Not sure if anyone else has noticed, but on Temu's customer frontend, semi-managed listings are getting way more visibility now.
I randomly searched "phone holder" – a pretty generic category – and the search results were almost all semi-managed listings. Barely any full-managed in sight.
Is this Temu officially moving away from the full-managed sellers that helped build their marketplace in the early days? Feels like they're forcing everyone to switch.
With this traffic shift, more sellers are going to jump into semi-managed – which means handling their own logistics (shipping from their own warehouse or 3PL) and managing last-mile delivery themselves.
Answers (8)
One thing to note: Temu's semi-managed has specific requirements around shipping speed and tracking. If your 3PL can't consistently meet those, you'll get hit with penalties. So if you're looking for a fulfillment partner, make sure they've actually worked with Temu before.
My advice: if you're on Temu, start building your semi-managed setup now. The longer you wait, the harder it'll be to catch up. And if you don't have your own logistics setup, start looking for a reliable 3PL that works with Temu's requirements. This shift isn't going to reverse.
Did the same search – you're right. It's not subtle. Temu is clearly pushing traffic to semi-managed. Full-managed listings are still there but buried.
This is basically a signal: if you want to keep selling, figure out semi-managed. Full-managed is probably going to be phased out or become a "factory-only" channel.
But if you're a small seller without warehousing? Semi-managed is a much bigger lift. You either need to find a 3PL that can handle Temu's requirements, or you're shipping from your garage and hoping you don't get hit with late delivery fines.
100% agree. This is classic marketplace strategy. Give sellers free traffic and zero commissions to get them to build inventory and infrastructure. Once they're locked in, flip the switch and start taking a cut.
I'm planning to add semi-managed but I'm not going to go all-in until I see what the fee structure looks like long-term.