u/Maleficent-Gas-9049

1,733 Toy ASIN Bulk List | Amazon FBA Product Research CSV
▲ 1 r/AmazonFBAOnlineRetail+1 crossposts

1,733 Toy ASIN Bulk List | Amazon FBA Product Research CSV

I just put together a toy ASIN bulk list if anyone wants something to run through their own tools.

It’s 1,733 toy ASINs in a CSV. Not saying every item is a winner, but it’s useful if you want a starting point to check eligibility, Keepa, seller count, Buy Box, fees, etc.

I use these kinds of lists to speed up research instead of checking products one by one. Comment "Detail" for more info

u/Maleficent-Gas-9049 — 4 days ago
▲ 2 r/AmazonFBAOnlineRetail+1 crossposts

I just scraped 3,000 products from one category… bulk sourcing is starting to make way more sense

I just scraped 3,000 products from a Home category and this is honestly making me rethink how I source.

Instead of clicking through products one by one, I can pull a bulk list, filter through the data, and only spend time checking the stuff that actually looks worth it.

It’s still not “easy money” because you still have to check the numbers, competition, Keepa, restrictions, all that. But it saves a lot of dead time.

I’m about to run another scrape today. If anybody wants me to check a site/category for them, comment “details” and I’ll send you the info.

u/Maleficent-Gas-9049 — 5 days ago

500 Free ASINs Today — Pick Your Category

Giving away 500 ASINs today.

I’ve been testing this sourcing system where I scrape retail/wholesale sites and organize the results into bulk lists so sellers can check leads faster instead of searching one by one.

Today I’m giving away 500 ASINs in whatever category you want me to look into.

Comment “details” and tell me the category you’re interested in.

Examples: grocery, beauty, pet, office, baby, health, toys, books, home, etc.

reddit.com
u/Maleficent-Gas-9049 — 6 days ago

What made sourcing finally start clicking for me

One thing I had to stop doing was randomly searching products and hoping something worked.

At first I was wasting too much time finding items, checking them, then realizing I was gated or the numbers didn’t make sense. It made sourcing feel way harder than it needed to be.

Lately I’ve been doing it different. I’ll scrape wholesale sites or online retail sites first, pull the product data in bulk, then check what matches up with Amazon and what I’m actually approved to sell.

It’s not magic and every product still has to be checked with Keepa/SellerAmp, but it saves a lot of time compared to searching one item at a time.

The biggest lesson for me: don’t just chase products. Build a system that gives you more products to check.

reddit.com
u/Maleficent-Gas-9049 — 8 days ago

Sharing a CSV of ASINs I pulled from Amazon category pages

I’ve been playing around with scraping Whole Sale, retail, and amazon category pages and ended up putting together a CSV with ASINs from a few different areas: Amazon deals, grocery/food, pet supplies, and baby items.

Figured I’d share it here in case it helps anybody who’s newer and trying to practice running ASINs in bulk. This one is just from Amazon category pages, not from a retail site like Walmart, Target, Walgreens, etc.

The way I’ve been using it is mainly to see what my account is already approved to sell without checking every ASIN one by one. It’s not meant to be a list of “go buy these products.” You still have to run everything through Keepa/SellerAmp and check the normal stuff like restrictions, fees, seller count, Buy Box, ROI, demand, and whether Amazon is on the listing.

I just know when you’re new, it can take forever to figure out what you can even sell, so having a bigger list to test in bulk can save some time.

Curious how other people are doing this too. Are y’all scraping categories, retail sites, clearance pages, or mostly just scanning/sourcing manually?

reddit.com
u/Maleficent-Gas-9049 — 8 days ago

Sharing a CSV of ASINs I pulled from Amazon category pages

I’ve been playing around with scraping Amazon category pages and ended up putting together a CSV with ASINs from a few different areas: Amazon deals, grocery/food, pet supplies, and baby items.

Figured I’d share it here in case it helps anybody who’s newer and trying to practice running ASINs in bulk. This one is just from Amazon category pages, not from a retail site like Walmart, Target, Walgreens, etc.

The way I’ve been using it is mainly to see what my account is already approved to sell without checking every ASIN one by one. It’s not meant to be a list of “go buy these products.” You still have to run everything through Keepa/SellerAmp and check the normal stuff like restrictions, fees, seller count, Buy Box, ROI, demand, and whether Amazon is on the listing.

I just know when you’re new, it can take forever to figure out what you can even sell, so having a bigger list to test in bulk can save some time.

Curious how other people are doing this too. Are y’all scraping Amazon categories, retail sites, clearance pages, or mostly just scanning/sourcing manually?

reddit.com
u/Maleficent-Gas-9049 — 8 days ago

Sharing a CSV of ASINs I pulled from Amazon category pages

I’ve been playing around with scraping Amazon category pages and ended up putting together a CSV with ASINs from a few different areas: Amazon deals, grocery/food, pet supplies, and baby items.

Figured I’d share it here in case it helps anybody who’s newer and trying to practice running ASINs in bulk. This one is just from Amazon category pages, not from a retail site like Walmart, Target, Walgreens, etc.

The way I’ve been using it is mainly to see what my account is already approved to sell without checking every ASIN one by one. It’s not meant to be a list of “go buy these products.” You still have to run everything through Keepa/SellerAmp and check the normal stuff like restrictions, fees, seller count, Buy Box, ROI, demand, and whether Amazon is on the listing.

I just know when you’re new, it can take forever to figure out what you can even sell, so having a bigger list to test in bulk can save some time.

Curious how other people are doing this too. Are y’all scraping Amazon categories, retail sites, clearance pages, or mostly just scanning/sourcing manually?

reddit.com
u/Maleficent-Gas-9049 — 8 days ago

Free list of 1,449 ASINs + bulk approval‑check script for new FBA sellers

I’ve been playing around with scraping Amazon category pages and ended up putting together a CSV with ASINs from a few different areas: Amazon deals, grocery/food, pet supplies, and baby items.

Figured I’d share it here in case it helps anybody who’s newer and trying to practice running ASINs in bulk. This one is just from Amazon category pages, not from a retail site like Walmart, Target, Walgreens, etc.

The way I’ve been using it is mainly to see what my account is already approved to sell without checking every ASIN one by one. It’s not meant to be a list of “go buy these products.” You still have to run everything through Keepa/SellerAmp and check the normal stuff like restrictions, fees, seller count, Buy Box, ROI, demand, and whether Amazon is on the listing.

I just know when you’re new, it can take forever to figure out what you can even sell, so having a bigger list to test in bulk can save some time.

Curious how other people are doing this too. Are y’all scraping Amazon categories, retail sites, clearance pages, or mostly just scanning/sourcing manually?

reddit.com
u/Maleficent-Gas-9049 — 8 days ago