Products

The Products page provides a detailed view of all the products you have listed on Amazon, along with key metrics and management options.

Products List & Management

On the Products screen you’ll see a full catalog view with these key elements:

  1. Active-Only Toggle At the top, switch Only show active Products on or off to include inactive SKUs in the list.

  2. Export / Import

    • Export Products: Download your entire product list (with current settings) as a CSV.

    • Import Products: Upload a CSV to add or update multiple products in bulk.

  3. Search Bar Quickly filter by SKU, ASIN, product title, or any visible field.

  4. Product Rows Each row displays:

    • Country Flag & SKU / ASIN: Your marketplace and product identifiers.

    • Product Title: Truncated with hover-to-read more for long titles.

    • Fulfillment: FBA (purple) or FBM.

    • Condition: New, Used, etc.

    • Status: Active, Inactive, or Suppressed.

    • Listing Price: Current sale price in your account currency.

    • Batch Stock: Units you’ve logged manually via batches.

    • Amazon Stock: Units currently available in Amazon’s warehouse.

    • Manage Product Menu (⋮): Click to access contextual actions.

  5. Manage Product Menu Options

    • Manage Batches: Open the Batches panel to track and edit cost batches for this SKU.

    • Select Shipping Rate: Choose or override the default FBM shipping profile used for cost calculations.

    • Stock Forecast: View historical stock, sales, and future stock projections (see “Stock History & Forecast” below).

    • Open in Sourcer: Jump directly to this ASIN in the Product Sourcer extension.

    • Listing Performance: See impressions, clicks, conversion rate, and Buy Box share for this SKU.


Shipping Rates

Shipping rates are important for FBM products, since SellerMagnet does not get any cost from Amazon. You have to manually create shipping routes in the settings (Here's how: Settings) and then assign them to FBM products.


Batches Panel

When you click Manage Batches for a product, the panel displays existing cost batches and lets you add new ones:

  1. Add Returns Back to Batch Toggle this on if you want returned units to be re-credited to your current batch.

  2. Existing Batches A list of previous batches appears above (not shown), each with its name, total units, and unit costs.

  3. Create a New Batch Fill in:

    • Batch Name: Any internal identifier (e.g., “June Shipment”).

    • Total Units: Quantity received in this shipment.

    • Unit Net Cost: Your landed cost per unit (ex-tax).

    • Unit Tax Cost: If you track tax separately.

    • Unit Shipping Cost: Freight or courier cost per unit.

    • Unit Payment Fee: Payment processor fees (if any).

    • Unit Customs Cost & Additional Cost: Duties, packing, or other per-unit expenses.

    • Arrival Date: When the batch landed in your warehouse or Amazon’s.

    • Currency: Defaults to your account’s currency.

    • Click Create to save this batch.

All batch data feed into your cost of goods sold (COGS) and profit calculations.

Managing Batches

Batches, or cost of goods (COG) are essential for SellerMagnet to calculcatoe key metrics such as profits, margins and ROI. You should add batches for every product to monitor your purchasing prices.

Once a batch is added, you can right-click on it to cancel or edit it


Stock History & Forecast

Accessed via Stock Forecast in the product menu, this chart provides:

  1. Current Stock Displays the live Amazon stock level (e.g., “2 units”).

  2. Estimated Months Remaining Calculates how many months you can continue selling at the current average usage rate. If sales data is insufficient, it shows “N/A.”

  3. Average Monthly Usage Shows units sold per month, averaged over the chosen historical period.

  4. Chart Lines

    • Historical Stock (blue): Snapshots of your stock level over time.

    • Historical Sales (black): Units sold plotted against the same timeline.

    • Forecasted Stock (dashed orange): Projected stock levels based on current usage—hover any point (e.g., July 19, 2025) to see the forecasted units on that date.

Use this view to anticipate replenishment needs, avoid stockouts, and plan next orders with confidence.

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