaway: The devil is in the details when it comes to receiving and packaging compliance. Invest in the systems and processes to send Amazon perfect data (ASNs), use proper labels on every carton/pallet, and upgrade your product packaging to meet Amazon’s FFP/SIOC standards. These steps directly translate into fewer fees and faster inbound. And never neglect chargeback audits – they’re your feedback loop to catch issues and an immediate source of recovered revenue.
The fourth pillar focuses on what happens when your shipment reaches Amazon, and how products are prepped for final delivery – essentially the “last mile” of vendor logistics on the fulfillment centre side. Mastering this area not only avoids costly chargebacks but also helps Amazon process your goods faster (which means your products become buyable sooner). Key components include:
- Advance Shipment Notifications (ASN) & EDI Integration: An ASN is an electronic notice to Amazon of what you’ve shipped, down to each carton’s contents. Vendors using EDI (Electronic Data Interchange) or API integrations will recognise this as the EDI 856 message. With Amazon now rolling out ASN version 2.0 (which requires mapping cartons to specific pallets and providing a license plate barcode for each pallet), getting your systems to provide detailed ASNs is crucial (Navigating 2024 Amazon Vendor Logistics Changes). A proper ASN means Amazon’s receiving dock can automatically scan and auto-receive cartons without opening each one (Navigating 2024 Amazon Vendor Logistics Changes). If you fail to send ASNs or they’re inaccurate, you will face shortage claims and “unreceived” inventory issues. Oliver stresses that at least 70% of his clients are using EDI/ASN and seeing far fewer discrepancies, while those that don’t often suffer hefty chargebacks for things like UPC/Item not found, or ASN errors. Setting up Vendor Central’s EDI for advance shipment data (or using Amazon’s web portal to upload carton contents) is a one-time IT project that pays off with long-term reduction in shortages.
- License Plate Receiving (LPR) & Carton Labels: License Plate Receiving is Amazon’s system of scanning a pallet or carton ID to know its contents. For this to work, every carton and pallet needs a scannable barcode label that ties back to the ASN data. Often this is an SSCC barcode (Serial Shipping Container Code) or Amazon’s unique carton ID label. Ensure you print and affix these correctly. Under the LPR process, Amazon aims to simply scan one code on the pallet and trust the data of what’s inside (Vendor Qualifications). If you’ve ever received a chargeback for “Missing Carton Content Label” or experienced Amazon opening boxes and miscounting, it means your carton labelling wasn’t up to spec. Follow Amazon’s Vendor Shipment Prep guidelines for labelling every box/pallet with the required codes (Vendor Qualifications). The payoff is faster check-in and fewer human errors during receipt.
- Prep-Free, SIOC & Frustration-Free Packaging: Amazon has been pushing vendors to adopt more sustainable, e-commerce-ready packaging. Programs like Frustration-Free Packaging (FFP), Ships in Own Container (SIOC), and Prep-Free Packaging (PFP) are tiers of certification for your product packaging (Vendor Qualifications). For instance, SIOC (Tier 2) means your product is shipped in its original box without Amazon needing to add an overbox – the packaging is sturdy and compact enough to serve as its own shipper (Vendor Qualifications). If you certify your ASINs under these programs, Amazon will waive certain prep fees or chargebacks (like those for not individually bagging or for overboxing) (Vendor Qualifications). In fact, in Europe, Amazon now levies chargebacks if your items are not in SIOC for applicable categories – effectively penalising vendors for excessive packaging. Conversely, sellers (3P) get small incentives for SIOC, but vendors get penalties if they don’t comply. The message: design your packaging so that Amazon can just slap a label on it and ship, with no additional prep. Not only will this avoid chargeback fees, it also reduces damage and improves sustainability. When developing new products, bake Amazon’s packaging standards into the process. (Amazon’s [Packaging Certification site][18] details the requirements and benefits at each level.)
- Chargeback Monitoring & Audits: Last but not least, every vendor should regularly analyse their chargebacks and shortage claims. This isn’t a program per se, but a best practice Oliver insists on. Amazon provides detailed reports of chargebacks – for things like late delivery, missing ASN, incorrect labels, etc. By auditing these, you can identify where your processes fail and fix them. More immediately, you can dispute invalid chargebacks and often reclaim significant money. “It’s always surprising when new vendors see how much Amazon could pay back,” Oliver says. His firm often starts engagements by auditing chargebacks; they’ve recovered tens of thousands of euros for vendors who never checked before. Don’t leave this money on the table. Make it a quarterly (if not monthly) habit to download your Vendor Central shortage and chargeback reports, investigate the root causes, and file claims for reimbursement where appropriate. Over time, your goal should be to address the root causes – many of which tie back to the topics above (ASN accuracy, proper labelling, on-time shipping, etc.). A successful logistics operation will see chargebacks trend down to a minimum, which gooses your profit and keeps Amazon happy too (Vendor Qualifications).
“Many vendors are shocked when they see how much Amazon might owe them in chargeback refunds. By digging into shortages and chargebacks, we often recover significant amounts – and then help fix the issues causing those fines in the first place.” — Oliver Tomaschewski
Key Takeaway: The devil is in the details when it comes to receiving and packaging compliance. Invest in the systems and processes to send Amazon perfect data (ASNs), use proper labels on every carton/pallet, and upgrade your product packaging to meet Amazon’s FFP/SIOC standards. These steps directly translate into fewer fees and faster inbound. And never neglect chargeback audits – they’re your feedback loop to catch issues and an immediate source of recovered revenue.
Quick Wins: Where Should Vendors Start? 🥇
Facing a long list of logistics programs, you might wonder which initiatives to tackle first. Oliver’s advice is to prioritise changes that yield the greatest impact with feasible effort:
- Enable PICS (Consolidation) Early: If your volume allows, push for Perfect Inbound Consolidation Service in your vendor terms. It streamlines everything else by simplifying orders and shipments. Many downstream benefits (like pallet-level shipping and fewer shortages) flow from PICS, making it a cornerstone of logistics efficiency.
- Integrate ASN/EDI Systems: A one-time tech setup to get your ASN (EDI 856) and carton labelling compliant will pay dividends every shipment. This underpins Amazon’s upcoming ASN 2.0 requirements – getting ahead now will save you from chaos (and fines) later (Navigating 2024 Amazon Vendor Logistics Changes). If you don’t have in-house EDI expertise, consider a middleware provider to bridge your ERP with Vendor Central.
- Adopt Direct Fulfillment (if capable): For vendors that can meet strict shipping SLAs, Direct Fulfillment is a quick win to capture sales Amazon would otherwise lose to out-of-stock. It’s essentially free additional revenue and improves your Amazon in-stock rate metric. Start with a small selection of SKUs and prove performance – Amazon will then expand your DF allotment.
- Audit Chargebacks and Recover Cash: Immediately pull your chargeback reports and dispute everything validly disputable. It’s the fastest way to boost your margin. More importantly, identify the top 2–3 recurring issues (e.g. “ASN not received” or “label unreadable”) and fix those processes to stop the bleeding. This could mean retraining warehouse staff on labelling or working with carriers on on-time pickup – whatever addresses the biggest fines.
- Optimise Packaging for SIOC/PFP: Begin transitioning your packaging to meet Tier 2 (SIOC) or Tier 1 (FFP) requirements. Even if you can’t repackage everything overnight, focus on your high-volume items first. The reduction in prep fees and avoidance of new SIOC chargebacks in EU can be substantial (Vendor Qualifications). Plus, smaller, lighter packaging saves on shipping costs too.
Every vendor’s situation is unique, but these steps are broadly applicable and set the foundation for more advanced optimisation. As Oliver noted, you don’t have to implement all programs – choose the ones that make sense and will benefit your operation the most. It’s about working smarter within Amazon’s system.
Conclusion & Next Steps 🎯
Amazon vendor logistics may be complex, but as we’ve seen, it’s full of opportunities for those willing to dig in. By leveraging programs like PICS, Amazon Freight, Vendor Flex, and Direct Fulfillment, you can turn logistics into a competitive advantage – streamlining your supply chain and cutting costs where others struggle. Coupled with rigorous data accuracy and compliance (ASN, labels, packaging), you’ll drastically reduce those profit-sapping chargebacks and shortages. The end result? A more efficient operation, stronger vendor metrics, and a healthier bottom line for your Amazon business.
For Amazon agency professionals, these logistics optimisations are a powerful lever to drive client success. They not only save money but also improve in-stock rates and vendor scores, leading to more sales. As a next step, consider conducting a holistic logistics audit for your brand or client: identify which programs from the four pillars you’re not using yet, and plan a roadmap to implement the high-impact ones.
In Oliver’s words, “Amazon wants a good inbound process and will share data to help – when vendors stay compliant, it helps Amazon help you.” Embrace that collaborative mindset. By investing in better processes now, you set yourself up to win the long game on Amazon.
To learn more and see these strategies in action, watch the full webinar on demand (Marketplace Masters episode) where Oliver dives even deeper into Amazon logistics nuances. If you need tailored guidance or want to see how MerchantSpring’s analytics platform can spot logistics inefficiencies in your Amazon data, get in touch with us. Our team is here to help you elevate your Amazon vendor performance. And don’t forget to subscribe to our blog/newsletter for more expert insights on Amazon Vendor Central – from logistics and chargebacks to content optimisation and beyond. Here’s to mastering the marketplace! 🚀