Amazon Wants Sellers to Optimize Warehouse Space
Amazon will impose stricter storage limits on sellers who use Fulfillment by Amazon in January.
The reason for the policy change is the company’s push for faster delivery – specifically, transitioning Prime Free Shipping from two days to one, reports ecommercebytes.
“While investing in our network, we need to manage our storage space so that we can continue delighting customers with products they love at faster delivery speeds,” Amazon said.
The FBA policy “stick” comes with a “carrot” in the form of a promotion to help certain sellers who wish to remove inventory; it runs only through the end of October.
The crux of the announcement: “Effective January 1, 2020, we are changing the IPI threshold for storage limits to 400 (previously 350).”
IPI stands for Inventory Performance Index, “a single metric to gauge your overall performance over time.”
Amazon explained that sellers with IPI scores below 400 the week of December 23, 2019 would have storage limits imposed for the first quarter of 2020; sellers who maintain an IPI score of 400 or greater would have unlimited storage for standard size and oversize items (monthly storage fees and long-term storage fees still apply).
More Amazon news
Amazon got caught copying products and manipulating search results
Amazon got caught cheating? Amazon has been repeatedly accused of copying third-party sellers’ products and then manipulating the search results to favor Amazon’s own brands. The company has denied the accusations. Reuters got access to internal Amazon documents...
China energy crisis wreaks havoc in the manufacturing sector
China in the dark Factories in China's busiest manufacturing provinces have been ordered to suspend production for up to a week or even longer, prompting concern global supplies of goods might be disrupted. China is in the midst of an energy crisis that has turned...
China stands up to protect intellectual property
E-commerce sites must guard intellectual property or be shut in China China plans to tighten oversight of e-commerce platforms like Alibaba Group over the infringement of intellectual property rights. Companies would lose their trading...