Overview
This Guidance demonstrates how retailers can onboard new suppliers and process orders of these suppliers’ products to help them provide customers with more product choices without higher inventory cost. It is designed for retailers who want to offer a wide range of products to their customers, but can’t always take on the cost of holding the inventory. For many retailers, creating an online marketplace for third-party sellers addresses this problem and creates an additional revenue stream through listing fees. With this Guidance, retailers can implement the marketplace software that allows them to quickly recruit and onboard new sellers and list their products alongside their own, offering their customers more choice. When these new products are ordered, the order is routed to the seller for fulfillment and the retailer collects their fee.
How it works
This architecture diagram demonstrates how retailers can onboard new suppliers and process orders of these suppliers’ products, enabling the retailer to provide their customer with more product choices without higher inventory cost.
Well-Architected Pillars
The architecture diagram above is an example of a Solution created with Well-Architected best practices in mind. To be fully Well-Architected, you should follow as many Well-Architected best practices as possible.
Implementation Resources
The sample code is a starting point. It is industry validated, prescriptive but not definitive, and a peek under the hood to help you begin.
Open sample code on GitHub
Disclaimer
The sample code; software libraries; command line tools; proofs of concept; templates; or other related technology (including any of the foregoing that are provided by our personnel) is provided to you as AWS Content under the AWS Customer Agreement, or the relevant written agreement between you and AWS (whichever applies). You should not use this AWS Content in your production accounts, or on production or other critical data. You are responsible for testing, securing, and optimizing the AWS Content, such as sample code, as appropriate for production grade use based on your specific quality control practices and standards. Deploying AWS Content may incur AWS charges for creating or using AWS chargeable resources, such as running Amazon EC2 instances or using Amazon S3 storage.
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