3PL Dropshipping Guide ====================== A practical guide covering supplier vetting, order fulfillment workflows, stock monitoring, returns handling, and account metrics tracking — everything you need to run a policy-safe dropshipping operation. Key Points ---------- - You hold inventory: Controlled sellers receive products at their own facility, inspect for damage, remove supplier branding, and repackage before shipping. Reckless dropshippers ship blind from a supplier they have never visited — and the defects pile up. - You control the tracking: Controlled sellers upload tracking from their own shipping account after the package leaves their hands. Reckless sellers rely on supplier-generated tracking that often arrives late, mismatches, or never appears — triggering eBay defects automatically. - You verify before you list: Controlled sellers confirm stock availability, handling time, and shipping speed with each supplier before listing a single product. Reckless sellers copy-paste listings and hope the supplier has inventory when orders arrive. - Supplier stock accuracy: Supplier must maintain above 95% inventory accuracy with real-time stock feeds. An out-of-stock sale is a guaranteed defect — and defects cascade into restrictions faster than any other metric. - Supplier handling speed: Supplier must consistently dispatch within your promised handling window. Late shipments are the fastest path to an eBay account restriction. We verify actual performance data, not sales claims. - Supplier return policy: Supplier return terms must match what you offer eBay buyers. If the supplier charges a 20% restocking fee and you offer free returns, that gap destroys your margin on every return. Process ------- - Research products: Identify products with consistent demand, reliable wholesale availability, and healthy margins after all costs. Validate supplier stock feeds before listing anything — if the supplier cannot fulfill consistently, the product does not make the cut. - Purchase from supplier: When an eBay order comes in, purchase the item from your verified wholesale supplier at the agreed price. Use documented ordering procedures so every purchase is tracked, confirmed, and time-stamped. - Receive at warehouse: Ship orders to your own warehouse or 3PL facility — not directly to the customer. This is the key difference between controlled and reckless dropshipping. You take physical custody so you control quality and timing. - Inspect and relabel: Open every package, inspect the product for damage or defects, remove supplier invoices and branding, and repackage with your own label. The unboxing experience should look like it came from your business — not a third party. - Ship to customer: Use your own shipping account and packaging to dispatch the order with tracking. Upload tracking to eBay immediately. You control the final mile — not the supplier — so delivery promises are always met on your terms. - Monitor and optimize: Track delivery times, return rates, and supplier performance metrics weekly. Replace underperforming suppliers, optimize shipping lanes, and refine your product mix based on real fulfillment data — not guesses. FAQ --- Q: Is dropshipping actually allowed on eBay? A: Yes — eBay allows dropshipping when you have a direct relationship with a wholesale supplier who fulfills orders on your behalf. What eBay prohibits is listing products from other retailers (like Amazon or Walmart) and having them ship directly to your eBay buyers. Controlled dropshipping works within eBay's policy by building direct supplier partnerships with documented fulfillment agreements — not retail arbitrage. Q: What makes controlled dropshipping different from what most people teach? A: Most dropshipping courses teach retail arbitrage — find a product on another marketplace, list it on eBay at a markup, and hope the other retailer ships it. This creates tracking mismatches, late shipments, and account suspensions. Controlled dropshipping uses direct wholesale supplier relationships, real-time inventory visibility, documented handling procedures, and proactive account monitoring — built for sustainability, not quick flips. Q: How many products should I start with? A: Start with 5 to 10 products from one or two verified suppliers. Prove that your fulfillment workflow works end-to-end — order placement, tracking upload, delivery confirmation, returns handling — before expanding the catalog. Most dropshipping failures come from scaling SKU count before the operational foundation is solid. Q: What are the biggest risks in dropshipping and how do you prevent them? A: The four biggest risks are: (1) stock-outs causing cancelled orders and defects — prevented by automated stock monitoring; (2) late shipments from supplier delays — prevented by handling time buffers and supplier performance tracking; (3) tracking upload failures — prevented by documented order confirmation workflows; and (4) returns chaos — prevented by pre-established returns procedures with each supplier. Every risk has a control when you build the system intentionally. Q: How do you handle returns in a dropshipping model? A: Before listing any product, we establish the returns procedure with the supplier: who pays return shipping, where items are returned, how refunds are processed, and what the timeline looks like. For eBay, you remain responsible for the buyer experience — so we build templated return authorization workflows that keep you compliant while routing returns efficiently through your supplier's process. Q: How long does it take to build a stable controlled dropshipping operation? A: A stable foundation — vetted suppliers, documented processes, monitored metrics, and 5-10 optimized listings — typically takes 4 to 8 weeks to establish. The timeline depends on supplier onboarding speed, product research depth, and how much cleanup your current operation needs. The goal is operational stability first, then scaling — not the other way around.