Eagle Lights had already tried working with a third-party Amazon seller. It didn't go well. Reporting was inconsistent. Communication lagged. Pricing issues created friction. The Connecticut-based LED headlight manufacturer needed a partner who would manage the account like an operator, not a middleman.
In November 2019, Eagle Lights handed a small test assortment to SupplyKick. Within a month, the assortment tripled. Sales outperformed forecast by 20%. Ad sales grew over 100%. The difference wasn't strategy. It was execution, reporting, and trust.
| Metric | Result |
|---|---|
| Sales vs. forecast | +20% |
| Assortment growth (QoQ) | 3x |
| Ad sales growth | 100%+ |
Brand: Eagle Lights manufactures premium LED headlights and automotive accessories for online-only distribution.
Product line: Requires clear fitment details, technical specs, installation confidence, and visual proof that the parts work as advertised.
Partnership start: November 2019
Test period to full handoff: Under 30 days
The previous partner didn't provide consistent sales reporting or clear account updates. Eagle Lights couldn't see what was happening in the account, which listings were moving, or where ad spend was going. Communication was slow. Questions sat unanswered. When visibility breaks down, trust follows.
Pricing decisions created conflict. The seller's incentives didn't align with Eagle Lights' margin goals or brand positioning. Eagle Lights needed a partner who would advocate for the brand, not just push volume. They started looking for an Amazon partner who could take day-to-day management off their plate and report like a real account owner.
Eagle Lights didn't hand over the full catalog immediately. They started with a few ASINs to test the relationship. SupplyKick focused on the basics: clean reporting cadence, listing cleanup, and responsive account management.
Amazon's own data says Basic A+ Content can lift sales by 8%, and Premium A+ Content can lift sales by 20%.
Within a month, Eagle Lights expanded the assortment. The test proved the relationship worked.
Eagle Lights wanted to focus on product development and new channels, not daily Amazon ad management. SupplyKick took over campaign oversight, search term refinement, and bid adjustments. The team invested its own capital into ad spend for Eagle Lights, which aligned incentives and removed friction around budget approvals.
Ad sales grew over 100%, but the goal wasn't just spend more and sell more. The advertising team continuously refined campaigns to improve efficiency and return. That meant cutting wasted spend, focusing on search terms that converted, and balancing branded coverage with category expansion.
Sales came in 20% above the forecast SupplyKick and Eagle Lights built together. That's not a projection miss. It's proof the account responded to better management.
The product assortment tripled quarter over quarter. Eagle Lights kept adding SKUs because the partnership was working. More products, better listings, stronger advertising support, and clearer reporting created a flywheel.
"We were apprehensive about working with another Amazon partner. However, our dedicated account manager kept us informed and listened to all of our suggestions. This made it very easy to do business with SupplyKick."
Keith Remy, Chief Technical Officer at Eagle Lights
That quote captures the core issue. Eagle Lights didn't need a flashy strategy. They needed an operator who would communicate, report, and execute without friction.
Warning Signs to Look For
Those aren't reasons to wait and hope things improve. They're reasons to start evaluating alternatives.
What to Expect From a Strong Amazon Operator
Start with a test. Hand over a small assortment, set clear expectations, and measure how fast the new partner moves. If reporting is clean, communication is responsive, and early execution delivers, expand the relationship. If not, you know within 30 days.
Real proof: specific metrics, clear time windows, and named outcomes. A strong case study shows the starting point, what changed, who did the work, and what happened as a result. Vague language and generic claims don't build credibility.
When visibility breaks down. If you can't get clear reporting, communication lags, or pricing decisions don't make sense, the relationship isn't working. Waiting rarely fixes structural issues. Test a new partner with a small assortment and compare the experience.
Reporting and communication improve immediately if the new partner is set up correctly. Listing updates, photography, and A+ Content follow within weeks. Advertising results take longer because campaigns need search term data, bid adjustments, and time to stabilize. Assortment expansion happens when trust is established and early results prove the relationship works.
Yes. Amazon's own guidance says Basic A+ Content can lift sales by up to 8%, and Premium A+ Content can lift sales by up to 20%. For technical products like LED headlights, A+ Content helps buyers compare specs, verify fitment, and see the product in use before they buy.
Listing optimization (titles, bullets, descriptions, backend keywords), product photography, A+ Content and Brand Story builds, Amazon advertising (Sponsored Products, Sponsored Brands, Sponsored Display), inventory coordination, pricing strategy, promotional planning, competitor monitoring, and monthly reporting. The scope depends on what the brand wants to hand off and what the agency can execute well.
Eagle Lights went from a broken relationship with inconsistent reporting to a partnership that tripled their assortment and outperformed forecast by 20%. The work was straightforward: better listings, stronger advertising, clear communication, and honest reporting.
SupplyKick manages the full Amazon marketing strategy for brands that want operator-level execution without the guesswork. From listing optimization and A+ Content to advertising and account management, our team handles the daily work so you can focus on your product.
Want to talk about what a SupplyKick partnership could look like for your brand? Connect with our team to start the conversation.