Showing posts with label online vendors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label online vendors. Show all posts

Thursday, January 23, 2025

The Predatory Side of Amazon?

Cory Doctorow analyzes in detail how, in his view, Amazon has developed bait-and-switch strategies to take advantage of both vendors and customers:

Amazon Makes Everything You Buy More Expensive

His abundance of specific details suggests that he knows whereof he speaks, so I don't dispute his facts. With one reservation about the article's title: Amazon doesn't make EVERYTHING more expensive. True, in my experience of buying non-book products on its site, many (but by no means all) cost more than they would in a physical store. But if the local place where we shop doesn't stock the product -- if the choice lies between paying a bit extra and not getting it at all -- I'll pay. Plus, with Prime, there's no shipping charge. Also prompt delivery.

Books, however, still seem to function as a loss leader. New books have consistently lower prices on Amazon than the suggested retail cost. With the Prime account my husband and I share, we get the free shipping, a considerable savings in view of how many books I buy per year. In addition, we get Prime Video, which I could hardly do without since Netflix stopped offering physical disks, in the process dropping untold numbers of vintage movies. Now at least I can usually find those streaming on Amazon.

As for its treatment of vendors, my only experience in that role involves Kindle self-publishing. Because I never sign up for the higher-royalty option that forbids selling the same e-book on other sites, I can offer those books on Draft2Digital as well as the Kindle platform with no restriction on the amount I can charge through the former.

In short, the Amazon Prime account offers discounted new books and, in the used-book category, access to almost anything ever published in English; gives us free, fast delivery of most items, with which we've hardly ever had problems; provides one-stop shopping for the vast majority of products we need, without the frustration of scouring the shelves of local stores in vain -- I have a low tolerance for in-person shopping, so if our supermarket doesn't have the thing, ordering online is the next step -- and I no longer even attempt the hopeless quest for clothes I can live with at physical stores; and, most importantly, has our address and credit card saved, so there's no need to share payment information with a bunch of different sellers' websites, and our Amazon account hasn't suffered a lapse in security in the many years we've bought from it (knock on wood).

So I depend heavily on Amazon, because for me its advantages -- which I benefit from constantly -- outweigh its flaws, which seldom or never directly affect us.

Margaret L. Carter

Please explore love among the monsters at Carter's Crypt.