Q&A: Can I sell books on Amazon.com from Canada?
QUESTION: I live in suburban Toronto and I'm wondering if it's possible to run an online bookstore from here. I looked at Amazon.ca and the book selection is much less, and the sellers are still in the States.Would I have equal access to the U.S. market? How different would shipping costs be? Would there be duty on used books sold outside of Canada?
ANSWER: I think your best bet would be to list books on both Amazon.ca and Amazon.com, especially your higher-priced books. Of course that would require you to delete listings manually on the other site when you have a sale.
You need to have a U.S. bank account to sell on Amazon.com but perhaps you can arrange that with a visit to a bank in the northern U.S. to open an account.
Being outside the U.S. Postal System would be a handicap for you (when selling on Amazon.com) but not an insurmountable one. For example, there are sellers on Amazon.com who live outside the continental U.S., in Hawaii and Alaska. To be competitive, these sellers often pay for airmail delivery for all their orders sent to the mainland, to ensure prompt delivery -- even when the customer pays only for ground shipping. These sellers seem to do OK, even though it's certainly a drain on their profits. You'd be operating with a similar handicap, but you're accessing a big market.
Another thing you might consider: Amazon has a new program called "Fulfillment by Amazon." Participating booksellers send their inventory to Amazon, and Amazon does all the shipping and customer service, and sends the bookseller the proceeds minus some storage and service fees.
Personally I wouldn't use Fulfillment by Amazon because I like to have total control of my business. But you might consider it if it allowed you to dramatically reduce your costs -- you could bulk-ship your inventory to an Amazon warehouse. Using a truck freight company you could probably get your per-book cost down very low.
If you fill the orders yourself, I'm not sure about the duties of books being shipped from Canada to the U.S., so I'm hoping we'll get some helpful comments. Anyone?
Labels: fulfillment, postage











3 Comments:
Does it pay to ship books internationally? I have considered it but my husband feels we would take a loss on shipping. What is your experience in this area?
Cindy Knisely
I was told by a Canadian that Canadians are not permitted to sell on Amazon.com, whereas US sellers are permitted to sell on Amazon.ca, which I do.
IF it will fit into a global priority envelope, I also list for international sales on amazon. On ABE, you can ask for more shipping (haven't decided how this works on alibris as I am new there). BUT it is a drain on the profits because you pay more for the total sale (which means more fees for the amount that is sh/h)with the credit card fees (I use the credit card services on abe, or through PayPal, and required on amazon, right? STILL, we are in the business of selling books, most of the international customers are very appreciative, and that is part of my pay :)...and more, whatever you lose in fees, you also lose in holding the item for months into years in your inventory (I have a real store with real bills). NOW, there is more risk on international sales. I lost a very rare book once because the guy's name was TURK, and somehow it never got to Italy. I believe the language barrier meant it went to TURKey, where it made no sense to anyone there, and they wouldn't bother to send the book to ITALY. OR the fellow got it a year later, and thought what the heck and didn't pay me by then. And I had to refund a LOT of money to him when he didn't get it! Still, most often very good for me to sell the books (esp. to Australia because they are often repeat customers).
Debbie K.
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