When I take on a new wholesale FBA client, the first thing I do is open a spreadsheet I've been building for years. It's a database of suppliers, brands, and distributors I've already vetted, contacted, or worked with across different categories. That's where supplier sourcing starts โ€” not Google, not Alibaba, not a paid directory.

Most advice on finding wholesale suppliers sends you straight to Alibaba or some generic trade directory. That advice ignores a fundamental reality: the suppliers worth working with are the ones that take time to find, time to build relationships with, and sometimes months to get approved by. There are no shortcuts. But there is a process that works โ€” and this is it.

Start With What You Already Have

If you've been operating in the wholesale space for any amount of time, you already have a database โ€” even if it's just notes or emails scattered across your inbox. The first step is organising that into a proper supplier spreadsheet: brand name, contact details, category, approval status, last contact date, and any notes from previous interactions.

Why start here? Because a supplier you've contacted before โ€” even one that rejected you โ€” is warmer than a cold lead. Markets change. Brands change their distribution policies. A supplier that said no 12 months ago might say yes today, especially if your account has grown since then.

Build this habit early

Every supplier you research, contact, or get approved by should go into a spreadsheet immediately. Track the contact name, email, phone, category, MOQ, payment terms, and approval status. This database becomes one of your most valuable business assets over time โ€” I still use mine daily.

Google Is Still the Best Research Tool

After checking my own database, the next place I go is Google. Not Amazon, not Alibaba โ€” Google. A simple search like "[brand name] wholesale application" or "[brand name] authorised distributor" will surface more useful leads than most paid tools.

From there I use Google Maps to find local distributors in specific US cities and states โ€” particularly for brands with regional distribution networks. A distributor in Dallas that supplies to independent retailers might not show up on any directory, but they'll have a Google Business listing.

The logic is simple: most sellers are running the same paid tools and browsing the same directories. Google searches โ€” especially location-specific ones โ€” surface suppliers that aren't getting hammered with applications from every new Amazon seller in the country.

The Biggest Mistake New Sellers Make

I see this constantly with new wholesale sellers: they buy from liquidators and unauthorised suppliers because the prices look good and the approval process is non-existent.

This is one of the fastest ways to destroy an Amazon account. Here's why:

The short-term appeal of cheap inventory without approval friction is not worth the account risk. Always source from authorised suppliers โ€” brands, manufacturers, or their official distributors.

The test for any supplier

Ask yourself: can this supplier provide an invoice on their company letterhead that includes the brand name, product details, quantities, and their business address? If the answer is no โ€” or if they hesitate โ€” don't place the order.

What You Need Before Approaching Any Brand

Before you contact a single supplier, two things need to be in place. Without them, your outreach will be ignored or rejected โ€” not because the brand doesn't want wholesale partners, but because you don't look like a serious one.

1. A proper e-commerce website

This is non-negotiable. Your website doesn't need to be elaborate, but it needs to exist and it needs to look like it belongs to a real business. Include your company name, what you sell, how you sell it, and contact information. Brands receive hundreds of wholesale applications โ€” a seller with a professional website signals credibility. A seller with a Gmail address and no web presence gets ignored.

2. Communication that reads like a business, not a beginner

Your first email to a brand sets the tone for the entire relationship. Keep it short, professional, and specific. State who you are, what you sell, which of their products you're interested in, and ask for their wholesale price list and MOQ. Don't mention Amazon in the first email โ€” many brands are cautious about their products being sold heavily on Amazon, and leading with that can close the door before it opens.

What not to say in your first email

"Hi, I want to sell your products on Amazon FBA, can you send me your wholesale price list?" โ€” This tells the brand you're an Amazon reseller looking for margin, not a retail business partner. Brands want distribution partners, not arbitrage sellers. Position yourself accordingly.

Rejection Is Part of the Process โ€” Not the End of It

I've been rejected by suppliers more times than I can count. Every wholesale operator has. It's not something to internalise or let slow you down.

Brands reject applications for many reasons that have nothing to do with you: they already have too many Amazon sellers, their distribution is locked to specific regions, they're changing their wholesale programme, or the person who handles applications is overwhelmed. A no today is not a permanent no.

The practice that actually works: follow up. Politely, consistently, and without desperation. I've had brands approve applications after four months of follow-ups โ€” including one where I sent emails every three to four weeks before finally getting a response. That brand became a solid long-term supplier. Persistence, done professionally, works.

The honest reality

Supplier sourcing is not a one-time task โ€” it's an ongoing operation. The sellers who have the best supplier relationships are the ones who treat it that way: maintaining a database, following up consistently, and building relationships over years, not weeks.

Timeline: What to Actually Expect

There is no standard timeline for getting approved by a wholesale supplier. It varies enormously depending on the brand, the category, how busy their trade team is, and whether they're actively looking for new distribution partners.

Some brands approve within a week of receiving a complete application. Others take months of follow-ups. My personal record is four months of consistent contact with a brand before they came back with approval โ€” multiple emails, the occasional phone call, and patience. It was worth it.

What you can control is your end: respond quickly when they do reply, have your documents ready (business registration, reseller certificate, website), and never let a lead go cold because you forgot to follow up.

The Process in Summary

  1. Check your existing database first โ€” warm leads are always better than cold ones
  2. Use Google โ€” search for brand wholesale programmes and use Google Maps for regional distributors
  3. Only approach authorised sources โ€” liquidators and unauthorised suppliers are account-risk, not opportunity
  4. Have your website and communication ready โ€” you get one first impression
  5. Follow up consistently โ€” most approvals come after multiple touchpoints, not the first email
  6. Track everything in a spreadsheet โ€” your supplier database is a long-term business asset

Want help building and managing your wholesale supplier pipeline?

I manage Amazon wholesale FBA accounts end-to-end โ€” including supplier sourcing, brand approvals, and ongoing account management. Book a free 30-minute call to discuss your situation.

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Moiz Zoaib Ali
Moiz Zoaib Ali

Amazon Wholesale FBA Consultant and Approved Amazon Solutions Provider based in Karachi, Pakistan. $3.7M+ in client sales managed across 6+ years of running full-stack wholesale FBA operations on Amazon USA.

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