Los Angeles Times

A prime slice from sellers

Amazon’s average cut of merchants’ sales surpassed 50% in 2022, including fees for ads and logistics.

- By Spencer Soper Soper writes for Bloomberg.

Grappling with slowing sales growth and rising costs, Amazon is squeezing more money from the nearly 2 million small businesses that sell products on its sprawling online marketplac­e.

For the first time, Amazon’s average cut of each sale surpassed 50% in 2022, according to a study by Marketplac­e Pulse, which sampled seller transactio­ns going back to 2016.

The research firm calculated the total cost of selling on Amazon by tallying the commission on each sale, fees for warehouse storage, packing and delivery, as well as money spent to advertise on a site where hundreds of millions of products jostle for attention. Paying Amazon for logistics services and advertisin­g is optional, but most merchants consider these a necessary part of doing business.

Sellers have been paying Amazon more per transactio­n for six years in a row, according to Marketplac­e Pulse, but were able to absorb the increases because the company was attracting new customers and rapidly increasing sales. That abruptly changed when pandemic lockdowns eased and people began traveling and dining out again, sucking the oxygen out of online shopping. Last year, Amazon generated the slowest sales growth in its history.

Consumers are far more deal-conscious than they were during the pandemic, so Amazon merchants are loath to raise prices. That reality, along with the steady increase in fees, means many sellers are struggling to make money — prompting some to handle shipping themselves and to spend less to advertise on Amazon’s site.

“For these small businesses, it’s getting harder and harder to be profitable, because they are spending more and more money on Amazon fees,” said Juozas Kaziukenas, Marketplac­e Pulse’s chief executive. “Amazon might be tempted to keep increasing fees, because it’s in a tough spot, but you have to reach some kind of equilibriu­m.”

Sellers choose to use Amazon’s logistics services because, on average, they cost 30% less than alternativ­es from other shipping companies, and merchants are free to buy advertisin­g anywhere, spokespers­on Mira Dix said in an emailed statement. The fees Amazon charges reflect the company’s own costs and investment­s, she said.

“Many selling partners have built and run their businesses without advertisin­g,” she said. “If they choose to advertise their products, they have many service providers to choose from. Sellers are not required to use our logistics or advertisin­g services, and only use them if they provide incrementa­l value to their business.”

Maintainin­g profits as sales slow presents a major challenge for Amazon’s core online retail business. Without Amazon Web Services, the profitable cloud computing business, Amazon would have posted a $10-billion operating loss last year. Chief Executive Andy Jassy is trying to restore the balance by cutting 18,000 corporate jobs and narrowing the company’s focus to key growth areas.

In response to rising costs, Amazon increased the annual price of a U.S. Prime subscripti­on by $20 in 2022. Last month, the company announced plans to levy fees on online grocery orders of less than $150. But charging customers more is risky. Merchants, many of whom generate 80% to 90% of their sales on Amazon, are less likely to rebel.

Chuck Gregorich, who sells fire pits and outdoor furniture, says turning a profit on Amazon is getting harder. One of his popular fire pits costs $200, of which Amazon takes $112 for its commission, warehouse storage, delivery and advertisin­g. That leaves him with $88 to pay the manufactur­er, ship the product in from China and cover his overhead. He expects his Amazon logistics expenses to increase up to 8% this year because of a new fee structure that took effect in January and additional changes scheduled for later this year.

“I’ll have to raise my prices, and I already raised them a lot last year,” said Gregorich, who is based in Eau Claire, Wis.

The higher fees have compelled Gregorich to handle more logistics himself. Other carriers can deliver fire pits for $28, he said, or about half what he pays Amazon to deliver bulky items. Amazon’s delivery service often takes longer than the two days customers expect, so it’s no longer worth paying a premium, he said.

Dix, the Amazon spokespers­on, said Gregorich’s experience with delivery times is “the exception and does not represent the vast majority of both Amazon sellers we partner with and customers that we deliver for.”

Sellers of nonperisha­ble grocery items are in a different bind, said Gwen McShea, president of Lean Edge Marketing in Vermont, which has about 70 clients. One sells snack-size bags of popcorn. A 24-pack helps the company offer bulk discounts, but Amazon has been ratcheting up fees owing to the package’s large size. A six-pack has to be priced significan­tly higher than in stores to cover Amazon’s delivery fees, she said.

“A single unit seems outrageous­ly priced to the customer, because it’s so much more than the store, but then, does the shopper really want two dozen in a bulk pack? Because that’s a big commitment,” she said. “It’s tricky to find the sweet spot.”

Sellers don’t control the commission­s Amazon charges or the fees for packing and delivery. The one thing they do control is advertisin­g, and there are signs they are pulling back.

Amazon’s advertisin­g revenue in the holiday quarter grew 18.9%, a robust expansion but a big slowdown from the same period a year earlier, when it increased by 32.2%.

Amazon is dedicating more space on its site to advertisin­g, which gives it more space to sell but also makes each spot less valuable, said Melissa Burdick, a former Amazon executive who is now president of Pacvue, an online marketing consulting firm. Conversion rates, which measure the number of shoppers who purchase a product after clicking an ad, declined each quarter last year, she said.

“The advertisin­g space on Amazon isn’t as successful as it used to be for sellers,” Burdick said. “A lot of sellers are choosing to offer discounts rather than advertise, because shoppers are responding more to discounts.”

Some sellers are benefiting from Amazon’s changes. Desert Cactus, a Chicagobas­ed company that sells flags, license-plate frames and other merchandis­e on behalf of colleges and profession­al sports teams, uses one of Amazon’s cheapest shipping services, designated for small, inexpensiv­e products. Amazon increased the maximum product price allowed for the program to $12 from $10, which makes more Desert Cactus merchandis­e eligible, founder Joe Stefani said.

“It’s hard to replace Amazon, because the value is still there,” he said. “They deliver all of these customers, and the shipping fees are less than if we did it ourselves. It’s the place to be, and it’s going to be for some time.”

 ?? SELLERS CHOOSE David Paul Morris Bloomberg ?? to use Amazon’s logistics services because they cost less than alternativ­es from other shipping companies, and merchants are free to buy advertisin­g anywhere, an Amazon spokespers­on said.
SELLERS CHOOSE David Paul Morris Bloomberg to use Amazon’s logistics services because they cost less than alternativ­es from other shipping companies, and merchants are free to buy advertisin­g anywhere, an Amazon spokespers­on said.

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