Veeqo x Your Amazon Consultant
A partnership that just makes sense.
I’m super excited to announce an official partnership with an Amazon-owned company called Veeqo. Through our partnership, I’ll be working to help sellers understand (and enjoy) the benefits of what Veeqo has to offer. There’s a reason that Veeqo was acquired by Amazon and as I’ve gotten to know the Veeqo team, it’s clear what makes them stand out in the shipping software space, where there are few tools that genuinely help sellers.
What is Veeqo?
Veeqo is an Amazon-owned shipping platform built to help e-commerce sellers streamline fulfillment across multiple channels. It brings together the best of Amazon’s logistics network with powerful shipping tools designed for real-world businesses.
What really hits home for me is that Matt Warren, the founder and CEO of Veeqo, has continued to lead the company even after its acquisition by Amazon. His commitment—and Amazon’s—to keeping Veeqo independent and focused on solving real seller problems is something I genuinely appreciate.
Key Features of Veeqo
Unified Shipping for All Channels: Ship orders from Amazon, Shopify, eBay, Walmart, and other marketplaces directly through Veeqo—no need to switch between platforms.
Discounted Amazon Shipping Rates: Access Amazon-backed carrier discounts and compare rates directly in Veeqo. In addition to the low rates, they offer up to 5% back as shipping credits on future orders.
Bulk Label Printing: Create and print hundreds of labels at once to save time during busy fulfillment cycles.
Multi-Carrier Support: Ship with UPS, FedEx, USPS, Amazon Shipping, and others—all from one dashboard. This includes the ability to connect your existing shipping carrier accounts (with pass-through rates).
Automated Shipping Rules: Set up custom rules for carrier selection, service level, and packaging to streamline workflow.
Amazon Buy Shipping Integration: Maintain account health and ensure valid tracking by purchasing labels through Amazon’s network.
I’ll never partner with a company unless I genuinely believe it brings real value to sellers—whether that’s through better operations or a stronger bottom line. At the end of the day, partnerships only matter if they make life easier and business better for the people actually doing the selling.