vs Spreadsheets
MarginLock vs running FBA on spreadsheets
Spreadsheets are flexible, but FBA operations need repeatable recovery, inventory, and compliance workflows as volume grows.
By MarginLock Team · April 15, 2026
Spreadsheets are where most Amazon operations start. They are fast, flexible, cheap, and familiar. For one-off analysis, they still win.
The problem starts when a spreadsheet becomes the operating system for a real FBA business. Settlement reconciliation depends on formulas. COGS changes get copied across tabs. Warehouse staff wait for somebody to update a shared file. Reimbursement opportunities age out because nobody owns the queue.
MarginLock replaces those repeatable workflows with structured records, detectors, worker actions, and audit trails.
The honest comparison
| Capability | MarginLock | Spreadsheets |
|---|---|---|
| Best fit | Recurring FBA operations: recovery, inventory health, prep, packing, storage, and settlement follow-up. | One-off analysis, ad hoc modeling, and quick exports. |
| Settlement reconciliation | Settlement lines tie back to orders, returns, adjustments, and discrepancy queues. | Manual lookups that can break silently. |
| Reimbursement detection | Detectors queue cases for lost inventory, fee overcharges, removal issues, returns, and weight discrepancies. | Only the cases somebody remembers to search for. |
| Box compliance | Pack-time checks catch overweight boxes and mixed-category mistakes before shipment. | A formula or warehouse habit, if one exists. |
| Stranded inventory | Urgency-ranked recovery workflow with loss estimates. | Manual report export and follow-up. |
| Multi-location stock | Locations, reservations, movements, cycle counts, and worker flows. | Separate tabs that drift unless somebody reconciles them. |
| Audit trail | Every workflow record has ownership and state. | Version history, if the file is shared correctly. |
| Speed of custom analysis | Structured exports and dashboards. | Excellent for scratch models and unusual questions. |
Where spreadsheets still win
Use a spreadsheet when the question is temporary: a supplier quote, a container scenario, a pricing experiment, or a founder's cash model. A flexible grid is hard to beat for that kind of thinking.
Where MarginLock is stronger
Use MarginLock when the same work happens every week. Reimbursements, stranded items, storage fee exposure, shipment prep, box compliance, settlement gaps, and stock movements should not rely on a spreadsheet staying perfect.
Which one to pick
Keep spreadsheets for analysis. Use MarginLock for the operational workflows that cost money when they are late, missed, or done inconsistently.