Comment by AnssiH

7 years ago

> Amazon makes this easy to do by commingling inventory and not matching/tracking sellers to inventory items.

That is not correct. Amazon's seller help pages and Amazon spokesperson comment on e.g. this FT Alphaville article https://outline.com/4R7fp6 say that Amazon tracks the original supplier:

> The system is purposefully designed so that similar products are not placed next to or near each other, and Amazon can also track the original seller of each unit.

I.e. commingling only means that any sellers' inventory can be used for fulfillment, not that the inventory is physically commingled.

Amazon "says" they can track the original supplier.

In practice, they clearly don't. I've had a client that was the only manufacturer of a product receive fake versions of their own product that was part of Amazon's commingled inventory. This happened last year.

Also, unless Amazon removes tags prior to delivery, there is no mechanism on many items that would allow them to track goods short of maintaining physical separation, which it is abundantly clear that they do not.

If this physical separation exists, it is useful only to Amazon if buyers can still be fulfilled by any of the sellers.

When evidence builds for fake product, Amazon can halt use of a particular seller's inventory...but prior to that you might get a fake, regardless of the seller's reputation.