Number of the Day

The Stealthy Rise of Amazon’s Private Label Empire, By the Numbers

What AmazonBasics and other ‘store brands’ mean for the e-commerce giant — and its third-party sellers

Marker Editors
Marker
Published in
2 min readAug 6, 2020

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Chutes at an Amazon Fulfillment Center with overlying text graphic: “Number of the Day: 22,617 Amazon Private Label Products”
Photo illustration, source: Helen H. Richardson/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post/Getty Images

22,617: That’s the total number of private label products that Amazon sells, more than triple the number it sold in 2018, according to a report by Coresight Research. AmazonBasics, the most popular of Amazon’s private label brands that offers household essentials like batteries and cookware, comprises 57% of all of Amazon’s private label sales while some of its other less obviously Amazon-branded lines like Common District (outerwear) and Obsidian (fitness equipment) together account for less than 20% of that pie.

In response to antitrust concerns last year, Amazon claimed its private label business generated less than 1% of its sales, which pales in comparison to a retailer like Target, whose private label brands account for nearly a third of its business.

But while Amazon may argue that its private labels make up an insignificant fraction of the $88.9 billion revenue it made in the second quarter of 2020, they’re a significant source of concern for the many small businesses that rely on the platform to sell their products, especially when Amazon seems to…

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