Score one for small business owners Greg and Betsy Amundson against the copycats on Amazon.
Sales of their Minnesota-made InstaTrim, a no-mess caulk alternative, were crushed on Amazon last year by Chinese imitators, threatening their future. Using Amazon's new arbitration-like remediation process, the Amundsons in January knocked out nearly 20 sellers with products that seemingly infringed on InstaTrim patents. Those sellers declined to spend $4,000 to defend their trim-like wares.
For InstaTrim, victory is sweet. But it doesn't guarantee survival.
"The biggest lesson was never give up," said Greg Amundson, founder of the 12-year-old company. "If you keep fighting, and don't run out of money, chances are you will win. Amazon provided a platform for us to seek fairness and justice at an inexpensive price.''
Amundson, 62, almost ran out of cash. InstaTrim sales fell 77% last year from $3.5 million in 2021. The fall mostly came from Amazon, but also because of a general pullback in home remodeling and improvement last year.
He considered bankruptcy until the Amazon arbitration win in January.
He added, "Our Amazon sales will not rebound to previous levels without a lot of work and time. We had to change our marketing strategy as well.''
Amazon is a titanic online bazaar, not a legal regulator — and long criticized for not cracking down more on counterfeiters who knock off products from soaps, baby formula, clothing and toys to industrial products.