While I’m stifling my boredom by endlessly scrolling, tapping, and swiping on my $1,100 depression device from Apple, Kwadwo Tuffour is using his to manage a $10 million Amazon business.
You probably know him as KT Hustles.
You also know having only one income stream today is like walking through gunfire hoping to emerge unscathed.
With cost of living skyrocketing and layoffs spiking, you’re bound to catch a stray sooner or later.
Is KT’s “Trusted Vendor Model” for selling on Amazon the answer though?
Read on for AMZ Accelerator Program reviews.
KT was in your stinky, rubbery Crocs just a few short years ago, feeling the gnawing hunger for security and financial freedom.
- He wanted to take nice vacations.
- Upgrade his car.
- Move into a bigger apartment.
- Put away some cash for a rainy day.
But where was this abundance gonna come from?
KT weighed his options.
Starting his own ecommerce brand seemed too risky. Between ordering samples, stocking inventory, and funding marketing, he could sink shoulder-deep in debt before even making his first sale – if it ever came.
Stocks and crypto? About as sturdy as an extension ladder leaning against a gutter, wobbling from wind gusts up to 35 miles per hour.
As for real estate? KT’s list of cons was taller than your dad.
Airbnb? I mean, he’d rather lick a recently-used plunger.
So what are you left with?
Well, assuming OnlyFans is off the table, KT thinks Amazon FBA is your best bet.
You can build this business on evenings and weekends and make as much money as you want, he says.
This model catapulted him from slinging cars at dealerships to generating $4.7 million in sales last year, all while working less than 20 hours a week.
Let it blare from a boombox on A.C. Slater’s shoulder: KT isn’t the only success story here.
Here are a few recent KT Hustles reviews:
- Daniel pulled in over $200k in his first five months on Amazon.
- Kate reported $70k in just two months.
- And Ty earned $30k in revenue last month alone, even while attending school full time.
Thing is, this isn’t your typical Amazon selling strategy.
KT calls it his Trusted Vendor Model because, rather than starting your own brand, you’re partnering with established mega-companies like Dove, Method, and Scrub Daddy.
In this role, you act as a vendor for their popular products that sell consistently every day.
List those products on The Everything Store, and the opportunity’s bigger than William “The Refrigerator” Perry from the ’85 Bears.
KT explains that you purchase these brand-name products at a discount and then send them to Amazon, where they sell at full price.
How is this possible?
You team up with retailers like Kohl’s, Best Buy, and Bed Bath & Beyond – or their authorized distributors – to secure wholesale pricing on bulk orders.
You then ship these items to an Amazon warehouse.
When a customer buys from your Amazon listing at full retail price, you pocket the difference.
Which is how much?
KT estimates that you might earn 30 cents out of every one dollar in sales.
Ideally, you should reinvest these early profits to expand your offerings.
But for instance:
- Imagine you find Method Body Wash listed for $26 on Amazon.
- You discover you can order 100 units of the same body wash for $1,000, which works out to just $10 per bottle.
- That’s a $16 margin, right?
- So if you sell all 100 units, your gross profit would be $1,600.
- Even after software, tools, shipping, and Amazon fees, you’re still sitting pretty.
Yeah, but the process is absolutely daunting.
“Ungating,” as it’s called, requires meticulous documentation, significant upfront capital, and strict compliance.
A bit too intense for my taste.
I feel like you’d need to be one of those perpetually busy, on-the-go New Yorker types, fueled by a potent mix of caffeine, nicotine, and borderline autism, to pull this off.
What about you?
According to Reddit, if you’re still standing and not completely overwhelmed, the Amazon Accelerator Program will set you back $5,000.