I have yet to find an e-shop as reliable and CS oriented as Amazon. I'm sure I'm not alone either. I don't mind paying a little extra just to have the best online shopping experience for me.Seems like Amazon is becoming a Sams Club of Internet sold merchandise where membership is needed. If an Amazon corporate dude is reading this I will straight up and tell you right now that is a failed business model. Use the Walmart strategy of everyday low prices. Don't make it an exclusive club. Like how the Internet should be open and free, so should online retailers. If eBay ever went this route they would in very short order lose a ton of their users. Bad enough they made one mistake after another. You know what they are. Many switched to Facebook or other online auction websites.
I can only imagine that if Amazon continues down the dark stupid path, their stock will too become a lousy $32 bucks.
Bose speakers with Monster Cable?It was not in any way bulk, alternator sized or related to hookers and/or blow. Nobody should care.
Bose speakers with Monster Cable?
Seems like Amazon is becoming a Sams Club of Internet sold merchandise where membership is needed. If an Amazon corporate dude is reading this I will straight up and tell you right now that is a failed business model. Use the Walmart strategy of everyday low prices. Don't make it an exclusive club. Like how the Internet should be open and free, so should online retailers. If eBay ever went this route they would in very short order lose a ton of their users. Bad enough they made one mistake after another. You know what they are. Many switched to Facebook or other online auction websites.
I can only imagine that if Amazon continues down the dark stupid path, their stock will too become a lousy $32 bucks.
I have no idea how it will work out, but clearly Amazon is making a fortune from Prime. Here's some data I am aware of.
They are estimated to have 63 million Prime members (at $99 each, that's $6 billion a year just for memberships). And it's 20 million more Prime members than a year ago - adding 55,000 new Prime members every day. And Amazon has found that when people join Prime, they do almost all their online buying at Amazon even if they didn't before. So it's not just the membership fee, not just the increased sales, it's also the taking of market share from competitors. And that's reflected in their overall market share of online sales, which keeps growing and is now about 33%. It's estimated that Prime members spend an average of about $100/month at Amazon.
So I'm not sure Amazon sees any downside to restricting some items to Prime only - they may have found that the result is it gets people to fork over the $99 annual fee, instead of buying elsewhere.
And, OP? It was all "allowable main malfunction" UNTIL multiple CSRs didn't have the tools to fix it for you, stat. That's when I, a manly man consumer extraordinaire, take a deep breath and calmly insist to "speak with YOUR immediate supervisor." This can entail up to 30 minutes more of stonewalling and tragic let down, but my shopping penis is large and hard and determined.
Is it worth my time on a time/cost basis to do this? Objectively, no. But I treat it like a game, and gain the satisfaction of "winning," which keeps my Consumer Ego proudly erect.![]()
And believe me, I have a large supply of Consumer Ego viagra which allows me to go for hours when the moment is right. It's just that past dealings with Amazon have taught me that's a poor way to approach things. On the phone the first person you speak to is a script reader that knows nothing and can't help and the second one is only working at the call center as extra credit for her English as a Second Language class which she is flunking. The third person will have no knowledge of what you've already talked about with the first two and will require your order number read off again and the next one will just laugh and "accidentally" disconnect you after a 17 minute wait on hold. Eventually you'll navigate the maze and reach a CSR 5 or 6 levels deep who can click the single button that cancels the order. And even if I had that kind of patience, with Amazon I want to work via email so that I have a paper trail. With so many CSR people having no idea of whats happening and so many more who just lie about it, you always get several different stories before unraveling the truth. I want written confirmation of what is told to me rather than relying on "well CSR #3 whose name I think was Apu Hahasapeemapetalan said...".
Sigh. The life of the modern ninja consumer. The system giveth, and the system taketh away. It's why I have never had much compunction about exploiting legal opportunities when they fuck up, and it's to our advantage. Is that a rationalization and not pristinely ethical? You bet it is, but it's a war out there, and mostly we're at their mercy, as they've got the heavy ordnance.![]()
Seems like Amazon is becoming a Sams Club of Internet sold merchandise where membership is needed. If an Amazon corporate dude is reading this I will straight up and tell you right now that is a failed business model. Use the Walmart strategy of everyday low prices. Don't make it an exclusive club. Like how the Internet should be open and free, so should online retailers. If eBay ever went this route they would in very short order lose a ton of their users. Bad enough they made one mistake after another. You know what they are. Many switched to Facebook or other online auction websites.
I can only imagine that if Amazon continues down the dark stupid path, their stock will too become a lousy $32 bucks.
I have no problems with you saying that, and I'm sure most of us would do a worse job, but companies (and governments) where the leadership thinks that arrogantly suck.
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Seems like Amazon is becoming a Sams Club of Internet sold merchandise where membership is needed. If an Amazon corporate dude is reading this I will straight up and tell you right now that is a failed business model. Use the Walmart strategy of everyday low prices. Don't make it an exclusive club. Like how the Internet should be open and free, so should online retailers. If eBay ever went this route they would in very short order lose a ton of their users. Bad enough they made one mistake after another. You know what they are. Many switched to Facebook or other online auction websites.
I can only imagine that if Amazon continues down the dark stupid path, their stock will too become a lousy $32 bucks.
I personally have never understood why they are so popular. I get just as good service, free shipping, and prices anywhere else. People are just too lazy to shop around these days. On occasion Amazon may be the only place that has some obscure item and I'll go with them, but more often than not I can find things cheaper elsewhere. Some like to tout that they are just too busy...um..yea..we're all busy you aren't a special snowflake.
Some like to tout that they are just too busy...um..yea..we're all busy you aren't a special snowflake.
Bose speakers with Monster Cable?
Some Bose speakers in the past were pretty awesome though.
I've seen a few old used sets I'd like to have.
I have no idea how it will work out, but clearly Amazon is making a fortune from Prime. Here's some data I am aware of.
They are estimated to have 63 million Prime members (at $99 each, that's $6 billion a year just for memberships). And it's 20 million more Prime members than a year ago - adding 55,000 new Prime members every day. And Amazon has found that when people join Prime, they do almost all their online buying at Amazon even if they didn't before. So it's not just the membership fee, not just the increased sales, it's also the taking of market share from competitors. And that's reflected in their overall market share of online sales, which keeps growing and is now about 33%. It's estimated that Prime members spend an average of about $100/month at Amazon.
So I'm not sure Amazon sees any downside to restricting some items to Prime only - they may have found that the result is it gets people to fork over the $99 annual fee, instead of buying elsewhere.
That's what's pissing me off. How was I allowed to buy an item I couldn't buy? How was I billed for an item they wouldn't ship? Why did I get confirmation for an order that wasn't valid? Why wasn't I notified of the problem before the rest of the order arrived? How could the process fail to catch the conflict at 10 different stages? Christ almighty, this seems like the easiest thing in the world to plan for. When an item is added to a customers cart just check the item restrictions against the buyers privileges. If they can buy it, proceed, if they're not allowed, display error. Now I'm stuck dealing with this shit when one person with one brain cell could have prevented it with literally one line of code.
Would you like so cheese with your whine?
You also have to have a membership at Sam's or Costco to buy stuff there.
The hell kind of peasant doesn't have Prime?