The B2B Podcast Index
High Voltage Business Builders Podcast

EP304: Amazon Sellers: Why Ignoring TikTok and Walmart Could Cost You 119% Growth

High Voltage Business Builders Podcast · 2026-06-25 · 9 min

Substance score

28 / 100

Five dimensions, 20 points each

Insight Density7 / 20
Originality5 / 20
Guest Caliber3 / 20
Specificity & Evidence9 / 20
Conversational Craft4 / 20

Neal Twa discusses how Amazon sellers are missing significant growth opportunities by ignoring TikTok Shop and Walmart Marketplace, highlighting a company (Pattern) that achieved 119% growth in non-Amazon sales through multi-channel diversification and providing three concrete moves for operators to implement platform expansion.

Key takeaways

  • Dependence on Amazon alone is a liability; a company managing brands across all three platforms (Amazon, TikTok Shop, Walmart) posted 119% growth in non-Amazon sales alone.
  • Walmart Marketplace offers dramatically less competition than Amazon in most categories with different buyer demographics, making it viable for sellers not yet listed there.
  • TikTok Shop rewards content-led discovery differently than Amazon, specifically favoring products with visual stories or demonstrations that can be understood in 8 seconds without narration.
  • When Amazon listings experience suppression or issues, having revenue diversified across Walmart and TikTok Shop provides critical revenue continuity rather than complete business disruption.
  • Channel expansion should maintain unit economics discipline with a $12 minimum net profit per unit floor, not just chase revenue at the expense of margin.

Topics in this episode

What our scoring noted

Our reviewer’s read on each dimension, with quotes from the episode.

Insight Density

7 / 20

The episode offers a handful of concrete data points (119% growth, $4k/month Walmart revenue in 60 days, $12 net profit floor) but the bulk of the runtime is devoted to elementary diversification advice dressed up with urgency. The actionable-to-filler ratio is low for a 9-minute format.

At Voltage we talk about $12 net profit per unit as a floor. That discipline applies on Walmart and TikTok shop just as much as it does on Amazon.
Within 60 days of getting listed on Walmart he was doing about $4,000 a month there.

Originality

5 / 20

The central thesis - don't build on a single platform - is among the oldest pieces of e-commerce advice in circulation, and the framing as 'channel infrastructure' rather than content is a modest repackaging rather than a genuinely fresh argument. Nothing here challenges conventional wisdom or offers a counterintuitive position.

Building your entire business on one platform is not a strategy. It's a single point of failure dressed up to look like a business pattern.
Waiting for Amazon to be perfect before you expand is waiting for a day that does not come.

Guest Caliber

3 / 20

This is a solo host monologue with no guest whatsoever; Speaker C is a product advertisement. The host asserts 13 years of operating experience but the transcript contains no verifiable depth of practitioner insight that would elevate the score beyond the floor for a guest-free episode.

We have been doing this for over 13 years. Not coaching from the sidelines, operating, building, advising brands at every level from first launch to eight figure exit.

Specificity & Evidence

9 / 20

The episode references several concrete figures - Pattern's 119% non-Amazon growth, a member's $30k/month baseline, 60-day Walmart ramp to $4k/month, an 11-day suppression window, and a $12/unit net floor - but the Pattern data is cited without methodology or category context, and the member anecdote is a single illustrative case with no comparative evidence.

A company managing brands across all three platforms just posted 119% growth in non Amazon sales.
His price points were in the 25 to $45 range.

Conversational Craft

4 / 20

There is no interview or dialogue of any kind; this is an uninterrupted solo monologue with an ad break inserted. The host constructs a narrative arc competently, but there are no questions asked, no pushback, no follow-up probes, and no productive tension - the entire dimension this score evaluates is absent by format.

Alright three moves these work whether you're doing $5,000 a month or 500,000amonth.
I want to tell you about a conversation I had with a member who came into our community doing right around $30,000 a month on Amazon.

Conversation analysis

Computed from the transcript - who did the talking, and the verbal tics along the way.

Share of words spoken

  • Speaker B91%
  • Speaker C6%
  • Speaker A3%

Filler words

right6like5kind of1actually1so1anyway1

Episode notes

Most Amazon operators treat TikTok and Walmart like a backup plan, but ignoring these platforms could cost you 119% growth. Neil Twa breaks down why relying solely on Amazon is a single point of failure. He shares insights from a company that's thriving by diversifying across all three platforms. Neil recalls a conversation with a community member who was making $30,000 a month on Amazon with eight SKUs and solid margins. The key takeaway? Expanding to Walmart Marketplace and using TikTok isn't optional if you want to keep up. Whether you're doing $5,000 or $500,000 a month, these moves are crucial. Ready to implement with us? Join the Voltage Business Builders cohort at voltagedm.com?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=show_notes&utm_campaign=ep304 Ready to implement with us? Join the Voltage Business Builders cohort at voltagedm.com:

Full transcript

9 min

Transcribed and scored by The B2B Podcast Index.

Speaker A: This is the High Voltage Business Builders podcast. Daily intelligence for serious e commerce portfolio builders across Amazon. TikTok Shop, Shopify, Walmart and every channel that moves the needle. Neal Twa and his Voltage team all day, every day since 2012. Let's get into it.

Speaker B: Most Amazon operators treat TikTok and Walmart like a backup plan. Something to get to eventually. Meanwhile, a company managing brands across all three platforms just posted 119% growth in non Amazon sales. You still waiting on eventually? It's Wednesday, June 24th. Welcome back folks. On behalf of myself and the whole Voltage team, we're genuinely glad you're here for episode 304 of the High Voltage Business Builders podcast. Now pay attention to this. Here's the Amazon is not shrinking, but your dependence on it is a liability and the numbers are starting to prove it. Today we're talking about what patterns, platform diversification results actually mean for operators at every level and what you should be doing about it right now. Look, I've been saying this for a couple of years now. Building your entire business on one platform is not a strategy. It's a single point of failure dressed up to look like a business pattern. For those who don't know, is one of the larger brand management and distribution companies in this space. They manage brands across multiple channels and their non Amazon sales just surged 119%. Not 19, not 29, 119%. TikTok Shop and Walmart are the two platforms driving that number. Here's what most operators get wrong when they hear this. They think, oh cool, TikTok is blowing up. Maybe I should post some videos. That is not what this is. This is channel infrastructure. This is catalog presence, fulfillment capability and demand capture on platforms where your customer already is. The content comes after the foundation. The average seller I talk to doing 10,000 to $50,000 a month on Amazon has not listed a single product on Walmart Marketplace. Not one. And I get it. Amazon works. Amazon has the traffic, but Amazon also has the use. They can change your buy box, suppress your listing or reprice your product without sending you a note. Come on. Walmart is not Amazon. It has different buyer demographics, different search behavior and dramatically less competition in most categories right now. That window is not going to stay open forever. TikTok shop is a different animal entirely. It rewards content led discovery in a way that Amazon's algorithm simply does not. If you have a product with a visual story, a demonstration or a transformation, TikTok Shop is your organic traffic machine. The implication here is not abandon Amazon. The move is to stop treating Amazon like the only answer. Real businesses have multiple revenue streams. The that is what makes them assets worth acquiring. That is what the almost automated income framework is built around. You are building a brand, not renting a shelf. If pattern is seeing 119% growth off Amazon, that is a signal. And the operators who act on that signal in the next 12 months are going to have a very different business than the ones who wait. I want to tell you about a conversation I had with a member who came into our community doing right around $30,000 a month on Amazon. Solid numbers, good margins. He had one brand, about eight SKUs, all in a home goods category. Clean operation. When I asked him about Walmart he said, and I'm paraphrasing here, I figured I'd get to it once Amazon was really dialed in. I hear this constantly. I understand the logic. Finish one thing before you start another. Except here's the problem. Amazon is never fully dialed in. There is always another ad campaign to optimize, another review to chase another listing to tweak. Waiting for Amazon to be perfect before you expand is waiting for a day that does not come. We walked through his catalog. Six of his eight SKUs were a natural fit for Walmart. His price points were in the 25 to $45 range. His products were not complicated to explain. No technical spec sheet required. You look at it, you get it. That is exactly the kind of product Walmart marketplace buyers respond to. Within 60 days of getting listed on Walmart he was doing about $4,000 a month there. Not life changing by itself. But here is what changed his thinking. His Amazon account had a suppression issue for about 11 days. During that same period listing came back. He recovered. But during those 11 days the Walmart revenue kept coming in. That is the point. It is not that Walmart replaces Amazon. It is that when Amazon does what Amazon does, you are not sitting there bleeding with zero options. You have another channel. TikTok shop is a different conversation and we are just starting to see operators in our community crack it. The ones having early success are not the ones spending the most on paid ads. They are the ones who found one piece of content that resonates and let it run. The discovery mechanic on TikTok is genuinely different. It rewards authenticity and demonstration over polish. Build the channel, then build the content, not the other way around.

Speaker C: Would you like to have another $26,400 on your bottom line while saving 17 hours a week? With the new Voltage Cayman Data MCP you can use the power of AI to reduce your time and increase your net profit. More than just ads management, It's a full AI driven operator in the palm of your hands. Visit voltagedm.com to learn how the Voltage Cayman Data MCP plus your data can 10x your Amazon brand in 2026 and beyond. And now back to the podcast.

Speaker B: Alright three moves these work whether you're doing $5,000 a month or 500,000amonth. Move one get on Walmart Marketplace if you are not already there. I know nobody wants to hear this because it feels like admin work. It is admin work. Do it anyway. The approval process is straightforward, the catalog sync tools have gotten significantly better and the competition in most categories is still thin compared to Amazon. You are not going to regret having a second channel when your Amazon listing hiccups and it will hiccup. Move 2 Audit your catalog for TikTok shop fit. Not every product belongs there, but some of yours probably do and you have not looked. Ask yourself one can someone understand the value of this product in 8 seconds of video without me saying a word? If yes, that product has TikTok shop potential. Start with one one. Get the mechanics right before you scale the content spend. Move 3 Stop optimizing for revenue. Start optimizing for margin and channel resilience. This is the one I have to say out loud because most operators skip it entirely. Yeah, because adding a revenue channel that costs you margin is just a more complicated way to lose money before you expand to a new platform. Know your unit economics cold. Know your landed cost, your fulfillment cost on that specific platform and your minimum acceptable net. At Voltage we talk about $12 net profit per unit as a floor. That discipline applies on Walmart and TikTok shop just as much as it does on Amazon. The operators who are going to look back at 2025 and 2026 as the years they built something durable are the ones adding channel depth right now, not pivoting away from Amazon, adding to it. That is how you build a real asset. Here is the thing about what Pattern's results tell us. It is not that Amazon is dying. It is that the operators who built brand infrastructure across multiple channels are pulling away from the ones who did not. That gap is going to widen if you are serious about building a real business, one that has actual enterprise value, one that could be acquired or that generates income without you being in it every single day. The work starts with getting the fundamentals right, not just on Amazon but across your whole brand footprint. That is exactly what we do inside the Voltage business Builders community. We have been doing this for over 13 years. Not coaching from the sidelines, operating, building, advising brands at every level from first launch to eight figure exit. The community is operator led, invite based and built around one goal, $100,000 in net new profit, not gross revenue net. If you want to build with a room of operators who are doing the same work who have already made the expensive mistakes so you do not have to come find us@ Voltage DM.com that is where the conversation starts. Thanks for spending time with us today on the High Voltage Business Builders podcast. We put out a new episode every single day because this business moves fast and you need information that keeps up with it. We will see you back here tomorrow.

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