Looking for help with starting

Hi everyone,

I’m new here. I have an e-trade license and an Amazon account, but I haven’t started selling yet because I don’t know how to do product hunting or create FBA listings.

If there is any serious person who could guide me step by step, I would really appreciate your help.

Hi there,

Welcome to the forum! Since you already have an Amazon account and an e-trade license, you’re off to a good start. For someone new, the key is to take things step by step:

  1. Product research first – Look for products with steady demand but not too much competition. Tools like Amazon’s Best Sellers lists or keyword tools can help identify opportunities.
  2. Test suppliers – Before buying in bulk, order samples from multiple suppliers to check quality and reliability.
  3. Start small – Launch with a small batch to validate demand before committing more capital.
  4. Learn listings & optimization – Focus on clean product images, clear titles, and bullet points that highlight benefits. It’s the foundation of a strong FBA listing.

Taking it slow and methodically will save you a lot of headaches. Once you’re ready, consider following a structured checklist for your first product launch to keep everything on track.

Running an Amazon Wholesale business is not only about your investment.

Yes, you invest capital, but we invest something just as important.

Our time.

Our market research.

Our product analysis.

Our daily effort to protect your ROI.

We spend hours finding winning products, checking price stability, analyzing sellers, and securing profitable deals, so your money works in the right place.

In this business, it’s not just your investment.

It’s our effort, strategy, and hard work invested alongside you.

That’s why we don’t treat your store like a project.

We treat it like a partnership.

A lot of wholesale beginners struggle because they focus too much on hot products. The problem is that once a product becomes popular, too many sellers jump on it, pricing becomes unstable, and that often leads to margin pressure and account risk.

Wholesale is usually much stronger when you focus on products that can be restocked consistently, managed properly, and protected over time. In many cases, if a product is already being heavily promoted as “hot” on YouTube or social media, the opportunity on Amazon is no longer as strong as it looks.