What's the Difference Between Amazon Vendor Central, Vendor Express, and Seller Central?

Maria Navolykina Author

UPDATE: September 24, 2019: From Amazon: “Enhanced Brand Content is now called A+ Content.”

UPDATE: March 13, 2018: Amazon Will Discontinue Its Vendor Express Platform

“Communicating via an email sent directly to sellers using the platform, Amazon announced the gradual discontinuation of the Vendor Express platform between now until its permanent unavailability, effective January 1, 2019.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE: While there has always been chatter on seller forums and debates about the merits of Amazon Vendor Central vs. Amazon Seller Central for first-party sellers, the discussion has heated up recently as a result of the major changes to the Amazon Brand Registry. What used to be fairly clear (Vendor Central or Vendor Express for 1P vendors and Seller Central for 3P sellers) has become increasingly complicated as Amazon has tacked on additional features, rules, restrictions, fees, and benefits to each program as the marketplace grows and expands globally.

We’ve covered this in the past, but given the changes of late, now is a great time to check in and discuss the differences between the programs available to those selling on/with/to/via Amazon.

Which Amazon Selling Programs Are Available to You?

First, before we dig into the three programs, let’s clear up some confusion about eligibility and which program was built for whom. There’s a lot to digest about each platform and no sense in wasting time pursuing options that are not available to you as an individual seller.

Vendor Central: First-Party Seller (1P), Invitation Only

Strengths, Benefits, and Advantages of Vendor Central

Weaknesses, inadequacies, and annoyances of Amazon Vendor Central

Bottom Line on Vendor Central

If you’re eligible for Vendor Central because Amazon invited you, it can be a great opportunity to gain massive exposure and give your company a chance to focus on innovation, product development, production, and selling high volume with few complications by offloading things like retail sales, packing and shipping, and customer service. However, the trade-off means lower margins, relinquishing a good bit of control over data, and pretty much agreeing to play by Amazon’s often-strict rules.

Vendor Express: 1P, No Invitation Required

Strengths, Benefits, and Advantages of Vendor Express

Weaknesses, Inadequacies, and Annoyances of Vendor Express

Bottom Line on Vendor Express

Amazon Vendor Express is not the perfect mix of Vendor Central and Seller Central that many sellers had hoped for. It’s definitely for first-party sellers. Its real strength is that it offers non-mega-brands an opportunity for a foray into wholesale and upscaling their productions (and hopefully their profits). What these younger, smaller producers may gain in terms of experience, exposure, time, and volume, they lose in terms of margins, control over cost, and customer interaction. But it doesn’t cost much to try Vendor Express. If you’re a producer who owns your brand and you want to spend more time earning and less time packing and shipping, Vendor Express could be a great fit.

Seller Central: Third Party (3P), No Invitation Required

Strengths, Benefits, and Advantages of Seller Central

Weaknesses, Inadequacies, and Annoyances of Seller Central

Bottom Line on Seller Central

With all of its pluses and minuses, Seller Central is the only option for 3P sellers on Amazon so it’s Amazon’s way or the highway. It’s tricky business, crazy cut-throat, and we all know that the slightest infringement or misstep can lead to a seller’s suspension. Amazon’s investment in Seller Central is about diversity and choice for the customer, offering the selection in order to say that Amazon offers EVERYTHING and that shoppers need not go anywhere else for options and the best prices. But Seller Central isn’t where it’s at for Amazon and they’d rather own the product outright than do a revenue share. The good news is that Seller Central has come a long way in terms of capabilities for sellers. FBA was a radical improvement and I like the look of Amazon starting to extend things like free EBC to 3P sellers.

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