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Instead of her usual manual grind, Sarah hovered over the tab in Amazon Seller Central and selected "Manage Orders". With a few clicks:

Once upon a time in a cluttered garage-turned-workshop, Sarah ran a small business selling handcrafted wooden puzzles. For years, she painstakingly managed her own fulfillment (FBM), manually copying customer addresses into a separate shipping site and praying the "Item Not Received" (INR) claims wouldn't eat her profits.

: Customer addresses and tracking numbers synced automatically, saving her hours of typing. The Test of Protection

Question about Using Amazon Buy shipping and buyer not getting item

: Amazon compared carriers like UPS and USPS , instantly showing the lowest available costs for her specific boxes.

A week later, "The Dreaded Email" arrived. A customer in Seattle claimed their puzzle never showed up. In the past, Sarah would have had to refund the money herself or face a hit to her .

One Tuesday, a flood of orders arrived—the "Great Puzzle Rush" had begun. Stressed and surrounded by bubble wrap, Sarah decided to try for the first time. The Shift to Automation