📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

Amazon Will Let Entrepreneurs Start Their Own Delivery Business and Earn Up to $300,000 a Year The new program will allow individuals with no logistics experience to operate a fleet of Amazon delivery vehicles.

By Lydia Belanger

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Amazon

Many entrepreneurs have built a business on Amazon, selling goods via the online marketplace, self-publishing books and more. Today, the ecommerce giant has announced a new opportunity: the ability to launch your own Amazon delivery operation.

Amazon Delivery Service Partners is a new program designed to help Amazon scale and meet the growing demand for package deliveries. In 2017, Amazon shipped 5 billion items to Prime members alone, and its operating income increased 20 percent year over year to $2.8 billion. To keep up, the company is seeking "hundreds of entrepreneurs" to start their own delivery companies in the U.S. through Amazon, according to a press release. Over time, Amazon aims for these Delivery Service Partners "to hire tens of thousands of delivery drivers."

Related: 17 Incredible Amazon Prime Facts and Stats

The company will help interested entrepreneurs, even those with little to no logistics experience, "start, set up and manage" a local delivery business, with each owner overseeing 20 to 40 Amazon-branded delivery vehicles that will retrieve goods from one of 75 Amazon delivery stations.

If they're successful, Amazon says each owner will have the prospect of earning between $75,000 and $300,000 in annual profits. Amazon will provide training as well as access to its delivery technology, along with discounts on vehicle leases, insurance, Amazon-branded uniforms, fuel and more.

Some Delivery Service Partners will be able to start their delivery businesses with Amazon for as little as $10,000 in startup costs, and the company has also announced a $1 million fund to help eligible military veterans get started with the program with $10,000 reimbursements.

The new program, Amazon says, is a solution to concerns the company has expressed on relying too much on third-party couriers such as FedEx, UPS and DHL. In Amazon's 2016 10-K report, the company stated that "our current and potential competitors include … companies that provide fulfillment and logistics services for themselves or for third parties."

At the same time, the company stated that replacing FedEx, UPS and others was not its plan -- and today's announcement doubles down on this insistence, as Amazon states that traditional carriers remain "great partners."

Suspicions to the contrary have mounted throughout recent years. In 2015, Amazon launched Flex, an urban delivery program that allows gig workers to deliver Amazon packages via their own vehicles for an hourly rate. Amazon also reportedly already has more than 7,000 trucks and leases 40 airplanes. In early 2017, Amazon invested in a Kentucky airport to serve as a cargo hub and also has experimented with drones, autonomous vehicles and other forms of delivery.

Related: Amazon to Delivery Companies: Yes, We're Building Our Own Service, But Don't Worry

Earlier this year, The Wall Street Journal reported on a planned delivery service, "Shipping with Amazon," by which it would deliver packages for third-party merchants.

Whatever the future holds, entrepreneurs who want to run their own Amazon delivery fleets will deliver only Amazon orders for the foreseeable future.

Lydia Belanger is a former associate editor at Entrepreneur. Follow her on Twitter: @LydiaBelanger.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Collaboration

You Need a Community With Shared Values to Find Long-Term Success — Here's How to Cultivate It.

Entrepreneurs need to remember this growth strategy: nurturing a purpose-driven community of like-minded entrepreneurs around them.

Growing a Business

When Your Company Hits This 'Critical Mark,' Big Investors and Private Equity Will Come Calling

Whether you're looking to sell or bring on bigger investors, this growth benchmark will get you in the room.

Franchise

I've Seen How Reckless Franchisors Can Ruin People's Lives. Here's How the Best Franchises Grow, Find the Right Franchisees, and Thrive Together

These are the four principles of what I call "Responsible Franchising." If you follow them, everyone wins — and can make a lot of money too.

Side Hustle

He Started a Salty Backyard Side Hustle That Out-Earned His Full-Time Job and Now Makes Over $1 Million a Year: 'Take the Leap'

In 2011, Kyle Needham turned his passion for oysters into a business that saw consistent monthly revenue "right away."

Money & Finance

How to Reduce Your Real Estate Insurance Costs When Rates Are Soaring Through the Roof

Effective cost-saving strategies for multi-family real estate investors.

Marketing

So, TikTok is Getting Banned. What's Next?

While the prospect of a TikTok ban poses significant challenges, it also opens doors for alternative platforms to thrive.