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Amazon FBA: 3 in 1 Master class Box Set: Book 1: Amazon FBA + Book 2: Wholesale + Book 3: Private Label

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The Ultimate Amazon FBA 3 in 1 Masterclass for Beginners Are You Ready To Make Some Serious Cash on Amazon s Learn How To Make Money Selling on Amazon like the professionals!Are you sick of the same old 9-5 routine? Do you seek financial independence without making that dreadful commute to sit in a cubicle for hours upon end? Or to be outside in the cold, working your fingers to the bone?This book is for you – Designed with only one thing in mind; that transition, that leap of faith, leaving the safety blanket of your normal and boring life behind you to create a very lucrative Amazon business. In this book you will find 7 steps created for a total beginner and we will explore in-depth steps from the very start.From creating and discovering your niche, to pricing, drop shipping, outsourcing & advertisement and marketing techniques you’ll need to be a success. Armed with this book you will only need three other things; an internet connection, a reliable computer and dedication, with these four things at your disposal, welcome to your new independent, wealthy life. Which leaves us only one question to ask, are you ready to leave the security blanket of your daily 9-5?Are you read to be your own boss? Are you ready for real independence? If the answers to these questions are then you have come to the right place. Why You Must Have This Book Today! > In this book you will learn what Amazon FBA is all about.> This book will teach you the best books to target for quick and guaranteed sales. > In this book you will learn the best places to acquire marketable products at a minimal price. > This book will guide you through the process of preparing your products for shipping and how to get your books received in the designated FBA centers. > This book will teach how to monitor your inventory from anywhere in the world.> In this book you will learn what to do if you want to adjust your prices. > This book will teach you all about private label and wholesale!> This book will teach you the difference between myth and facts when it comes to selling on Amazon FBA. This book will give you the roadmap to making over $2000 or more on a monthly basis!What you’ll Learn from Amazon FBA* That you do not have to do any manual work to earn through FBA.* That Amazon actually does all there is to do to get your book selling.* Anyone can become rich through Amazon FBA as you can begin with any level of inventory* That the tools available help you monitor your inventory and your income from anywhere.* Book that seem useless to you could be dear to someone else and hence fetch very high prices.* Amazon FBA centers are very secure and the cost of storage manageable* There is no limit to inventory and no limit to your monthly earnings.Want to Know More? Hurry! For a limited time you can download “Amazon How to Make $2000 - $4000 Every Month Selling Physical Books on Amazon FBA from Thrift Stores, Garage Sales and Flea Markets!” for a special discounted price of only $2.99 Download Your Copy Right Now! Just Scroll to the top of the page and select the Buy Button.

79 pages, Kindle Edition

First published March 28, 2015

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8 people want to read

About the author

Greg Zucker

8 books

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Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for Cara.
Author 21 books103 followers
July 3, 2015
The writing style in this book is seriously weird. For example, "If you own a functioning smart phone you will need to acquire an app to start reconnaissance." (The copyright date is 2015 on this book, but all right, some people still don't own functioning smart phones... but reconnaissance?)

Or worse, "The warehouse is receiving and shipping procedures are concentrated on for distributors and manufacturers." Huh? Or get this: "Prosperous warehouse shippers adhere to a few basic regulations to internally regulate procedures."

Ghostwriter from another country? That's my best guess. Anyway, this bundle was only 99 cents, and I was curious what they'd have to say about wholesale acquisition and private labeling.



Ok, this was a really terrible book. At least it was organized in descending order of exhausting wordiness, but dang. I was so bogged down in the business-speak and other jibberish in the first "book" (it's three "books" in one but the whole thing still adds up to the length of one short book), I didn't get anything out of it at all… to the extent that I was still waiting to get to the information about private label stuff when I got to the start of the third "book" and realized that one is just about FBA. I got all indignant: Where's the private label stuff? That's what I wanted to read!

Then I looked back and realized that was what the first "book" was supposed to be about. Damn! :( This is the first eBook I've ever seriously considered returning on Amazon. It's that bad.

So, the first "book" claims to have 7 proven steps for earning 1k to 5k per month selling private-label stuff through FBA. The table of contents just shows the chapters as step 1, step 2, etc., but so you can see how inane this is, here are the steps:
"Step 1: Establishing a New Amazon FBA Account" (seriously, directions for signing up for an FBA account on Amazon)

"Step 2: Important Tips for New Sellers on the Amazon Marketplace" (not that this is not really a step, but it basically tells you to learn stuff and figure out what you're doing before you just jump in)

"Step 3: Comprehending Shipping Procedures Encompassed with Amazon FBA" (I'm totally fucking serious, that is the title) (This chapter contains the most incomprehensible explanation I've ever seen of: you send your stuff to Amazon. They put it in their warehouse where they can find it later. If someone orders something, you send a list of the shit they ordered and where to send it. Amazon gets it from the warehouse, puts it in a box, and ships it to the customer. At this point, I'm reasonably certain the ghostwriter was paid by the word. Maybe by the character. And notice that there's still no actual action or doing anything in these steps so far.)

"Step 4: The Process of pricing your FBA Inventory to be Sustainable on Amazon" (You might think this would be about how to figure out what price to charge for your item. You would be wrong. It basically says you should monitor the competition and change your prices from time to time, and then it walks you through which buttons to click in order to reprice an item on Amazon's website.)

"Step 5: Determining the best Product to Sell on the Amazon Marketplace" (Oh goody, is it going to tell us how to choose products to sell? How to determine whether you should private label something or try to source a known brand? How to find sources for products? Alas, no. Its advice is to buy PLR content and sell it as your own. "Best of all, such products are digital items, so you don't have to worry about delivery and shipping." Um, that much is true… so why does this even have anything to do with FBA? But I just realized, maybe I'm the dummy here. When you buy products and put your own branding on them, that's called "white labeling," not "private labeling." Maybe PLR is actually what they meant the whole time? But then why even bring up FBA?)

"Step 6: Acquiring Consent for selling in the gated group" (Having read this chapter, I'm still not sure what they mean by "gated group." Maybe licensed team merchandise (which this chapter is about) is a restricted category for sales on Amazon? I thought it might be something specifically to do with sports memorabilia, so I did a quick search… and discovered that this chapter was apparently PLR content that someone took a story spinner to. That pretty much explains everything about this book.)

"Step 7: Mounting your Enterprise, Employing Workers, and making Goals for the Future of the Business" (a very long, tedious philosophical monologue on business overall, with no discernible information whatsoever)

The other two "books" in this file are less nightmarish to read but still pretty wildly lacking in useful content. But I have spent almost two days learning about this stuff, so maybe I'm being unfair in expecting to learn something new here. (Ha ha)
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