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Insight into an Amazon Fulfillment Center

Wednesday, September 21st, 2011

A recent article about the working conditions at an Amazon Fulfillment Center has gotten some interesting coverage. There are varying opinions on the slant of the article, but I found some interesting information about the operations and expectations of those employed in these facilities that gives some insight for those sellers who use FBA regularly.

Integrity Staffing Solutions is contracted by Amazon to provide much of the labor in their warehouses. They seem to be paying around $11 to $13 per hour based on numbers mentioned in the article. It sounds like they also have managers at the location to handle coordination between their employees and Amazon management. For my math in this article, I’m going to figure that it costs Amazon about $15.00 per hour for each of the workers. I believe this is a conservative figure and should include the direct cost that ISS pays the workers, as well as their overhead for management, accounting and similar expenses. Additionally, Amazon employs a sizable number of workers as well, and will have additional payroll costs associated with their full-time employees.

I’m interested to see how the fees that I pay as an FBA seller are allocated and used. FBA Sellers pay four different fees when they utilize Amazon’s Fulfillment Services. The storage fee and weight-based fee are closely tied to the value of the space and the postage respectively, so the “Order Handling” and “Pick and Pack” fees are what are seen in action in the warehouse.

The Leigh Valley article that this article is based upon is for the ABE2 and ABE3 facilities which are currently being used primarily for books and media products, so that is probably what most of their rates are based on.

It seems there are four basic tasks done in the warehouse:

Receiving – “Unloading inventory from boxes, scanning bar codes and loading products into totes”. A worker mentioned that their quota increased from 250 to 500 items per hour. That is 4-8 items per minute. At $15.00 per hour, it costs $0.03 to $0.06 for Amazon to “Receive” each item

Stowing – “putting products in bins in the warehouse”. No productivity rate was mentioned in the article. It seems to me that this would be the opposite of “picking” which has a rate of about 120 items per hour, so I’ll use that for my math. 120 items per hour at $15.00 per hour costs $0.12 per item.

Picking – This would involve finding items in the warehouse and sending them to the packaging people. Specific rates were mentioned in the article: “It started with 75 pieces an hour. Then 100 pieces an hour. Then 125 pieces an hour.” and “He said he was expected to pick 1,200 items in a 10-hour shift, or one item every 30 seconds.” Again, $15.00 per hour for 120 items is $0.12 per item

Packaging – This wasn’t mentioned much in the article, but I’ve seen the process in videos of the FC. Quotas also weren’t mentioned in this news article. The process would involve picking the correct box for an item, placing the item in the box, and then putting any packing slips and filling into the box, sealing it, and applying a label to the box. Since, I don’t have any more specific numbers to use, I think the 120 items per hour rate is reasonable, again at $0.12 per item.

So if we add up those four tasks, it costs Amazon roughly $0.40 in labor for each item that they fulfill. Amazon also has other significant costs in providing this service, such as the building, power, specialized equipment, management, HR, and computer systems to name a few. FBA Media sellers currently pay either $0.60 (for items sold for under $25) or $1.00 for these fulfillment services.

And I should briefly talk about the working conditions described in the article. It was clearly written to tell only one side of the story. FBA has been growing and changing significantly in the past year and I think there would have to be some learning and “growing pains” as that occurred. I can think of several things that I know about as an FBA Seller that have occurred over the same time period:

  • Amazon change these facilities to be used for all books. This may account for the change in workers quotas as having fairly uniform items should make the work easier
  • Amazon increased the Pick and Pack fee from $0.50 to $0.60. They may have done this to account for an increase in the amount of labor required from their initial expectations
  • FBA Fulfillment centers run out of space! . I believe this is fairly widely known, and one of the FBA executives at SCOE acknowledged it.
  • 2011 had an unusually long and hot heat wave (who wasn’t complaining about the heat?)

Overall, I think that Amazon is well positioned and is actively dealing with these issues. The negative press will likely cause them to be a little more proactive about this type of potential problem in the future as well.

Take a Quick Survey. Get a BookScouter Shirt!

Tuesday, September 13th, 2011

Take the survey

I’ve had the chance to introduce some significant new features to BookScouter recently and am pretty happy with how things are working. Now I need to figure out what the next step is :) With so many BookScouter users, I want to make sure that we are working on features that will be useful to people so that BookScouter will continue to be the most comprehensive, accurate, and easy to use tool for comparing prices on selling used books.

We’ve put together a short survey that I’m hoping will help us learn and quantify how and why people use the website. We’re interested in learning a bit about your book-selling ventures and what other tools you are using that we might be able to integrate with.

Please take a few minutes to complete the survey. Most users should be able to finish it in about five minutes. We’ll send you a free BookScouter.com t-shirt for your time, and you’ll be helping to make sure that BookScouter.com has the best tools for you to use.

Take the survey

View Amazon SalesRank and Basic Pricing Information

Wednesday, August 31st, 2011

I’ve had numerous requests from users to show the Amazon Sales Rank and some basic Amazon pricing information on the site. I’m happy to announce that is now possible. You’ll need to put in your Amazon Product Advertising API credentials to make it work. There is a new link for "Manage your Amazon Access Keys" on the screen right after you log in. That screen describes the process and what needs to be done to enter your AWS Access Credentials.

BookScouter showing Sales Rank

BookScouter Deal of the day

Monday, May 2nd, 2011

Check out this great deal that I just found. A website is selling this book for $11.00 and buying it back for $63.00. I wonder if they charge shipping if you have them send it to themselves? Even if they do charge your $5, you could still earn $47.00 with a few clicks

BookScouter Deals

This deal is currently available as of the time of this writing. You can also Buy the book on Amazon for around $12

Anybody interested in seeing more of these?

Help Spread BookScouter: Spring 2011 Flyer Available

Tuesday, April 19th, 2011

Spring 2011 BookScouter Flyer

Have you used BookScouter to sell your textbooks for a ton of cash? You can help other students to earn more cash for their books as well by telling them about BookScouter. We’ve created a simple flyer that you can print and hang up around campus. They are perfect for bulletin boards in cafeterias, dorms, popular classrooms, and anywhere that students are likely to be found.

Please make sure to obey any rules regarding the posting of flyers. Some places may require approval before pinning up flyers (This is usually noted somewhere on the board). Also, please be responsible and take the flyers down after your school’s buyback period is over.

Download (120k PDF)

Thanks,
Brandon Checketts
BookScouter.com

BookScouter will be at the 2011 Amazon Sellers Conference

Saturday, April 9th, 2011

I’m pleased to announce that BookScouter will have a table at the Amazon Sellers Conference for Online Entrepreneurs (SCOE) in Seattle from July 8th through 11th. This will be the first trade show that we’ll be at, and I’m hoping to be able to unveil a couple of additional tools on the website designed specifically for small- and mid-sized book resellers.

I’m also working on putting together some “swag” to give away. What do people prefer? T-Shirts? Mouse Pads? Pens?

BookScouter Mentioned in Consumer Reports Magazine

Wednesday, February 23rd, 2011
BookScouter mentioned in Consumer Reports

I just learned that BookScouter has been mentioned in the March 2011 issue of Consumer Report Magazine. The full article is titled "How To Get Rid of Practically Anything" and there is a few paragraphs about getting rid of old books where it mentions that BookScouter compares prices from dozens of book-buying sites.

Consumer Reports March 2011 Cover

BookThink.com Article

Monday, January 10th, 2011

I was recently interviewed by Kristian Storm for an article on BookThink.com. Kristian runs lowestcostbooks.com and has been reselling books for many years. His article is intended for book sellers who deal primarily with higher-end collectible books, so he recommends using BookScouter to sell some slow-moving books. The article includes a good review of some of the top vendors that he recommends using as well.

The full article is available at http://bookthink.com/0152/152amaz1.htm

Bookscouter Android Application

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

We are excited to announce the new Bookscouter Android application. To get started you need to go to the Android Market, search Bookscouter and download the app for FREE. When opening the Bookscouter app the first time you will be prompted to download a barcode scanner. The app uses your phones digital camera to scan the barcodes so the scanner is a must. When using the app you can either scan the ISBN or type it into the search bar. Let us know how it is working!

Moola4Books and Buyback101 Added

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

I’ve just finished adding two new vendors to the site, bringing to total number of searchable sites up to 43.

Moola4Books is a company based out of Fort Wayne, Indiana that has been buying and selling books since 2008. The initial pricing that I’ve see looks like these guys have pretty competitive pricing.

Buyback101.com is based out of Florida and specializes in K-12 books, so they may buy some of those books in quantities that other textbook companies won’t.

I’ve had a good amount of communication with both companies prior to getting them enabled today. Both seem very eager to provide excellent customer service and to provide accurate and prompt payments. I’d encourage you to give them a try when you see the opportunity. And please remember to leave feedback once you have completed a transaction or two.

Thanks,
Brandon Checketts
BookScouter.com