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These Are the 5 Biggest Mistakes Amazon Sellers Make When Choosing a Product to Sell
By Katie Melissa | Edited by Kara McIntyre | Entrepreneur | Jun 24, 2026
Extractive Summary of the Article | Listen
3 key takeaways from the article
- The biggest mistakes Amazon sellers make when choosing products come down to a predictable set of patterns: choosing products based on personal interest rather than market data, underestimating the margin impact of Amazon’s fee structure, entering categories dominated by entrenched competitors with no clear path to buy box share and committing to inventory before validating supplier pricing at real volume.
- These mistakes aren’t rare! They are the standard experience for first-time Amazon sellers, and they account for a significant portion of the stores that launch with enthusiasm and stall within six months. Understanding them in advance doesn’t make you immune, but it does make you considerably harder to surprise.
- The following are few of those mistakes. Falling in love with the product instead of a business analyst. Ignoring the fee structure until it is too late. Underestimating established competition. Skipping supplier validation to ensure consistent supply at various order levels. Choosing products based on personal purchases not on research. Choosing trend products over evergreen ones. And not stress-testing the numbers.
(Copyright lies with the publisher)
Topics: Selling on Amazon
Click for the extractive summary of the articleThe biggest mistakes Amazon sellers make when choosing products come down to a predictable set of patterns: choosing products based on personal interest rather than market data, underestimating the margin impact of Amazon’s fee structure, entering categories dominated by entrenched competitors with no clear path to buy box share and committing to inventory before validating supplier pricing at real volume.
These mistakes aren’t rare! They are the standard experience for first-time Amazon sellers, and they account for a significant portion of the stores that launch with enthusiasm and stall within six months. Understanding them in advance doesn’t make you immune, but it does make you considerably harder to surprise.
Mistake 1: Falling in love with the product. Passion for a product is not a market research strategy. It is a bias that makes it harder to read the data clearly. The sellers who consistently find good products approach the process like a business analyst, not a shopper. They are looking at BSR trends, review velocity, competitor pricing and margin math. They are not thinking about whether they would personally enjoy selling the thing. They are thinking about whether the numbers work.
Mistake 2: Ignoring the fee structure until it is too late. Amazon takes a cut of everything. Margins do not survive contact with Amazon’s fee structure unless they were calculated with Amazon’s fee structure in mind from the beginning. Model the full cost stack before you get attached to a product. The FBA revenue calculator is free. Use it early and often.
Mistake 3: Underestimating established competition. The categories worth entering are the ones where demand is real, competition exists but has not fully consolidated, and a new seller with strong account health and competitive pricing has a genuine path to buy box share. Those categories exist. Finding them takes patience and a willingness to evaluate 50 product ideas to find five worth pursuing.
Mistake 4: Skipping supplier validation. Find a supplier and discover the minimum order quantity is 500 units at a cost that completely breaks the margin you modeled. Getting supplier quotes early also surfaces other variables that affect the viability of a product. Lead times affect how quickly you can restock a product that is performing well. Minimum order quantities affect how much capital you need to commit before you know whether a product works. Supplier reliability affects whether you can maintain the in-stock rate that Amazon’s algorithm rewards.
Mistake 5: Choosing products based on personal purchases. This one is subtle, and it trips up smart people specifically. The problem is that your purchase behavior is a sample size of one. What you want from a product, what price point you consider reasonable, what features you prioritize — none of that is market data. It is an anecdote dressed up as insight. Amazon gives you access to actual market data. BSR shows you what people are buying right now. Review analysis shows you what buyers in a category value and complain about. Search volume tools show you what people are actually looking for. All of that is more useful than your personal purchasing preferences, no matter how confident you feel about them.
Mistake 6: Choosing trend products over evergreen ones. Trending products are exciting. Evergreen categories, the ones with consistent, year-round demand that do not depend on a news cycle or a viral moment, are boring in the best possible way. Boring products that people buy consistently throughout the year are the foundation of a stable, scalable Amazon business. Save the trend chasing for categories where you already have established supplier relationships and can move quickly. Build the base of your product catalog on things people reliably need.
Mistake 7: Not stress-testing the numbers. The margin math worked. The demand looks real. The competition is manageable. Everything checks out. Now ask what happens when one thing goes wrong. A series of ‘what if’ questions. Products that only work when everything goes according to plan are fragile. The ones worth building a business around are the ones that still work when the plan meets reality, which it always does, and reality wins. Stress-testing isn’t pessimism… It’s what separates the sellers who are still in business two years later from the ones with a great story about the time they tried Amazon.
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