u/Icy_Zucchini_1499

Migrate to a new seller account

Has anyone dealt with changing Amazon seller accounts while having existing Amazon loans?

I’m a brand owner, but I can't use my current account due to a bank account issue. I tried updating the business details on the existing account, but Amazon rejected it because there are active loans.

So, creating a new Amazon account to pay back the loans seems to be the only realistic option here? What’s the cleanest way to migrate everything — brand registry, listings, A+ Content, images, etc. — without causing more account issues?

Would really appreciate advice from anyone who has been through this.

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u/Icy_Zucchini_1499 — 1 day ago

Amazon consultancy/account management services?

We’ve been managing our own Amazon listings for a while, but with a growing catalogue, things like listing images, A+ Content, keyword optimization, variation setup, compliance issues, and conversion improvement are becoming too manual. I know Amazon has some internal/account support teams (saw some paid programs on seller central), and there are also external consultants or agencies, but it’s hard to know who actually adds value. Has anyone used Amazon consultancy services long-term, especially for listing optimization/management?

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u/Icy_Zucchini_1499 — 1 day ago

Tested a bunch of AI options for listing images and A+

Spent the last couple months trying out different AI options for listing images and A+ content. Not doing a full review of each one, just sharing what I noticed.

Canva — Most flexible if you actually enjoy designing. The AI features are legit. But you're adapting generic templates to Amazon specs yourself. It has no idea what an A+ comparison chart should look like for your category. You bring that expertise. Great if you already live in Canva, but plan on 30-60 min per listing.

Photoroom — Best background removal and scene placement I found. White background heroes and lifestyle scenes on marble countertops etc. come out clean. But it's one image at a time. No A+ workflow, no listing strategy. You're stitching everything together yourself.

Blend — Specifically good at lifestyle product photography. Realistic environments, not that obvious composite look. Limited to lifestyle backgrounds though — no infographics, text overlays, or A+ modules.

Saharan AI — This one's different from the rest because it's more of an "agent" than a tool. You upload a product photo and it generates the whole package — hero, secondaries, A+ modules — without you touching any design interface. What surprised me is it picked up on category-specific stuff automatically. My supplement listings got dosage callouts and certification badges without me asking. Kitchen products got dimensional context. Not as customizable as doing everything yourself in Canva, but the time savings are wild if you're managing a bunch of ASINs. It really feels like it’s trained on e-commerce expertise.

Pebblely — Similar to Photoroom but aimed at smaller products like cosmetics, jewelry, food items. Quick and intuitive. Still single-image only though.

The built-in image generator in Seller Central — Free, which is nice. But output is hit or miss. Limited customization. No A+ support. Good for experimenting but I wouldn't rely on it.

Freelancers (Not AI tho)— Prices have dropped a lot since designers started using AI tools behind the scenes. You can get a full package for $80-250 now. Still per-listing pricing though, still 3-5 day turnaround, still revision cycles, still inconsistent quality depending on who you hire.

u/Icy_Zucchini_1499 — 3 days ago

I compared 7 AI options for Amazon listing design — here's what actually works (and what's a waste of time)

First — there's a distinction most people miss. There are AI tools (you're the designer, AI assists with tasks like background removal) and AI agents (you upload a product photo, the AI handles everything). This matters way more than any feature list.

Here's what I tested:

Canva — Honestly the most flexible option if you enjoy designing. Magic Studio features are solid. But you're building Amazon listings from general-purpose templates, manually setting dimensions, choosing layouts, making sure everything meets Seller Central requirements. It doesn't know what an A+ comparison chart should look like for supplements vs. kitchen products. You bring that knowledge. Works great if you already use Canva for other brand stuff and don't mind spending 30-60 min per listing.

Photoroom — Does two things really well: background removal and AI scene placement. Need a clean white-background hero or your product on a marble countertop? Solid results, fast, affordable. But it stops at individual images. You're assembling everything else separately.

Blend — Good at lifestyle photography specifically. Placing your product into realistic environments — diffuser on a bedside table, water bottle at the gym. Looks natural, not composited. But again, just lifestyle backgrounds.

Saharan AI — This one's different from the others because it's the agent model I mentioned. You upload a product photo and it generates the whole package — hero, secondaries, A+ modules — without you touching a design interface. It makes the layout/typography/content decisions that a freelance designer would make, but in a couple minutes. Worked surprisingly well for my supplement and home/kitchen ASINs where it picked up on category-specific stuff (dosage callouts, dimensional context) without me telling it to. Not as customizable as doing it yourself in Canva, but the time savings are ridiculous if you're managing multiple ASINs. It really feels like it’s trained on e-commerce expertise.

Pebblely — Similar lane to Photoroom but targets small physical products (cosmetics, jewelry, food). Quick lifestyle images, intuitive interface. Still a single-image tool though, not a listing solution.

Amazon's Built-In AI Generator — Free for Brand Registered sellers, right inside Seller Central. Price is right but output is inconsistent. Limited customization, no A+ design, no strategic thinking about how your listing works as a whole. Fine for experimenting at zero cost. Not a solution.

Freelancer + AI Hybrid (Fiverr/Upwork) — Most designers now use AI behind the scenes which has driven prices down ($80-250 for a full package vs $500 before). You get a human eye on final output. But you're still paying per listing, waiting 3-5 days, dealing with revision cycles, and quality varies wildly.

My takeaway after testing all of these:

If you sell 1-2 products and enjoy designing → Canva

If you just need quick hero images on a budget → Photoroom or Pebblely

If you're managing 10+ ASINs and don't want to become a designer → Saharan AI (the agent approach saved me the most time by far)

If you want to test AI at zero cost → Amazon's built-in tool

Pro tip regardless of which you pick: Don't swap all your images at once. Start with your worst-performing ASINs, change secondaries first (slots 2-4), monitor conversion for two weeks, THEN test the hero image. Use Manage Your Experiments if you're Brand Registered. Back up screenshots of everything before you touch it.

u/Icy_Zucchini_1499 — 3 days ago

I compared 7 options for Amazon listing design — here's what actually works (and what's a waste of time)

First — there's a distinction most people miss. There are AI tools (you're the designer, AI assists with tasks like background removal) and AI agents (you upload a product photo, the AI handles everything). This matters way more than any feature list.

Here's what I tested:

Canva — Honestly the most flexible option if you enjoy designing. Magic Studio features are solid. But you're building Amazon listings from general-purpose templates, manually setting dimensions, choosing layouts, making sure everything meets Seller Central requirements. It doesn't know what an A+ comparison chart should look like for supplements vs. kitchen products. You bring that knowledge. Works great if you already use Canva for other brand stuff and don't mind spending 30-60 min per listing.

Photoroom — Does two things really well: background removal and AI scene placement. Need a clean white-background hero or your product on a marble countertop? Solid results, fast, affordable. But it stops at individual images. You're assembling everything else separately.

Blend — Good at lifestyle photography specifically. Placing your product into realistic environments — diffuser on a bedside table, water bottle at the gym. Looks natural, not composited. But again, just lifestyle backgrounds.

Saharan AI — This one's different from the others because it's the agent model I mentioned. You upload a product photo and it generates the whole package — hero, secondaries, A+ modules — without you touching a design interface. It makes the layout/typography/content decisions that a freelance designer would make, but in a couple minutes. Worked surprisingly well for my supplement and home/kitchen ASINs where it picked up on category-specific stuff (dosage callouts, dimensional context) without me telling it to. Not as customizable as doing it yourself in Canva, but the time savings are ridiculous if you're managing multiple ASINs. It really feels like it’s trained on e-commerce expertise.

Pebblely — Similar lane to Photoroom but targets small physical products (cosmetics, jewelry, food). Quick lifestyle images, intuitive interface. Still a single-image tool though, not a listing solution.

Amazon's Built-In AI Generator — Free for Brand Registered sellers, right inside Seller Central. Price is right but output is inconsistent. Limited customization, no A+ design, no strategic thinking about how your listing works as a whole. Fine for experimenting at zero cost. Not a solution.

Freelancer + AI Hybrid (Fiverr/Upwork) — Most designers now use AI behind the scenes which has driven prices down ($80-250 for a full package vs $500 before). You get a human eye on final output. But you're still paying per listing, waiting 3-5 days, dealing with revision cycles, and quality varies wildly.

My takeaway after testing all of these:

If you sell 1-2 products and enjoy designing → Canva

If you just need quick hero images on a budget → Photoroom or Pebblely

If you're managing 10+ ASINs and don't want to become a designer → Saharan AI (the agent approach saved me the most time by far)

If you want to test AI at zero cost → Amazon's built-in tool

Pro tip regardless of which you pick: Don't swap all your images at once. Start with your worst-performing ASINs, change secondaries first (slots 2-4), monitor conversion for two weeks, THEN test the hero image. Use Manage Your Experiments if you're Brand Registered. Back up screenshots of everything before you touch it.

u/Icy_Zucchini_1499 — 3 days ago

I compared 7 options for Amazon listing design — here's what actually works (and what's a waste of time)

First — there's a distinction most people miss. There are AI tools (you're the designer, AI assists with tasks like background removal) and AI agents (you upload a product photo, the AI handles everything). This matters way more than any feature list.

Here's what I tested:

Canva — Honestly the most flexible option if you enjoy designing. Magic Studio features are solid. But you're building Amazon listings from general-purpose templates, manually setting dimensions, choosing layouts, making sure everything meets Seller Central requirements. It doesn't know what an A+ comparison chart should look like for supplements vs. kitchen products. You bring that knowledge. Works great if you already use Canva for other brand stuff and don't mind spending 30-60 min per listing.

Photoroom — Does two things really well: background removal and AI scene placement. Need a clean white-background hero or your product on a marble countertop? Solid results, fast, affordable. But it stops at individual images. You're assembling everything else separately.

Blend — Good at lifestyle photography specifically. Placing your product into realistic environments — diffuser on a bedside table, water bottle at the gym. Looks natural, not composited. But again, just lifestyle backgrounds.

Saharan AI — This one's different from the others because it's the agent model I mentioned. You upload a product photo and it generates the whole package — hero, secondaries, A+ modules — without you touching a design interface. It makes the layout/typography/content decisions that a freelance designer would make, but in a couple minutes. Worked surprisingly well for my supplement and home/kitchen ASINs where it picked up on category-specific stuff (dosage callouts, dimensional context) without me telling it to. Not as customizable as doing it yourself in Canva, but the time savings are ridiculous if you're managing multiple ASINs. It really feels like it’s trained on e-commerce expertise.

Pebblely — Similar lane to Photoroom but targets small physical products (cosmetics, jewelry, food). Quick lifestyle images, intuitive interface. Still a single-image tool though, not a listing solution.

Amazon's Built-In AI Generator — Free for Brand Registered sellers, right inside Seller Central. Price is right but output is inconsistent. Limited customization, no A+ design, no strategic thinking about how your listing works as a whole. Fine for experimenting at zero cost. Not a solution.

Freelancer + AI Hybrid (Fiverr/Upwork) — Most designers now use AI behind the scenes which has driven prices down ($80-250 for a full package vs $500 before). You get a human eye on final output. But you're still paying per listing, waiting 3-5 days, dealing with revision cycles, and quality varies wildly.

My takeaway after testing all of these:

If you sell 1-2 products and enjoy designing → Canva

If you just need quick hero images on a budget → Photoroom or Pebblely

If you're managing 10+ ASINs and don't want to become a designer → Saharan AI (the agent approach saved me the most time by far)

If you want to test AI at zero cost → Amazon's built-in tool

Pro tip regardless of which you pick: Don't swap all your images at once. Start with your worst-performing ASINs, change secondaries first (slots 2-4), monitor conversion for two weeks, THEN test the hero image. Use Manage Your Experiments if you're Brand Registered. Back up screenshots of everything before you touch it.

u/Icy_Zucchini_1499 — 3 days ago
▲ 5 r/SaharanAI+2 crossposts

I compared 7 AI options for Amazon listing design — here's what actually works (and what's a waste of time)

First — there's a distinction most people miss. There are AI tools (you're the designer, AI assists with tasks like background removal) and AI agents (you upload a product photo, the AI handles everything). This matters way more than any feature list.

Here's what I tested:

Canva — Honestly the most flexible option if you enjoy designing. Magic Studio features are solid. But you're building Amazon listings from general-purpose templates, manually setting dimensions, choosing layouts, making sure everything meets Seller Central requirements. It doesn't know what an A+ comparison chart should look like for supplements vs. kitchen products. You bring that knowledge. Works great if you already use Canva for other brand stuff and don't mind spending 30-60 min per listing.

Photoroom — Does two things really well: background removal and AI scene placement. Need a clean white-background hero or your product on a marble countertop? Solid results, fast, affordable. But it stops at individual images. You're assembling everything else separately.

Blend — Good at lifestyle photography specifically. Placing your product into realistic environments — diffuser on a bedside table, water bottle at the gym. Looks natural, not composited. But again, just lifestyle backgrounds.

Saharan AI — This one's different from the others because it's the agent model I mentioned. You upload a product photo and it generates the whole package — hero, secondaries, A+ modules — without you touching a design interface. It makes the layout/typography/content decisions that a freelance designer would make, but in a couple minutes. Worked surprisingly well for my supplement and home/kitchen ASINs where it picked up on category-specific stuff (dosage callouts, dimensional context) without me telling it to. Not as customizable as doing it yourself in Canva, but the time savings are ridiculous if you're managing multiple ASINs. It really feels like it’s trained on e-commerce expertise.

Pebblely — Similar lane to Photoroom but targets small physical products (cosmetics, jewelry, food). Quick lifestyle images, intuitive interface. Still a single-image tool though, not a listing solution.

Amazon's Built-In AI Generator — Free for Brand Registered sellers, right inside Seller Central. Price is right but output is inconsistent. Limited customization, no A+ design, no strategic thinking about how your listing works as a whole. Fine for experimenting at zero cost. Not a solution.

Freelancer + AI Hybrid (Fiverr/Upwork) — Most designers now use AI behind the scenes which has driven prices down ($80-250 for a full package vs $500 before). You get a human eye on final output. But you're still paying per listing, waiting 3-5 days, dealing with revision cycles, and quality varies wildly.

My takeaway after testing all of these:

If you sell 1-2 products and enjoy designing → Canva

If you just need quick hero images on a budget → Photoroom or Pebblely

If you're managing 10+ ASINs and don't want to become a designer → Saharan AI (the agent approach saved me the most time by far)

If you want to test AI at zero cost → Amazon's built-in tool

Pro tip regardless of which you pick: Don't swap all your images at once. Start with your worst-performing ASINs, change secondaries first (slots 2-4), monitor conversion for two weeks, THEN test the hero image. Use Manage Your Experiments if you're Brand Registered. Back up screenshots of everything before you touch it.

u/Icy_Zucchini_1499 — 3 days ago