Hey everyone, I’m brand new to Amazon FBA and looking to jump in with $400k in startup cash, plus another $800k set aside for working capital. I’m nervous about wasting this money — I’ve never run an online store before, so I need real, actionable advice.
My goal: Hit $4M in annual sales with $400k profit (that’s 10% net margin, right?). I’m happy to put $100k of that profit toward team bonuses — I just need to make sure we get there first.
Where I’m at now:
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No supply chain experience at all. I want to focus on one category and build depth, but I have no idea where to start.
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I have friends who sell on Amazon (some white-hat, some used to do “shady stuff” — but they warned me to stay away from that now).
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I have a few legitimate seller accounts, so that’s not an issue.
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I need to build a team, but I don’t know if I should hire first or find a product first.
My big questions:
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What categories are realistic for this budget? I don’t want to compete with huge brands.
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What’s a realistic timeline to hit $4M/year? 12-18 months? Or should I expect longer?
Any advice from people who’ve built an FBA business this size would be amazing. I’m not looking for get-rich-quick schemes — just honest, real-world tips. Thanks so much!
Answers (6)
I’ve been where you are — new to FBA, lots of cash, no clue where to start. Let me tell you: your timeline is a bit optimistic, but doable if you play it smart.
Here’s what my timeline looked like (I started with $300k startup):
I hit $2.8M in year one, then $4.5M in year two. So 18-24 months to hit your $4M goal is realistic — don’t rush it. And avoid electronics at all costs — I tried wireless earbuds, had 25% return rate, and Amazon suspended my listing for a month. Nightmare.
Also, don’t overhire upfront. I made that mistake: hired 5 people day one, spent $20k/month on salaries, and had nothing to keep them busy. Start with 2-3 people (a product researcher and an ops person), then add more once you have live products. And for team bonuses? Don’t promise big money upfront — tie it to profit goals. I did profit-sharing last year, and my team actually cared about cutting costs (unlike when I paid flat salaries).
Low-priced products ($20 or less) need INSANE volume to hit $4M — that means you’re tying up all your cash in inventory, and your margins get eaten by ads. I tried selling phone cases in 2024 — sold 10k units a month, but net margin was 2% after ads and returns. Not worth the hassle.
High-ticket items? Fewer units, easier cash flow, and ad costs are way easier to absorb. I sell vintage-style furniture now (similar to Hoobro) — no single best-seller, but 15 SKUs doing 5-8 units/day each. We hit $3M last year, and net margin was 12%.
The catch? Supply chain and inventory planning. You’ll need someone who knows how to manage long lead times (ocean freight takes 6-8 weeks sometimes). I hired an ops manager who used to work for a furniture seller — best $80k/year I ever spent.
My best advice? Don’t start from scratch. Either invest in an existing profitable Amazon team (they know the ropes, you provide the cash) — or go work for a successful FBA seller for 6 months. I did that back in 2023, and it saved me $500k in mistakes. You’ll learn more in 6 months on the job than you will reading 100 forum posts.
And hey, if you’re on the fence — consider parking your cash in safer investments. Amazon isn’t easy money anymore. I’ve got 4 years in, and it’s still a grind. Only jump in if you’re ready to learn, fail, and adjust.