---
title: "Amazon Business Models - Flapen"
canonical_url: "https://flapen.com/guides/business-models"
last_updated: "2026-07-19T11:15:34.339Z"
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  description: "Decide your fulfillment model and your seller model as two separate choices, each with its own tradeoffs."
  "og:description": "Decide your fulfillment model and your seller model as two separate choices, each with its own tradeoffs."
  "og:title": "Amazon Business Models - Flapen"
---

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# **Amazon Business Models**

Decide your fulfillment model and your seller model as two separate choices, each with its own tradeoffs.

## Two decisions, not one Sellers often collapse selling on Amazon into a single question. It is two. The first is your fulfillment model — who stores your inventory and ships each order. The second is your seller model — what you sell and where the product comes from. They are independent: any seller model can run on either fulfillment model. Each choice buys you something and costs you something, and the costs sit in different places.**Two axes, four combinations** Fulfillment and sourcing are independent — settle each on its own merits, not as a bundle. ## Choosing a fulfillment model Fulfillment is a choice between letting Amazon handle storage and shipping (fulfilled by Amazon — FBA) or doing it yourself (fulfilled by the merchant). Letting Amazon fulfill buys reach: your offers become eligible for the fast-shipping badge many buyers filter for, which lifts conversion. It costs you fees on storage and each unit shipped, and hands day-to-day control to a third party. Fulfilling orders yourself buys control — and margin when your own storage and shipping cost less than the fees they replace. You set the packaging and hold the inventory. It costs you conversion, because self-fulfilled offers rarely carry the fast-shipping badge buyers trust, and every late shipment lands on your own record. Self-fulfillment can be acceptable for oversized, slow-moving, or highly variable products where storage fees would punish you. For most standard-sized private-label products, FBA usually wins on reach. ## Choosing a seller model Your seller model determines what you list and how much of the product you actually control.**Private label** your own brand on a sourced product; you control the brand, the listing, and price.**Wholesale** established brands bought in bulk to resell; you control little and compete on availability.**Retail or online arbitrage** discounted retail stock resold at a markup; you control nothing and each buy is one-off. Wholesale and arbitrage resell products that already exist, so you share or fight for the same listing and rarely set price. Arbitrage can produce early cash but does not compound — every sale depends on finding the next discounted lot. Dropshipping — listing products a supplier ships on demand — sits outside this series for the same reason: you resell a product you neither own nor brand. ## Why this series assumes private label The rest of these guides assume you are building a private-label brand. That path owns its listing, brand, and margin, which is what makes the later work worth doing. Resale models can be winning businesses, but they turn on buying skill and supplier access rather than on brand building. If you resell, the fulfillment guidance still applies; the brand-building guidance will not. ## Deciding your two models Work through both choices in order before you commit to a product.**1****Fix the seller model first** Decide whether you are building a brand or reselling; it shapes every later guide. For this series, that answer is private label.**2****Match fulfillment to the product** Choose FBA for standard, steady-moving items; consider self-fulfillment only when size or variability makes it cheaper.**3****Re-check once you have real data** Revisit the fulfillment choice after enough sales history to see actual fees and conversion rather than projections. Before you lock the pair in, confirm you can answer each of these:**Before you commit**- You know whether you are building a brand or reselling, and why. - You know which fulfillment model your product's size and turnover favor. - You understand what each choice costs you, not only what it buys. - You have not chosen a model just because a competitor uses it. - You are prepared to re-check fulfillment once real numbers arrive. The seller model is the harder one to reverse — settle it first, and let the account you open next reflect it. Decide, then revisit Pick the models that fit the product today, and re-check them when operating history gives you something better than a guess.Was this page helpful? [**Introduction** Everything you need to know to start and grow a profitable Amazon business.](https://flapen.com/guides) [**Setting Up Your Amazon Seller Account** Sequence your entity, account, and tax decisions deliberately, because early identity choices are painful to unwind.](https://flapen.com/guides/account-setup)