Ready for Prime Day? Grab your 2025 Prime Day Checklist — Everything you need to prep, sell, and scale. Download the Checklist

#675 – Zero to $3M: Her Amazon Seller Story

What if you could transform from a complete novice to a $3 million Amazon seller within a few years? Join us as Amina Solohova, a vibrant member of the Helium 10 members Facebook community, unveils her incredible journey from an international relations student in St Petersburg to a thriving entrepreneur navigating the bustling world of e-commerce. With stops in Thailand, Spain, and now Ireland, Amina shares how her relentless pursuit of a fulfilling career led her to Amazon, despite having no background in business. Listen to learn how community involvement and determination can propel you to unprecedented heights.

Amina’s story isn’t just about selling products; it’s about mastering strategies and tools that ensure success in competitive markets. Together with her husband, she’s managed to maintain a healthy profit margin, even in Europe’s challenging market landscape. She opens up about the pivotal role Helium 10 has played in streamlining her operations and how they’ve effectively handled PPC and product design. Plus, she gives us a glimpse of her ambitious expansion plans, which include potential ventures onto platforms like TikTok Shop and launching in new markets across the US and Europe.

But that’s not all—experience the camaraderie and local flavor as Amina recounts hosting a memorable meetup with Irish sellers. As she anticipates breaking sales records and invites us to future discussions on her ongoing success, Amina’s insights become a beacon for aspiring Amazon sellers. This episode is not just a testament to innovation and resilience in e-commerce; it’s an invitation to embrace the power of community and the endless possibilities it offers.

In episode 675 of the Serious Sellers Podcast, Bradley and Amina discuss:

  • 00:00 – From Newbie to $3 Million Seller
  • 01:07 – Helium 10 Community Engagement Yields Amazon Success
  • 13:13 – Optimizing Amazon Sales and Strategies
  • 13:51 – Utilizing Facebook Groups for Amazon Sellers
  • 17:35 – Expanding Business to Europe and Online
  • 22:59 – Localizing Amazon Listings for Higher Conversion
  • 23:30 – Global Amazon Seller Strategies
  • 26:32 – Keywords in Amazon Sponsored Brand Targeting
  • 32:05 – Importance of Native-Sounding Listings
  • 34:17 – Ireland Meetup and Future Plans

Transcript

Bradley Sutton:

Today we talked to a seller who began as a newbie on Amazon, asking questions in the Helium 10 Facebook group way back in 2019, to now being on pace to do $3 million of sales this year. How cool is that? Pretty cool, I think. Hello everybody, and welcome to another episode of the Serious Sellers Podcast by Helium 10. I’m your host, Bradley Sutton, and this is the show. That’s a completely BS-free, unscripted and unrehearsed organic conversation about serious strategies for serious sellers of any level in the e-commerce world, and we are going to the other side of the world as we often do for a seller first time on the podcast, but she has been in our community for a long time. Amina, how’s it going?

Amina:

It’s going very good right lately recently I was able to relocate to Ireland.

Bradley Sutton:

Ireland all right, so definitely on the other side of the world.

Amina:

Yes, and the weather is not as bad as I expected. To be honest, it’s pretty.

Bradley Sutton:

What did you? Expect too hot or too cold.

Amina:

lots, lots of rain.

Bradley Sutton:

Oh lots of rain. Yeah, yeah, that’s true. That’s true. Okay, all right. Well, before we get into how you know your journey to Ireland, it’s interesting to note how I knew about her. Like, probably there’s a handful of people that those of you who are in our Helium 10 members Facebook group and some of our other Facebook groups like have been around forever and those of you who know you know them have been. You know, you got like Jake Paulson out there who’s been posting for years in our in our groups and a handful of others. But Amina was one of the first ones and I actually just now, right before we got on this call, looked at when her first post in the Facebook group was and it was October of 2019. We are now in 2025. This was six years ago.

Bradley Sutton:

Let me see if I can pull it up here. All right, so here she is October 24th 2019. I didn’t even reply to this post, but I’ve replied to others. I’ve interacted with her a lot in the Facebook group. I know she says hey, I’m new in this group, nice to meet you. I’ve been selling on Amazon for six months Helium 10 user and I noticed some crazy. What she noticed was the Amazon search shuffle that was very prevalent back in the day, and then she was talking about you know her, her ranks and everything. But again, this is how I knew about I mean she, she has been. I wonder if, if there’s see how many posts you have done in our, in our, like I’m going to look in their admin section here. Is there a way?

Bradley Sutton:

No, it doesn’t say like I think you broke it, like how many, how many, how many comments you have made, but it’s been many and I think you know this is important because I’ve been telling people so long you know, go to conferences, join groups you know whether it’s Reddit, Facebook group because you can get a lot of benefit by immersing yourself in the community and asking others, and I think you are probably one of the best examples of that, because I’ve seen you consistently post. So let’s go back before 2019, though. Where were you born and raised?

Amina:

I was born and raised in Russia, St. Petersburg, a northern part of the country, very cold.

Bradley Sutton:

That’s a very cold place.

Amina:

Yes, very cold.

Bradley Sutton:

Okay, part of the country very cold. That’s a very cold place.

Amina:

Yes, very cold.

Bradley Sutton:

Okay. So, born, growing up there, um, did you, did you live throughout, like your high school and college or university, uh, years there, or did you move away a certain time?

Amina:

Uh, yes, I lived there till 2022 and then I decided to relocate to Thailand first, then I moved to Spain and now I’m in Ireland, so I had changed. I have changed three countries.

Bradley Sutton:

So you live there most of your life, though in Saint Petersburg.

Amina

Yes, yes, yes.

Bradley Sutton:

And that’s when you started your Amazon business when you were there.

Amina:

Yes.

Bradley Sutton:

Did you go to University there?

Amina:

Yes.

Bradley Sutton:

What did you study?

Amina:

uh. I started international relations in the State University of St. Petersburg.

Bradley Sutton:

What was the idea? Did you have some kind of career in mind for that?

Amina:

Yes, yes, I was full of dreams, as all young people are, and I wanted to work in the embassy, you know, in the embassy of Russia somewhere in the western part of the world, being responsible for the establishment of these international relations with other countries. But, to be honest, I got disappointed with this idea later, when I went to the internship and I worked there in the government of St. Petersburg, and I understood that this is extremely boring and the salaries were miserable, you know. And then I understood that, no, I should definitely try something else. So that’s how I went to a trading company and I worked there as a customer support specialist. I spent there four years. Yes, as I were able to speak English and French. I worked there for about four years. Yes, as I were able to speak English and French. I worked there for about four years, and then I changed my position from customer support specialist to affiliate manager, but the idea was almost the same I had to reply emails and later on I got bored again.

Bradley Sutton:

You get bored easily, I see here.

Amina:

Yes, this is the worst feeling in the world for me. I absolutely hate when life gets boring. Maybe this is why I changed three countries of my life throughout the past three years, you know, yes, and I left my job and I decided that I want to move somewhere else and unfortunately.

Bradley Sutton:

At this point, you hadn’t started e-commerce at all.

Amina:

No, I even didn’t have a minor idea that I could run my own business or something like that. I wanted to build a career and I desperately wanted to go to the United States. So, I applied to different job positions but unfortunately, I didn’t get any offer at all. I can understand why because I didn’t have any decent specialization at the time and I had nothing to offer to businesses in the United States and they just didn’t want to do this paperwork for me. So, yes, I was left like in a limbo. I didn’t know what should I do next. I was running out of my savings and this is how it was, just like a miracle. I heard the story of a Ukrainian guy who started business on Amazon, and it sounded so simple at that time. You had just order products from China, put your own label, send it to America and then you can choose the private jet you want to fly.

Bradley Sutton:

This is probably like around 20, 2018, uh 2019, then you heard about this.

Amina:

Yes.

Bradley Sutton:

You’re like private jet. I could, I could do that.

Amina:

Yeah yes, absolutely. It all sounded so simple at the time and I was kind of naive, but I decided to try this opportunity and this is how I shared this story with my boyfriend and he supported this idea and he told me that that was great, we should definitely try it. And we started like business partners at that time and, yes, he was the one who chose the whole niche, the first product, and later he registered the company in here in Ireland.

Bradley Sutton:

What kind of product did you make for your first one?

Amina:

Well, I have to admit that it was a bad product.

Bradley Sutton:

That’s what we like to hear. We like to hear the good stories and the bad stories, no problem.

Amina:

yes, my story is full of up and downs. The first product was the silicone case for AirPods.

Bradley Sutton:

Okay.

Amina:

And it even sounds bad, you know, because yeah.

Bradley Sutton:

well, hey, when you’re new, like 2018, 2019, maybe I could understand how that. And so how much did you invest when you first started with that one?

Amina:

It costed really cheap, maybe a few like 20 cents per case, I don’t remember. Maybe the first order was costed us $500. And for the whole product we invested a few thousand dollars and we had to spend quite a lot on advertising on Amazon and I had to do it all on my own. We didn’t have any money to hire a specialist or an agency and I understood that I have to deal with it and I have to make it work.

Bradley Sutton:

And this was Amazon USA. You launched it.

Amina:

Yes, because starting in Europe is a different story. Yes, it’s so much harder, and this is how I went directly to YouTube. I started Googling different videos about how to sell on Amazon. I have never done anything similar to PPC before that, and this is how I came across you really, your videos Helium 10. Before that, so, and this is how I came across you really, your videos Helium 10. And, uh, I decided to open my account on Helium 10 and I have been your client for the past six years, I guess yeah.

Bradley Sutton:

I knew I liked you for a reason a very smart person.

Amina:

Yes, yes, and I took, uh, your amazing PPC course. It helped me a lot, because this is I was the person who didn’t understand a single thing about you know, what should I do here? What should I click here, how, how? How do I make it work? And your course was great for me, and I also watched your case study with coffin shelves. It was also very useful. And then

Bradley Sutton:

So how, now that you had Helium 10, instead of just like picking a random product, like, how did that change how you chose your next product?

Amina:

Well, it changed my PPC approach because now I had the tool that helped. At that time there was no anything like Brand Analytics on Amazon account and I had no idea what the search terms are there on Amazon right now, so these two helped me a lot. The Magnets, Cerebro are my favorite ones, for sure, and I was using them to launch my ad campaigns because my niche, as you can see, is very saturated was very difficult and I had to go with the long keywords, the long term.

Bradley Sutton:

So you stayed in that kind of like phone accessories kind of niche and things. You didn’t get completely because a lot of people are like, oh man, this is way too competitive, so how were you able to compete in such a competitive niche all these years then?

Amina:

Yes, it was not easy, but we decided that we are going to position our product as a premium solution for our customers. So, our product costs higher than the products of our competitors, but it is designed for those who, for example, previously bought the cheaper solutions and were not happy with them because our product is really better. We worked hard to find the product of a premium quality and for us it’s impossible to sell at the price of our main competitors. We cannot go with the price like $10, $12, because we produce it for quite high price.

Bradley Sutton:

Is it in China where you’re producing the products?

Amina:

Yes, it’s in China. Yes, and we have designed the best user guide for our customers. We have designed the best package. We work hard to provide all these materials so that our customers would have the best experience with our product. And, yes, as long as we had a higher price, we could afford to spend more on PPC, and this is how it is profitable for us. And we use lots of sponsored brands. We produce lots of videos, custom images, and we are focused on these types of ads at the moment. So, yes, this is how it works for us now.

Bradley Sutton:

Okay, now fast forward. We’re going to fill in the gaps a little bit too, but fast forward. Um, what was your? Which year was your best year of sales? Like? Is it going to be this year? Like, are you on pace? Uh, was it last year, was it, you know, during covid? What year was your best?

Amina:

This is our definitely our best year.

Bradley Sutton:

And so what are you on pace? Well, you know, if things keep going as they do, what do you think you will end this year with your gross sales?

Amina:

I hope that we are going to reach three million euro of our revenue this year.

Bradley Sutton:

Wow, that’s excellent. And all starting from a failed product launch that you invested $500 of silicone, silicone Air Pod holders, cases and now in a very competitive niche, you know, scaling to this. That’s pretty impressive. So what are some? Obviously, you said your first product was a fail. What are some other big failures of the last six years.?

Amina:

Yes, I had lots of failures. I have to admit that once my account got suspended, my listings got suspended. My payouts got suspended in Q4. In Q4, it happened a year ago.

Bradley Sutton:

What were some of the reasons of account and listing suspension? What happened?

Amina:

Design patent infringement. I didn’t do it on purpose, but this happened to me. Yes, unfortunately, I violated the trademark. There was a trademark misuse or something like that, and I had to write these emails to amazon. Please unblock me, I’m not going to do this again and I was lucky, my account got reinstated.

Bradley Sutton:

Wow, okay, so that was some scary times.

Shivali Patel:

Thinking about selling on TikTok shop? Or maybe you are already in it and you’re ready to scale. Unlock all of Helium 10’s brand new TikTok shop tools with our diamond plan Everything from bulk Amazon to TikTok, listing conversions to instant Amazon MCF fulfillment. Best of all, you use the code TT10 to get 10% off diamond for six months, even if you’ve used a coupon before. So go ahead and upgrade and let Helium 10 do all the heavy lifting for you so you can focus on what really matters. For more info on our new TikTok shop offerings, visit h10.me/tiktok. I’ll see you there.

Bradley Sutton:

What are some of the things that you know? I talked about the beginning of the episode. You know how it’s important to be in the network and get help from other people. Anything stick out in the past, like where you were able to get help from the Facebook group or community of Amazon sellers that really saved you or that really helped you out when you couldn’t figure something out.

Amina:

Yes, absolutely. Whenever I have any trouble, I go instantly to these Facebook groups and I get lots of help from people there, because now I have lots of friends thanks to these groups, like Helium 10, for example. For example, it’s always a tricky part when you need some help from Amazon support. You can barely get it from them so, and people gave me different types of advice. How I can, you know, reach them? For example, they gave me an email of a verification team and I wrote my case directly to this email and my case got solved after that.

Bradley Sutton:

Okay, so do you have is it just you two, or do you have employees VAs?

Amina:

No, there’s me, my husband and we. I also have a PPC specialist.

Bradley Sutton:

Okay, and so this is. Maybe I just missed it. So, you and your husband, this is all you do right now you guys are 100% Amazon. And how much time between you two do you spend on the business? I assume maybe it’s not like a 50 hour a week for both of you, but how much time does it take to invest in this.?

Amina:

Maybe about four, five hours per day I spend on PPC and everything related to the product launch, the product designs and managing the whole business. The times when I spent eight, 10 hours, they are in the past. Luckily, I don’t have to spend as much.

Bradley Sutton:

And your husband? Is he still actively working on things or he’s still mainly investing in product design stuff like that.

Amina:

He is working, but he’s not related to any marketing. He, for example, helps us to find new people we are now actively searching for a new PPC specialist, for example. So he launches these ads on LinkedIn and stuff like that, and yes.

Bradley Sutton:

You know, I should train you guys.

Amina:

Okay, yes, please.

Bradley Sutton:

With Helium 10 ads so that you don’t need to hire somebody. I think you should give that a try before. If you’re in the state right now where you had somebody doing it, now you’re trying to find somebody else or you have nobody, maybe there’s a way that you guys I, you know you guys can do. That’s the whole point of Helium 10 ads. Now, of course, you know, later you want to scale, or hey, I need to take some time off, okay, but you know, like me I don’t sell as much as you, um, right now.

Bradley Sutton:

Um, obviously, you know this is not my full-time job, but still, you know, like I have over 200 camp uh, no, like wait more than 200 campaigns. I like I manage like three different accounts. It’s not quite a million dollars, but like it takes me maybe 15 minutes a week to do my advertising. So, for you guys, yeah, it could maybe take an hour or two hours a week if you know how to use Helium 10 today. So, after this, let’s talk about it and let’s see if we can save you guys from having to buy or buy uh to uh like hire, uh, you know somebody out there.

Amina:

Okay, that would be, interesting.

Bradley Sutton:

What’s kind of um. You know being in a very competitive niche. You did say you have a higher price point. What kind of profit margins are you looking at? Um usually, uh like you know, this year, last year, etc.

Amina:

Uh 30 percent.

Bradley Sutton:

So even, even in a, the state of Amazon now, with all the new fees and advertising more expensive and you’re in a very competitive niche. After everything’s done, you are still able to have about 30% profit.

Amina:

Yes, especially in Europe. I wouldn’t say that in the United States is the same. Maybe it’s around.

Bradley Sutton:

Oh, so now you are selling. You launched in US, but now you’re also selling in Europe Marketplaces.

Amina:

Yes, yes we started about five years ago, and this is the reason why we opened business in Ireland, because we wanted to have an account on Amazon Europe. It was not as easy as with the United States, and now, yes, we’re actively selling products in almost every single country here, and we have recently registered a VAT number in Sweden too. So, yes, we are trying to

Bradley Sutton:

Ireland has Amazon now. Did you start there yet?

Amina:

I am planning to start. But unfortunately, we don’t have ads account there yet. And I just wait when they will launch it and then I’m going for sure hope on this opportunity.

Bradley Sutton:

Any other marketplaces other than Amazon, like Walmart, TikTok shop et cetera. Website.

Amina:

We are fully focused on Amazon, but this is what we want to work on during the nearest time. We are planning to launch a new brand and we would like to take out the profit as much as possible this year and to reinvest it to our new brand. And we would like to take out the profit as much as possible this year and to reinvest it to our new brand. And, uh, yes, with this one, I hope that we are going to finally have our own website. We will explore other opportunities, like TikTok shop, for example, but for now, no, only Amazon.

Bradley Sutton:

Okay being in like you know, I used to be in the cell phone. Um, like I used to do cell phone cases and accessories. It’s a little bit different than other markets. Like, like you asked about the coffin shelf, I’m selling the same coffin shelf as 2020 or whenever you know we started. But when you’re in the cell phone case, obviously like hey, it’s the iPhone 14 and then next year it’s the iPhone 15 and then it’s the iPhone 16. So how do you manage that kind of thing where products don’t have that long of a life? Like, are you adding, like variations and then putting it in the old parent so you keep all the reviews? Or just every two years if it’s for a different cell phone or a different accessory? Like you’re starting from scratch, like a brand-new listing. What’s your strategy there?

Amina:

Yes, we start a new listing, for sure, because all other approaches are a gray area. Really, you wouldn’t want to try this one. And yes, we start a new listing. And, to be sure, some of the very old ASINs are still performing pretty well right now, for example, iPhone XR I don’t know when it was introduced, maybe in 2017 or 2016, but we still have a decent amount of sales for these products for a mobile phone like this. But yes, once Apple introduces a new iPhone, we are always there to start new listings, to bring new products and to launch sales.

Bradley Sutton:

Since you just said you’re launching new ASINs, so it’s not like you’re just putting new variations on existing listings. What is your launch strategy like? Do you have an offline community as well that you’ve built up, that you’re telling people, hey, we’ve got a new product? Or you are just doing fresh launch 100% only on Amazon, like just with PPC? Or how do you launch nowadays?

Amina:

Yes, yes, we do absolutely fresh launch. So I always try to push more on sponsor brand because I like how much placement they take nowadays in the search result. These videos, they are everywhere nowadays. The Wish may make the shooting of a new product and we put it almost everywhere on Amazon and helps us to drive traffic for a lower cost than sponsored product.

Bradley Sutton:

Interesting. Okay, so you focus on sponsored brand headline and sponsored brand video, or only sponsored brand video?

Amina:

Both, both of them.

Bradley Sutton:

Interesting. Okay, what’s your strategy as far as how you’re doing your creatives? How do you do the videos? Is it AI? Is it you’re hiring photographers to do video shoots? And then the custom creative for the sponsored brand headline ads how are you guys doing those creative for the sponsor brand, headline ads. How are you guys doing those?

Amina:

I was absolutely lucky to find a very talented team of designers two years ago and since that time they have been creating lots of materials. We’re using 3D design for all that we are using on Amazon and this is why our listing looks like slightly better than the listings of our competitors, because all our images have really high resolution and they are highly detailed and we also produce 3D videos for our products and it helps to drive really lots of traffic.

Bradley Sutton:

Okay, interesting, interesting. What are? Are some other you know unique things you are doing Like you know a sponsored brand that you know unique things you are doing, like you know sponsored brand that you know will help get visibility and traction but maybe not 100% is getting you to page one on organic. So, like, how are you getting to page one for your main keywords? How are you scaling these products after launch? Because you know again, like not anybody can just go into a competitive market like cell phone accessories and have success. So you obviously must be doing something a little bit unique or different. So, can you share some of that?

Amina:

Yes, for sure. The main goal of almost every Amazon seller is to have a high conversion rate. So the way I do this and this is probably my main secret is that we translate all the listings, all the images, to the local languages. So in Germany, you will see that all images are in German language. In France, in French, in Italy, Italian and so on. And this is really. That was a game changer for us and it helped us to really increase the conversion rate. And this is how the PPC, for example. I noted that now it costs less than it costed before.

Bradley Sutton:

Mm-hmm. Interesting. Okay. So yeah, localizing is definitely important.

Amina:

I think that not many sellers are talking about that. And recently for example, when I started selling in Sweden, we all believed that people in Sweden they speak English. And English is a not. But when I downloaded my first search down report from Amazon, I noticed that 90% of search is in Swedish language. So this how I believe it’s extremely important to localize your listings in all of the markets where you work, especially if you have plans for Europe. I noticed that not all of my competitors are doing this now.

Bradley Sutton:

Okay. So for some newer sellers, they might think wait a minute. If we’re using the same ASIN, it’s just using the same images in all of the marketplaces. So how do you change the images in the unique marketplaces? What would you tell them?

Amina:

You can do this in your account. It’s a hidden feature. You go to upload images and then you will see the link country specific images. You click on it and then you can upload different images by marketplaces.

Bradley Sutton:

Uh, going back to your sponsored brand, um strategies, what is your, your basic strategy? Like, when you launch a product, how do you set, like, like, what are you? How many creatives are you doing? Like, how many different videos are it? Uh, how are you choosing what to target? Uh, what? How do you decide what your budgets are? Uh, because obviously, like you said, you’re very profitable with this strategy.

Amina:

Uh, like, my goal is to target as relevant as possible. So, for example, if I’m selling a, let’s say, case for iPhone 16 pro max, I only want to use search terms the keywords containing 16 pro max. I, I only want to use search terms, the keywords containing 16 Pro Max. I don’t want to target, you know, any 14 Pro Max, 15 Pro Max. And this is how I avoid this waste of money. I don’t need to waste money.

Bradley Sutton:

So like exact targets.

Amina:

Yes.

Bradley Sutton:

And do you even negative match already, like some of those other ones, or it’s not needed? Or you do need to negative match from day one of those other ones, or it’s not needed or you do need the negative match from.

Amina:

Yes, absolutely we need to negative, and when we do the broad targeting, we use this plus modifier uh, so to make it to narrow the amount of search term that we can get.

Bradley Sutton:

What’s that for the people who don’t know? um explain how that works. We’ve had some people on the podcast talk about that but.

Amina:

Yeah, this is essential for my niche because, for example, if I put iPhone 16 case, amazon is going to substitute 16 with all other numbers, so I basically have to use 16 to make it fixed. You know so that amazon will attract the search terms containing 16. They will not substitute it for 15, 14, 13. And I will work with these search terms only. So this is how it works in my niche.

Bradley Sutton:

So then explain how you do the modifier, though. Like how you put the

Amina:

Plus in front of the number of phone um phone model number. So plus 16 iPhone case, plus 15 iPhone case. I use the things like this and they are extremely helpful for me.

Bradley Sutton:

Yes, I guess a lot of people have used that. That’s good. That’s good because, yeah, with amazon, nowadays, you think exact is exact and exact sometimes if it’s not even exact no.

Amina:

This is what we have noticed recently. For some reason, exact targeting is not exact anymore. And even when I go with iPhone 15 case, I see iPhone 14 case, iPhone 11 case with the exact targeting.

Bradley Sutton:

Yeah, it’s crazy. People don’t realize what’s happening. Are you using broad and phrase at all when you’re doing sponsored brand, or you’re just doing the exact with the modifiers?

Amina:

I do broad with modifiers and I do exact with modifiers. Nowadays I don’t see any sense in using phrase targeting, because the broad targeting drives the same amount of search terms and traffic to my product. So these are just the duplicates in my case.

Bradley Sutton:

Are you doing anything as far as pack like unique packaging or, or, like you know, to have a nice unboxing experience, or just using generic packaging? What are you doing as far as that goes for branding?

Amina:

Uh, yes, for sure. Uh, we have. We have worked hard to design a very attractive package and I attended the conference about a year ago and they were talking about how important the main image is and the thing that we’re using right now. We put the product together with the package and on the package we try to write the main benefits of our products and it has proven to work pretty well in our niche and our recent product launch was pretty successful in the United States because of that.

Bradley Sutton:

Do you split test your main image before you launch? All right, so, guys, you know like we’ve got that in Helium 10, Helium 10 audience. You know also it’s powered by PickFu. So that’s something that I think so many people are sleeping on is. Don’t just like all right, I’m going all in on this main image. The main image is so important, you know, like she said, for conversions, and if you can, you know like, have two or three different variations that you test in Helium 10 audience before. It could have a huge effect on your conversion rate and your sales down the road.

Amina:

Yes, absolutely I love A-B huge effect on your conversion rate and your sales down the road. Yes, absolutely I. I love ab testing um on amazon and we test different things the titles, bullet points, the main image. We even test the order of the images in the listing, so we try to improve our listing on a daily basis.

Bradley Sutton:

How many SKUs active now you have approximately?

Amina:

About 60.

Bradley Sutton:

60 okay.

Amina:

Yes, on each of the markets, and we have about 500 campaigns in each of the markets

Bradley Sutton:

Five. Okay, excellent, excellent, so, or in each of the markets yes so then that’s that’s a lot. And then you’re all in almost all of Europe, so that’s a lot of uh and US, that’s a lot. And then you’re all in almost all of Europe, so that’s a lot of uh and us, that’s a lot. I have you expanded at all to like Middle East or Asia? Um, or Australia?

Amina:

No. Our recent country, the new recent country was Sweden, and, yes, that would be absolutely fantastic if you could add Magnet and Cerebro to Sweden as well, because you don’t have it there yet and it’s a little bit tricky for me to work with this market.

Bradley Sutton:

Yes, all right. Well, we’ll have that on our list. Well, obviously, every I think everybody’s favorite tool is Cerebro. How are you using Magnet to, kind of like round out your keyword research? Uh, in addition to Cerebro, like you mentioned that a couple times.

Amina:

Yes, uh, when you work with European markets, it’s getting harder because obviously I don’t speak of all of these European languages. And for me, Magnet is a real help because we just add our main competitors and we are able to take out all the main keywords that they are ranking on and we can then launch our campaigns using these keywords. And, for example, when my PPC manager she came to me and I told her that you’re going to be responsible for Italy, she asked how is it possible? I don’t know Italian language. I told her calm down. We have Helium 10. We are going to do that. You are going to speak Italian. That’s going to be fine.

Bradley Sutton:

Did you see? We have a translation now in Cerebro and Magnet, where all the keywords. You can now have a new column where you can say all right, like if it’s Italian, like hey, put this in English or something, so make sure she knows about that one.

Amina:

I saw something like that, yes recently so in different languages. This is how I do it. I I always do this. I lived in Spain and you know, I remember, how the attitude of people dramatically changed when I switched from English to a very poor Spanish. They were happy that I was trying to speak Spanish and they was really open-hearted.

Bradley Sutton:

Yes, that’s very important like. Amazon Japan, by the ways is, I would suggest you to launch there, it’s like bigger than almost all European markets other than Germany. And competition is so low, but it’s dominated by Chinese sellers. But the Japanese sellers do so much better than the Chinese sellers even though they outnumbered because to Japanese people was very similar to what you said. Like they, they don’t want the listing to seem like it’s it’s somebody not native who did it or has too much English or like you know, it’s obviously like Chinese, Japanese or Chinese, just like Chinese English. We have in in in America. So if you can, you know, have like native looking listings in in some of these marketplaces like Japan, like Spain, like she said it, the culture, culturally, they absolutely I mean I appreciate it. Like when I’m in, when I’m shopping on amazon here in the United States, and I see a listing that uses like broken English or it’s obviously just like they didn’t care about the images, like it turns me off like, even though the price might be good, I’m not gonna buy it, I’m probably gonna buy another one. So this is like a universal thing, don’t just, hey, let me put my listing in google translate or just let me lose the same images here and there it’s very important point that you mentioned there, so I like that.

Amina:

Yes, absolutely yes.

Bradley Sutton:

um any plans this year to come to Amazon Accelerate or any other conferences.

Amina:

I’m not sure yet. Maybe, if any event occurs somewhere.

Bradley Sutton:

Try to come to Accelerate. That’s the biggest one of the year. It’s put on by Amazon. If you have any Amazon issues at all that you can’t get fixed in customer support, they have representatives there that can get stuff fixed. So for you and anybody else listening, there’s no like affiliate link. This is just a short link that we have. It’s called h10.me forward slash accelerate. I think that will take you guys to the page to register for it. But I highly recommend it’s the one place where you can meet two, three thousand amazon sellers in one space. We’re gonna have, uh, Helium 10 elite I’m wearing my Helium 10 Elite shirt today Helium 10 elite workshop there, um, right before. So, Amina, you and your husband, I’m personally inviting you guys sure make sure to come to the Amazon accelerate this year and then we’ll do like a podcast meetup or something. But I really think it’s especially for somebody like you, who values networking and community and stuff. I think it will be a great place for you, you guys, to meet other sellers.

Amina:

Thank you so much for the invitation. We will consider that and you come to Ireland. Ireland is a new market for Amazon, so it might be interesting.

Bradley Sutton:

Yes, I did one meetup a couple of years ago. I took my family to Ireland and then and then, and then, um, I had a meetup uh in, like right out, right outside of the airport, like with some Irish sellers, and so, yes, it’s time for me to go back to uh, to Ireland. So I’ll be seeing you there. All right, thanks, Amina, let’s bring you uh, maybe your husband should come on the show uh together with you. Uh, next time, uh, so next year, but let’s see if you were able to break your sales record, like you said you’re going to this year and maybe talk about some other marketplace like TikTok shop or something that you can expand it to. We’ll see you then, absolutely.

Amina:

Sure. Thank you so much for inviting me. It was such a pleasure to have this conversation and I hope we will meet in the future.

Bradley Sutton:

At Amazon. Accelerate, yes, and also next year on the podcast. All right, we’ll see you later.

Amina:

See you, bye, bye.


Enjoy this episode? Be sure to check out our previous episodes for even more content to propel you to Amazon FBA Seller success! And don’t forget to “Like” our Facebook page and subscribe to the podcast on iTunesSpotify, or wherever you listen to our podcast.

Get snippets from all episodes by following us on Instagram at @SeriousSellersPodcast

Want to absolutely start crushing it on Amazon? Here are few carefully curated resources to get you started:

  • Freedom Ticket: Taught by Amazon thought leader Kevin King, get A-Z Amazon strategies and techniques for establishing and solidifying your business.
  • Helium 10: 30+ software tools to boost your entire sales pipeline from product research to customer communication and Amazon refund automation. Make running a successful Amazon or Walmart business easier with better data and insights. See what our customers have to say.
  • Helium 10 Chrome Extension: Verify your Amazon product idea and validate how lucrative it can be with over a dozen data metrics and profitability estimation.
  • SellerTrademarks.com: Trademarks are vital for protecting your Amazon brand from hijackers, and sellertrademarks.com provides a streamlined process for helping you get one.
author-photo
VP of Education and Strategy

Bradley is the VP of Education and Strategy for Helium 10 as well as the host of the most listened to podcast in the world for Amazon sellers, the Serious Sellers Podcast. He has been involved in e-commerce for over 20 years, and before joining Helium 10, launched over 400 products as a consultant for Amazon Sellers.

Published in:
Published in: Serious Sellers Podcast

Achieve More Results in Less Time

Accelerate the Growth of Your Business, Brand or Agency

Maximize your results and drive success faster with Helium 10’s full suite of Amazon and Walmart solutions.