Why These January Hires Mattered to SupplyKick's Growth
January 2018 was a turning point for SupplyKick. We were five years into building an Amazon-focused agency, and the business was scaling faster than our internal systems could handle. We needed people who could professionalize three critical areas: how we talked about what we did (marketing), how we moved products (logistics), and how we supported partner brands (client success).
Annie, Lowell, and Amy filled those gaps.
Meet the New Team Members
Annie Albrecht, Marketing
If you don't think Creed is the best character on The Office, you're wrong. A Columbus, Ohio, native (Go Bucks!), Annie joined as our Marketing Content & Support Specialist. In her free time, she coached aspiring collegiate volleyballers, managed freelance social media pages, and walked her German Shorthaired Pointer puppy, Vader, on the Monon Trail.
Annie's last Amazon purchase: a reflective dog tag so Vader wouldn't get lost on night walks.
Lowell Bieber, Logistics
Lowell joined SupplyKick as a Logistics Analyst to build processes that could scale with the business. A Kentucky native who went to Miami of Ohio (Rise up, Redhawks), he ended up in Indianapolis through the Orr Fellowship, a competitive program placing college grads in local startups.
When he wasn't building logistics workflows, Lowell was either hiking, rock-climbing, or listening to what he called "the greatest rock star of our generation, Kanye West." (This was 2018, remember.)
Lowell's last Amazon purchase: a pizza cutter. Practical.
Amy Wagner, Partner Success
Amy is an Indiana native whose passion for product and the retail industry only slightly surpasses her passion for iced coffee. She joined as a Partner Success Manager to work with clients and help them grow their Amazon sales. What she loved most about SupplyKick (besides the coffee shop next door) was the positive energy and the fact that the company actually trusted people to own their work.
In her free time, Amy hung out in Broad Ripple watching Purdue games (Go Boilermakers!) or listening to true crime podcasts.
Amy's last Amazon purchase: the card game "What Do You Meme?"
How These Roles Support SupplyKick Clients
When you're running an Amazon agency, three functions matter more than anything else:
Marketing tells the story. You need someone who can translate what brands do into content that makes sense to customers, partners, and search engines.
Logistics moves the products. Someone has to make sure inventory flows from manufacturers to warehouses to customers without running out of stock or sitting on dead inventory.
Partner success makes the relationship work. Clients don't care how smart your systems are if they can't get a straight answer when something breaks.
Annie, Lowell, and Amy each took ownership of one of those pillars. That infrastructure — content systems, supply chain workflows, client communication protocols — is still part of how SupplyKick operates today, even as the specific roles have evolved.
Learn More About SupplyKick
Want to see who's on the team now? Check out our About page.
Curious what an Amazon agency actually does? Visit our Agency page.
Interested in growing your brand on Amazon? We'd love to talk.
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