I Worked Just 14 Hours Last Month and Made $2,500 ( Amazon )

Last month, I decided to track my time out of curiosity.

When I added everything up, I realized I had spent around 14–15 total hours on my eBay side hustle for the entire month.

That still sounds fake when I say it out loud — but it’s exactly what happens when you build something that runs on volume instead of constant effort.

The Business Model: Amazon to eBay Dropshipping

I run an Amazon-to-eBay dropshipping store.

The model is simple:

  • I list products on eBay that are already selling on Amazon
  • When an order comes in on eBay, I fulfill it through Amazon
  • No inventory
  • No upfront ad spend

Once listings are live, they keep working even when I’m not.

Why This Works: Scale Beats Perfection

The real reason this works is scale.

Right now, I have roughly 10,000 active listings.
Each listing acts like a tiny salesperson working 24/7.

I’m not chasing “perfect” products anymore. I’m just adding more listings.

Most of my profit comes from simple 100% markups.

If I make:

  • $10–$15 per sale
  • 10–20 sales per day

That puts me in the $1,000–$3,000/month profit range.

Once you stop obsessing over individual products and focus on volume, sales stop feeling random and start becoming predictable.

My Pricing & Listing Strategy

Here’s how I actually do it:

  • I run 100% markup on most listings
  • I use a 4.1% ad rate, but I don’t pay anything upfront to eBay
  • I find products on Amazon Best Sellers
  • I copy the product title and search it on eBay
  • If I find someone selling the same item for more:
    • I open their profile
    • Check sold listings
    • If it’s moving, I undercut them by $0.05

That tiny undercut often triggers instant sales.

My breakdown looks roughly like this:

  • 10% of items undercut by $0.05
  • 90% listed at full 100% markup

That balance works surprisingly well.

What My Day Actually Looks Like

This is the unglamorous part.

On a normal day, I:

  • Answer buyer messages
  • Send offers
  • Check Amazon stock
  • Process orders
  • List a few new items

That’s it.

The heavy lifting was done earlier when I built up the listing count. Now, the store runs with very little maintenance.

Why This Feels “Passive” Now

This wasn’t passive at the beginning.

The work was front-loaded:

  • Building listings
  • Learning what sells
  • Scaling volume

But now, because the system is in place, the effort-to-income ratio makes sense.

It’s not flashy.
It’s not exciting.
But it’s consistent — and that’s what makes the numbers real.

Final Thoughts

Most people give up on dropshipping because they:

  • Chase perfect products
  • Expect fast wins
  • Never scale listings

This works because it’s boring, repetitive, and built on volume.

And sometimes, boring systems pay the best.

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