Shane
@LegacyProfitCo
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Scaling Amazon Arbitrage to $1M+ Daily sourcing tactics + profit plays Building LegacyProfitCo
Joined January 2026
The real Amazon FBA skill isn’t finding deals. It’s knowing which ones to ignore. (A hard lesson to learn.)
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If you sell on Amazon, remember this: -Proof beats emotion. -Structure beats length. -Clarity beats anger. That lesson alone can recover a lot more money over time. What’s the hardest support case you’ve had to fight with Amazon?
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The shift is simple: Stop writing cases like a frustrated seller. Start writing them like someone building a file for approval. The difference will transform your outcomes.
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Amazon calls it “seller support.” Sometimes it feels more like seller sacrifice. That’s exactly why your case strategy matters. On this platform, being right is not enough. You have to prove it clearly and realize who you're playing the game with.
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The sellers who recover the most money are not always the sellers who were most wronged. They’re usually the sellers who: -keep records -understand policy -stay concise -escalate correctly -present facts better than average
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Emotion feels justified, but documentation gets you paid! That’s one of the harshest lessons I've had to learn on Amazon.
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Another mistake: Sellers ask support to “review.” Winning sellers ask for a specific outcome. Not: “Please look into this.” Better: “Based on the attached evidence, I respectfully request reimbursement of $___.”
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Most sellers lose because they bury the point. If support has to search your message to understand the problem, your odds drop fast. Again, make it easy for them to say yes!
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A strong case usually looks like this: (Copy this for reference) Issue: [one sentence] Facts: [short timeline] Evidence: [tracking / images / order details] Policy: [relevant rule] Request: [specific resolution] Simplicity wins!
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Amazon support does not want your full life story. They want to quickly understand: -what happened -why you are correct -what proves it -what action should be taken That’s it.
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I stopped treating support cases like complaints. I started treating them like evidence files. That changed everything.
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The case that wins is usually not the case with the biggest problem. It’s the case with the best documentation. That means: -clear timeline -screenshots -tracking data -policy reference -exact requested resolution I.E. Make it easy for them to say yes.
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Most sellers open cases emotionally. They write things like: “This is unfair” “Please help” “I need this fixed” Amazon rarely rewards frustration. It rewards clarity.
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Amazon customer support denied the case at first. I still won! Here’s what most sellers get wrong when dealing with Amazon support... #AmazonFBA #RetailArbitrage #OnlineArbitrage
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Helpful Tip for Inventory that moves slow: I listed one variation of a product for an outlet deal. Instantly all the variations of the same product received a huge sales boost at retail prices! #AmazonFBA #OnlineArbitrage
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Amazon says, “seller support," but too often it feels like seller sacrifice. To win more cases stop arguing emotionally and start documenting like investigators.
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One of the biggest lies in FBA: “Just find profitable products.” NO! You need products that are: -profitable -repeatable -replenishable -cash-flow friendly -low competition A random win is not a business.
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Nobody talks enough about how much of Amazon FBA is emotional control. 😟 -Not getting too excited on a winner. -Not getting too desperate on a slow week. -Not panic-buying bad inventory because you want movement. A lot of profit is just disciplined decisions under boredom.
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Amazon FBA is weird. You can have: -sales coming in -money “on the way” -inventory in transit -profit on paper …and still feel broke. That’s when you realize this business is less about sales and more about cash flow timing. #AmazonFBA #OnlineArbitrage
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Sometimes the best motivation is seeing all the things you do. Make a list of weekly goals. Cross off the things you accomplish. Look back periodically and remember what you are capable of doing. You got this!
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