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Migrating from SellerCloud to Rilk
Bring your catalog, your suppliers, your cost data, and your channel connections over — and pick up a profit number that ties to your bank deposit.
What this does
Switching platforms sounds heavier than it is. The things that took you years to build in SellerCloud — your product catalog, your vendor list, your cost history, and the marketplaces you're connected to — are exactly the things that come over. You rebuild almost nothing by hand.
The point: you keep the data that matters and leave behind the parts that made the old tool feel like work — the busy screens, the per-module setup, and the profit numbers you had to piece together in a spreadsheet.
What comes over
- Your products — SKUs, titles, identifiers, and listing details, brought in as one catalog.
- Your vendors — suppliers and the buying history attached to them, so nothing is lost.
- Your cost basis — what you paid, carried through so per-unit profit is right from day one.
- Your channel connections — reconnect Amazon, Walmart, eBay, Shopify, and the rest to the same catalog.
How the import works
Open Products → Import and choose the SellerCloud import. Export your catalog from SellerCloud, hand Rilk the file, and match your columns once — Rilk maps the rest and loads everything in a single pass. Your products land as one catalog, ready to list on the channels you sell on.
Then open Company Settings → Marketplace integrations and reconnect each channel (see Connect your marketplaces). Rilk links your imported catalog to the live listings it pulls back in, so you're working from real, current data — not a stale copy.
Why multichannel sellers switch
SellerCloud is deep. If you've run high-volume Amazon for a decade, that depth is familiar — and so is the surface area you learn to tolerate. Here's the honest side-by-side of what changes when you move to Rilk:
- Settlement-verified profit. SellerCloud tells you what you sold and at what price. Rilk reconciles every sale against the actual marketplace payout — referral fees, fulfillment fees, refunds, reimbursements — so the profit you see is the money that hit the bank, not an estimate.
- Per-serial cost through condition changes. If you take returns, run them through regrading, and re-list them as B-stock, Rilk carries each unit's original cost through every condition change. Cost basis follows the serial, not a spreadsheet.
- Buy Shipping, built in. Rate-shop across your own UPS, FedEx, and USPS accounts, buy the label, and print it — on Amazon Buy Shipping where it counts toward your metrics — with no separate shipping add-on to license.
- One modern interface. Purchasing, inventory, returns, and profit reports live behind one clean screen your team learns in a week, instead of many menus and configuration pages.
Being honest: if your team has fifteen years of SellerCloud muscle memory and a pure single-SKU arbitrage flow, the switch is real work for a smaller payoff. For anyone running multiple channels, refurbishment, or overseas buying, the move pays for itself fast. See the full Rilk vs. SellerCloud comparison.
What you'll end up with
- Your catalog, vendors, and cost history in Rilk, without re-keying.
- Your channels reconnected to the same products, syncing listings and orders.
- A profit number tied to your settlement deposits, from the first order forward.
- One interface for buying, stock, shipping, returns, and reporting — no per-module setup.
Do it in Rilk
The easiest way to see the fit is to bring a slice of your catalog over and watch it light up. Sign in, open Products → Import, and choose Get Support → Guides — Rilk walks you through the SellerCloud import step by step, right on the page.
Related
- Rilk vs. SellerCloud — the full honest, feature-by-feature comparison.
- Pricing — public per-account pricing, starting free.
- Connect your marketplaces — reconnect your channels after the import.
- Settlement-reconciled reporting — the profit number that ties to your bank.
