Posted in Inventory Management on May 19, 2026 by Jeremy Jordan , 0
A manifested truckload comes with a detailed item list showing product descriptions, quantities, and condition codes so you know what you’re buying before the freight arrives. An unmanifested truckload ships without that list. You’re buying the load based on category and source retailer, with the exact contents revealed once you receive and sort the freight. The difference affects your pricing strategy, processing time, and how predictably you can turn inventory into profit. Understanding both options before you buy will save you from expensive surprises. Quick Facts Manifested truckloads include an Read more »
Posted in Inventory Management on May 19, 2026 by Jeremy Jordan , 0
Yes, buying liquidation truckloads can be profitable, but it depends heavily on what you buy, what you pay for shipping, how you sell, and how efficiently you process inventory. Profitability is not a guarantee that comes with every load. It is the result of careful planning, realistic cost accounting, and selecting the right product categories. This guide breaks down what actually drives profit in truckload liquidation so you can make smarter buying decisions. Quick Facts Liquidation truckloads can generate strong returns, but net profit varies widely by load type, category, Read more »
Posted in Inventory Management on May 19, 2026 by Jeremy Jordan , 0
Most first-time liquidation buyers come to this question from the same place: limited budget, limited experience, and a real fear of buying the wrong thing. That’s completely understandable. The problem is that the comparison between Amazon liquidation pallets and Amazon liquidation truckloads usually gets framed as a cost question, when it’s actually a risk question. Cheap upfront doesn’t mean safe. Expensive upfront doesn’t mean risky. Once you reframe the decision around total exposure rather than sticker price, the right choice for your situation becomes a lot clearer. This guide walks Read more »