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Amazon Jacked Up Prime Day Prices, Misleading Consumers, Says Vendor (foxbusiness.com)

An anonymous reader shares a report: A Charlotte-based startup says e-commerce king Amazon jacked up their suggested retail price during the company's annual discount event -- Prime Day -- to deceive consumers into thinking that they were getting a deal, when in reality, they weren't. Jason Jacobs, founder of Remodeez, a small company that specializes in non-toxic foot deodorizers and other odor stoppers, says he had an agreement with Amazon since 2015 on a suggested retail price of $9.99 for his products and was shocked after the tech giant almost doubled that on Prime Day to make it look like people were getting a discount, when they were actually paying full price. "They showed the product at $15.42 and then exed it out to put '$9.99 for Amazon Prime Day.' And on the final day, the price was like $18.44. So, we put a support ticket in right away and I rallied some friends through social media to go to their complaint board and complain," Jacobs tells FOX Business.

233 comments

  1. You know what else is jacked up? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    MY BALLS!!! Suck 'em, nerds!

    1. Re: You know what else is jacked up? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      +1, Interesting

  2. Amazon by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

    Are they the new railroad monopoly?

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    1. Re:Amazon by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      Not for long, if this keeps up...

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
  3. And So It Begins by cunina · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Amazon ran their retail business at a loss for years in order to gain market dominance. We always knew the day would come when they'd use their immense power to start extracting higher profits out of their customer base. That day has arrived. And, don't think for one minute that they won't do the same with AWS if they ever achieve the same level of dominance. (Giving us all a rare reason to root for Microsoft.)

    1. Re:And So It Begins by Train0987 · · Score: 0

      It's even worse. Besides wiping out local brick-and-morter (far worse than Walm-Mart, which is even being threatened now), states are being decimated by the loss of sales tax revenue.

    2. Re:And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If you don't think that this is how Amazon has operated for years you are fooling yourself. They almost never have the better price than competitors online, you buy from amazon for the convenience and the pre-paid 2 day shipping you signed up for with amazon prime. If you don't think you're getting sold to with AWS pricing as well you are also fooling yourself. If you think Microsoft, or any other for profit business, wouldn't do the exact same thing I'd like to start selling to you directly.

    3. Re:And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

      I pay sales tax on everything sold directly from Amazon (probably with an exception or two) and even many of the things that are not sold directly from Amazon. I think this was a valid attack on Amazon a few years ago, but it's not really applicable anymore.

    4. Re:And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And hassle-free, free returns for 90 days. UPS comes and picks up my return from my porch. This is the number one reason I am loathe to use other online retailers.

    5. Re:And So It Begins by Overzeetop · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "you buy from amazon for the convenience and the pre-paid 2 day shipping you signed up for with amazon prime"

      Yes, and the painless returns. You have to shop smart, but Amazon has one of the best direct/3rd party systems. Have you seen the dumpster fire that Newegg has turned into, or - God forbid - have you every looked for something at Sears/Kmart or Walmart online? Those last two are case studies in making a 3rd party marketplace a total clusterfuck on your site.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    6. Re:And So It Begins by Penguinisto · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, Amazon has been forced to collect sales taxes, even in states where it has no physical presence (at least as of April of this year). The only exceptions would be the five states e.g. Oregon) which do not charge sales tax.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    7. Re:And So It Begins by supremebob · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yeah, this basically means that they're now working like every other retail business in existence.

      When I worked at a grocery store as a teenager, I must have marked up items hundreds of times only to "discount" some of them 10 to 25% off a week later. Basically, the item was only a few cents less than the old retail price, which then went back to the new marked up price a week later.

      The number of items that went up in price every week vs the number of items that went down every week was like 10 to 1. Basically, they just used the sales to generate price confusion so you were less likely to notice that your total grocery bill was creeping up about 6% every year.

    8. Re: And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When your business model requires hostages to function (state sales taxes) maybe it is time you admit that your model is broken.

    9. Re:And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find myself increasingly rooting for Microsoft these days, and that bothers me.

    10. Re:And So It Begins by TheFakeTimCook · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "you buy from amazon for the convenience and the pre-paid 2 day shipping you signed up for with amazon prime"

      Yes, and the painless returns. You have to shop smart, but Amazon has one of the best direct/3rd party systems. Have you seen the dumpster fire that Newegg has turned into, or - God forbid - have you every looked for something at Sears/Kmart or Walmart online? Those last two are case studies in making a 3rd party marketplace a total clusterfuck on your site.

      I agree that Amazon has the logistics down "pat".

      Newegg always WAS a dumpster-fire. I haven't tried to order online from Kmart/Sears, but Walmart isn't THAT bad. Nice touch that you can avoid shipping costs if you have a Walmart nearby.

      For "tech" stuff, I often prefer B&H Photo over Amazon these days. Generally better prices, no sales tax, often free shipping, fast service (they even shipped something ON July 4th!), and there doesn't seem to be the issue with "counterfeit stuff" that is getting to be rampant on Amazon.

      For example, Apple recently studied all the supposed "Genuine Apple" AC adapters and cables on Amazon, and I think they found that some 90% of them were counterfeits.

      https://www.forbes.com/sites/a...

      OTOH, B&H is a much smaller target for those people, and has been in the mail-order business since the mid to late 1960s, at least, decades longer than Amazon; so, IMHO, they have as much, or even more, experience in this business, at least as applies to "tech" items. As for groceries...?

    11. Re:And So It Begins by Anubis+IV · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Is that still the case? Amazon started collecting sales tax a few years ago in all states where it has a physical presence. I believe they even collect it on behalf of third-party sellers if those sellers ship their products to Amazon's warehouses so that the products can be "Fulfilled by Amazon".

      Even so, I quite agree with the sentiment you're espousing that Amazon is far more threatening than most people give it credit. One of the smartest things they've done is play the part of benevolent monopolist while slowly becoming a more and more abusive monopsonist (i.e. the sole buyer) in a variety of markets. They made their margins razor thin so that they could drive both online retailers as well as brick and mortar stores out of business. Having succeeded in capturing a large swath of the retail market, we've now seen them start to squeeze both sides of the market for profit: they're turning the screws on sellers who have no one left to sell to, driving those sellers to unsustainable pricing while capturing the savings as profit for themselves, and they're simultaneously raising the prices paid by consumers who have been trained to shop only at Amazon, again capturing the increase as profit for itself.

      By playing the long game like this, they've managed to avoid any sort of major public outcry, given that consumers tend not to complain about cheaper prices, and it's only as prices have started going up that consumers have started to take notice. That said, anyone paying attention has seen the writing on the wall for years, given that monopsonies are just as dangerous as monopolies, and Amazon began abusing its monopsony positions much earlier. Antitrust regulations are designed to protect against both, but American regulators tend to be slow to pursue monopsonies, given that they have a far less direct impact on consumers. Now that Amazon is starting to take advantage of its near-monopolies and engage in other deceptive practices, however, maybe we'll finally start to see some regulatory intervention.

    12. Re:And So It Begins by toejam13 · · Score: 1

      They're actually worse. In a traditional brick and mortar store, every customer sees the same price on the shelf. But e-Commerce stores like Amazon are increasingly turning to customer analytics to fine tune pricing on a per customer basis. They're looking at your shopping history, your estimated income, and several other metrics to squeeze more money out of you. The closest traditional retail can come to that is setting different prices for their stores depending on the economic status of the surrounding area.

    13. Re:And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, they already dominate the cloud market. Last I checked they were 80%+ of the market.

    14. Re:And So It Begins by Mashiki · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yeah, this basically means that they're now working like every other retail business in existence.

      Well not really. It means that they're working like every shady retail business in existence. In most countries this is illegal to do. It doesn't matter if it's pennies or thousands of dollars difference. Hiking the price before a sale, at least here in Canada falls afoul of federal consumer protection laws and provincial consumer protection laws in every province and territory. If you live in Canada, you should file a complaint. You can do so at this link here. Then click the "complaint form" section or you can call this number: 1-800-348-5358 and file a complaint directly.

      The government does investigate this stuff, they do levy fines over it. One of the big problems is, some people don't notice it or believe it's simply the market forces at work. A few years ago, there was an entire chain of gas stations in Quebec for exactly this. And there's currently an investigation into one of the big food chains here in Canada over sale manipulation.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    15. Re:And So It Begins by danbert8 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Even if it's illegal, it's still widespread. I've literally gone back to a Best Buy with receipt in hand for an item bought NOT on sale trying to exchange it for the same item ON SALE for $5 more than it was the previous day with the "regular price" $15 above what my non sale price was the previous day. I had to fight with a manager to let them do the exchange without me paying an additional $5 sale price.

      --
      Yes it's an anecdote! Were you expecting original research in a Slashdot comment?
    16. Re: And So It Begins by buchanmilne · · Score: 2

      "They're actually worse. In a traditional brick and mortar store, every customer sees the same price on the shelf. But e-Commerce stores like Amazon are increasingly turning to customer analytics to fine tune pricing on a per customer basis."

      In my country, many "brick-and-mortar" shops (stores) have moved from paper price labels to smart price labels (yay, IoT), and the vendors selling the solutions have been talking up the ability to do the same thing (with WiFi hotspots or bluetooth beqcons tracking shoppers) ...

    17. Re:And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      There is always sales tax (assuming your state has one). If you aren't paying it, you are a criminal.

    18. Re:And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      B&H is the best there is, especially if you're in the northeast. They've always been my go-to place for camera gear, but these days they have pretty much everything tech-related. I recently bough a NAS setup from them and they had both more selection and lower prices than Newegg, with none of the uncertainty of Amazon and faster shipping than Prime. I knew that I would be getting what I needed the next day at the lowest price. I'll only order from someone else if I can't get it locally or from B&H.

    19. Re:And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      But Walmart online does actually have everything. I was donated a $200 microwave that had a burned out thermostat in it. I searched the google machine for the part number and Walmart had them. $5 for a bag of 5 of them.

      My HVAC unit went belly up the beginning of June 2017. The HVAC guys came out to look at it and told me that my HVAC systems run capacitor had failed and I needed a new one at a cost of $350 and another $150 to install it.

      Me being the amateur electrician looked at the part number for the run capacitor still on the HVAC unit and typed the part number into the google machine... Guess who had it... WalMart... Yep that is right... https://www.walmart.com/ip/TITAN-HD-PRCF7-5A-Motor-Run-Capacitor-7-5-MFD-440V-Round/41370291

      $11 for something the HVAC company was going to charge me $500 installed for. I paid the over night shipping and had my HVAC system running the next day. Also note if when your HVAC system turns on and it make a horrible noise while running, your run capacitor is about to fail. When I replaced the capacitor myself, remember to ground all leads before disconnecting, when I turned my HVAC system back on it was super quiet. I went outside the first couple of days to make sure it was still running it was that quiet.

      So.... Walmart is still good for somethings.

    20. Re:And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Giving us all a rare reason to root for Microsoft.

      Some of the Microsoft hardware range doesn't suck. For example, the M$ Keyboard Vacuum Cleaner.

    21. Re: And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indon't see how. Im charged tax on every purchase.

    22. Re:And So It Begins by cunina · · Score: 1

      True, but what they want to dominate is IT itself. Once a critical mass of that has moved onto AWS, the screws will start to tighten.

    23. Re:And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea- New Hampshire rules. Moved to New Hampshire as part of the Free State Project which is a migration of liberty-minded people to New Hampshire for the elimination (ideally anyway) of the state. More realistically less government and more freedom is on the agenda. New Hampshire already has no general purpose sales tax and we've been winning a lot more freedom lately in the courts and at the state house. From eliminating the banking department (for businesses such as exchanges that deal with crypto) to decriminalizing marijuana. http://www.freestateproject.org/ and http://www.freekeene.com/ for the latest news on whats happening here.

    24. Re:And So It Begins by sexconker · · Score: 1

      I'd be mildly interested in this if it weren't way out in New Hampshire.

      I hope you guys have enough success to get a similar movement going for a state out west. I enjoy the sun.

    25. Re:And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just don't try to impulse buy on a Saturday(you know the day after pay day), since you know, the WEBSITE IS CLOSED ON SATURDAY.

      WTF.

    26. Re:And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'murika!
      taxes!!
      dey tuk ur jerbs!!!

    27. Re:And So It Begins by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Half the stuff I'm looking for that shows up on Walmart is something sold by Zoro, not Walmart, which means it comes with exactly zero CS support should something not go right (and 9 times out of 10 stuff from Zoro is horribly overpriced, though I'v also gotten my share of deals directly from their website).

      Oh, hey - look - your capacitor came from Zoro. Surprise (not). Might as well go straight to their store.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    28. Re:And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if it's illegal, it's still widespread. I've literally gone back to a Best Buy with receipt in hand for an item bought NOT on sale trying to exchange it for the same item ON SALE for $5 more than it was the previous day with the "regular price" $15 above what my non sale price was the previous day. I had to fight with a manager to let them do the exchange without me paying an additional $5 sale price.

      And did you file a BBB complaint about that? Report it to the FTC? Did you even complain to BestBuy corp? Maybe you did all those things, but most people won't which is why companies keep doing these things.

    29. Re:And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No problem, just go out to Chik-Fil-A instead. Because I inevitably only ever think to go there on Sunday...

    30. Re: And So It Begins by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      Or just use camelizer extension in your browser. Or go to their website CamelCamelCamel.com and paste in the URL. Camelizer will show you the price history to ensure it's a good deal.

    31. Re:And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The MS Mouse Cleaner REALLY sucks the chrome off a trailer hitch!

    32. Re:And So It Begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everything is on sale. If it weren't you couldn't buy it because it wouldn't be available for sale. Once you realize sale means "we will let you buy this", you will be happier.

    33. Re: And So It Begins by djinn6 · · Score: 1

      This would make the physical stores even worse. They already know you're in the store, so the effort it takes to go to a competitor is going to make you spend the extra $ at their store. They could for example, give you 1 item at a discount, then once you've committed to standing in their checkout line, mark up everything else.

      With online stores, the worst that could happen is you have to open a new tab and check the competition, which takes 30 seconds or so.

    34. Re:And So It Begins by mattack2 · · Score: 1

      states are being decimated by the loss of sales tax revenue

      You can't blame rightfully blame Amazon for that.

      Their residents are legally required to pay use tax, at the equivalent rate as sales tax, for things bought out of state where sales tax was not collected.

      This is not a "using every available legal way to avoid taxes" (which I absolutely endorse), this is literally cheating on their taxes.

    35. Re:And So It Begins by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Haven't ordered using the Sears third-party marketplace, though I did recently buy a microwave directly from them because they had a good price and free ship-to-store. Took a week to come in, but the biggest wait in the store was how long it took to serve the customer before me. My actual transaction took about ten minutes from telling them who I was to driving away.

    36. Re:And So It Begins by mattack2 · · Score: 1

      But e-Commerce stores like Amazon are increasingly turning to customer analytics to fine tune pricing on a per customer basis. They're looking at your shopping history

      I don't know about the other factors, but grocery store club cards seem to be doing the same thing, and I'm fine with it. I get "personalized prices" that are LOWER than the sporadic specials (that rotate every couple of weeks), more often than the rotating specials, on things I actually buy. (Plus they try to add some more. I can't think of any of those examples that got me to buy a different product more than once.. The "once" times are sometimes when something is actually free.)

    37. Re:And So It Begins by TheFakeTimCook · · Score: 1

      B&H is the best there is, especially if you're in the northeast. They've always been my go-to place for camera gear, but these days they have pretty much everything tech-related. I recently bough a NAS setup from them and they had both more selection and lower prices than Newegg, with none of the uncertainty of Amazon and faster shipping than Prime. I knew that I would be getting what I needed the next day at the lowest price. I'll only order from someone else if I can't get it locally or from B&H.

      Yep. Absolutely!

      I have "purchased" (well, actually "spec-ed") 3 Synology NASes and their Drives from B&H (1 for my employer, and two for a friend of mine), and am getting ready to recommend a 4th one, to replace the first one for work.

      B&H has great prices, great selection, and wonderful fulfillment-times. What more can you ask? With Amazon, they've become such a "bazaar" it's like "Ok, I found an EXAMPLE of the thing I want; now I wonder how many OTHER "examples" there are OF THE EXACT SAME THING floating around on this site, but with ENTIRELY different prices? And how many of them are actually REFURBS and COUNTERFEITS?" It's almost worse than Alibaba, FFS!

    38. Re:And So It Begins by TheFakeTimCook · · Score: 1

      Just don't try to impulse buy on a Saturday(you know the day after pay day), since you know, the WEBSITE IS CLOSED ON SATURDAY.

      WTF.

      Oh, WAAAAH.

    39. Re:And So It Begins by TheFakeTimCook · · Score: 1

      Half the stuff I'm looking for that shows up on Walmart is something sold by Zoro, not Walmart, which means it comes with exactly zero CS support should something not go right (and 9 times out of 10 stuff from Zoro is horribly overpriced, though I'v also gotten my share of deals directly from their website).

      Oh, hey - look - your capacitor came from Zoro. Surprise (not). Might as well go straight to their store.

      $11 for a faily-hefty Motor-Start cap. is much cheaper than he would have found it at a local appliance-parts store (if he even lived in a city large enough to have such a thing), or even at online appliance-parts sites.

      So, $11 was a good deal, IMHO. And who cares if there was a hand-in-the-middle (Walmart) between the actual etailer and the customer?

      So much for your Zoro bs.

  4. Alternate headline: by lq_x_pl · · Score: 2

    Company that sells stuff engages in shady behavior to maximize profits.

    --
    An internal system operation returned the error "The operation completed successfully.".
    1. Re:Alternate headline: by RotateLeftByte · · Score: 1

      Quel Surprise! Not!
      Use Amazon? Caveat Emptor.

      --
      I'd rather be riding my '63 Triumph T120.
    2. Re:Alternate headline: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'd think that Amazon was a liquidator that was closing up a store that jacks everything up to MSRP despite things selling for much lower than MSRP.

  5. Nothing new... by MitchDev · · Score: 1

    See Kohl's and just about any other brick and mortar retailer too...

    Diligence folks...

    1. Re:Nothing new... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's much harder to do diligence when there's a limited number and a time limit. Not everyone knows about CamelCamelCamel and other sites like it and frankly we shouldn't be in a constant state of trying to make sure companies aren't ripping us off. ESPECIALLY on hugely hyped sales events. Amazon knew what it was doing and they, like any company that takes advantage of their customers need to be punished. We won't, of course, but we should.

    2. Re:Nothing new... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I did pricing at Best Buy for a while back in college. I always laughed when I had to change out a price tag that was the exact same price as normal but now said "As Advertised" on the top of it.

    3. Re:Nothing new... by MitchDev · · Score: 1

      Rush tactics, pretty shady way to do business, there's your first clue something is up...

      " and frankly we shouldn't be in a constant state of trying to make sure companies aren't ripping us off."
      HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA, Used car salesmen love folks like you. What color is the sky in your world?

    4. Re: Nothing new... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +1
      Seriously, what a moron. It's the internet. It's easier than ever to comparison shop.

      "Bad company tricked me into paying too much. Greed, evil, blah, blah, blah."

      All the while ignoring that it was his own greed that allowed him to be duped by something that was trivial to verify.

    5. Re: Nothing new... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I caught on to amazon and their 'deals' a while back, now I compare prices no matter what. The price is almost always competitive, but certainly not the massive discount you were led to believe

    6. Re:Nothing new... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stop & Shop recently started doing this. I guess they noticed that sales slowed down on items that haven't been on sale for a while (and used to be on sale frequently), so now they put a second price tag above the first one in bigger type, same exact price on both, to grab your attention. Still better than Walmart, where they change the color of the shelf tag to show that it's on clearance without changing the price (or sometimes increasing the price in the process).

  6. The Cheaper Assumption by cahuenga · · Score: 3, Informative

    Amazon is no longer reliably cheaper than some brick and mortar options. I have run into this trend more and more in the last couple years.

    1. Re: The Cheaper Assumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True in many industries. I have found some items cheaper at specialty stores than in chain stores. The same is true for Amazon. The differences are many and, in effect, you are comparing apples and oranges. I have to drive to the brick & mortar store, wait in lines, pay, and drive home. Whereas with Amazon, I shop in the comfort of my own home and Amazon brings my purchases to me. The B&Ms are just stores, while Amazon is a shopping & delivery service. The difference is important for folk who cannot leave home.

    2. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

      Amazon has the stock advantage.

      That oddball movie? They have it
      A Nintendo Switch? They have it
      Some obscure part? They have it

      HMV just shuttered its stores across Canada 20 years ago they were a good place to shop for music and movies, they maintained a comprehensive stock as of last year they had walls (WALLS) of new release only material plus a mountain of other crap that wasn't music or movies.

      The future is massive efficiently managed warehouses tied to a delivery infrastructure with a catalogue dump online. It's going to be YEARS before anybody else catches them. Hell even Wal-Mart is feeling the hurt. As we speak they're tapping into dry goods and non-perishables, COSTCO better start paying attention.

    3. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by MightyYar · · Score: 2

      Yup, you need price comparison extensions in your browser if you want to only shop Amazon. If you can't install those, then you really need an extra tab open to a price comparison site. The irony is that their worst prices are for typical household items that they are pushing with their "Dash" buttons and subscriptions. Cleaning products are typically 50-100% more expensive than at Home Depot.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    4. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by chispito · · Score: 1

      Amazon is no longer reliably cheaper than some brick and mortar options. I have run into this trend more and more in the last couple years.

      You don't use Amazon for the prices anymore, you use it for the selection and "free" shipping.

      --
      The Daddy casts sleep on the Baby. The Baby resists!
    5. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by Khyber · · Score: 1

      "The future is massive efficiently managed warehouses tied to a delivery infrastructure with a catalogue dump online"

      I see someone has already failed to observe and learn from history. We had this back in the day - it's called the Sears & Roebuck catalog.

      Wanna know why it died? Brick and Mortar stores.

      Nothing beats the convenience of being able to have the item in your hands THEN AND THERE, NO WAITING.

      This is why I rarely shop online.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    6. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by SQLGuru · · Score: 2

      Amazon has tackled that, too. I live in a warehouse city, so there are many items I can get the same day.......so I don't have to leave the house and I can have it just as fast as if I got dressed, drove to the store, hoped they had it, bought it, and returned home.

    7. Re: The Cheaper Assumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lolololololololol. Yeah, clearly B&M is winning the fight.

    8. Re: The Cheaper Assumption by parkinglot777 · · Score: 1

      True in many industries. I have found some items cheaper at specialty stores than in chain stores. The same is true for Amazon. The differences are many and, in effect, you are comparing apples and oranges. I have to drive to the brick & mortar store, wait in lines, pay, and drive home. Whereas with Amazon, I shop in the comfort of my own home and Amazon brings my purchases to me. The B&Ms are just stores, while Amazon is a shopping & delivery service. The difference is important for folk who cannot leave home.

      You also have to account the time for Amazon delivery. For store front, you may use it when you urgently need something. For Amazon, you may have to wait. If you don't want to wait, pay extra for their service plan that they will deliver the goods at your location in a couple hours (if available).

    9. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by HumanWiki · · Score: 2

      "The future is massive efficiently managed warehouses tied to a delivery infrastructure with a catalogue dump online"

      I see someone has already failed to observe and learn from history. We had this back in the day - it's called the Sears & Roebuck catalog.

      Wanna know why it died? Brick and Mortar stores.

      Nothing beats the convenience of being able to have the item in your hands THEN AND THERE, NO WAITING.

      This is why I rarely shop online.

      You didn't just seriously compare a periodical paper catalog, with 4-6w shipping/return time with a service that provides same day delivery of well more than what was ever in an S&R mail order catalog, did you?

    10. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      This seems to be mostly a result of Prime.

      Prime is great, but it seems that it's led many people to just buying a ton of random one-off items by themselves that they otherwise would have batched into a larger purchase.

      As a result, even if they're taking a loss sometimes, Amazon is pricing many items such that they'll take a smaller hit on the "free" shipping. Items that Wal-mart sells for $4 might be $7-8 at Amazon, because they have to account for the shipping.

      On more expensive items it's a crap shoot. With TV's I've recently seen Wal-mart and even Best Buy offering better prices. Where Amazon still does win out though it selection. It's just not realistic for a brick and mortar store to stock the same # of items as Amazon does.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    11. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      Catalog sales were much less efficient.

      There is no "search" option in a catalog. You had to manually flip through a bazillion pages looking for what you wanted, THEN write out an order form in pen, mail a check, and wait the somewhat standard "Allow 4-6 weeks for delivery".

      With Amazon I can go online and for anything under the threshold where I'm going to comparison shop, I can find it in under 30 seconds, click a few buttons, and it'll show up to my door within two days.

      There are VERY few things that I need faster than that, and only in those rare cases do I go to a brick and mortar store - and even when I do I've started using the pickup options (ie, for Walmart, I filter to items in stock at the local store, order, and then go pick the order up).

      Judging by the way the market has been going, it seems that for most consumers the result trending the same: brick and mortar is increasingly becoming the last resort option rather than the primary one.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    12. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by Penguinisto · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Jut the opposite for me... I live in the sticks, so places like Amazon, Newegg, etc have the selection that the (relatively) local stores do not. Prices are generally lower as well (even when you factor in shipping).

      It's a tradeoff I know, but I'm okay with it given my locale.

      That said, There's lots of specialty websites out there as well, and Amazon ain't the only game in town when it comes to online shopping (e.g. water well filters... kicks the crap out of Amazon's prices, which in turn easily beat the prices found at the local suppliers. Unlike Amazon, the specialty websites also know the products far better.)

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    13. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I've almost given up on brick and mortar shops because the never seem to have what I need. Beyond some basic daily life stuff and food, I either have to travel a long way or order online in the UK.

      In Tokyo some shops are offering 1 hour delivery to your door now. Actually the first was Yodobashi, which has several massive physical shops in Tokyo anyway, but some online retailers with warehouses in that area now offer it too.

      Having said that, Yamato Transport, which does deliveries for Amazon, has decided to jack up the price Amazon pays by 30% and cut down the hours its staff work recently.

      Maybe the solution is some kind of hybrid system... I wouldn't mind walking to a nearby convenience store that is open into the evening just to collect items I ordered.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    14. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by JohnFen · · Score: 1

      Nothing beats the convenience of being able to have the item in your hands THEN AND THERE, NO WAITING.

      This is why I rarely shop online.

      Yes, this is one of the reasons why I do most of my shopping from real, physical stores.

      But I do buy a fair amount from Amazon, because they usually carry whatever doohicky I'm looking for and can't find locally. But I've never been too fussed about the amount of time it takes for the goods to arrive. I usually just pick the cheapest shipping option. I particularly like the "free shipping but it'll take a month" option when it comes up.

    15. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by freeze128 · · Score: 1, Funny

      When I heard people say "Sears and Roebuck", I thought they were saying "Sears and Robot". Imagine my disappointment.

    16. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by TheFakeTimCook · · Score: 1

      Amazon has tackled that, too. I live in a warehouse city, so there are many items I can get the same day.......so I don't have to leave the house and I can have it just as fast as if I got dressed, drove to the store, hoped they had it, bought it, and returned home.

      I agree that that is cool.

      I also live in a city that has an Amazon warehouse in a nearby town. It was Thanksgiving day, and i found that my digital meat thermometer had decided to die.

      Got on Amazon, and a couple of HOURS later, there was a knock at the door... Same day delivery (via a Courier service), and on a HOLIDAY!

      There's a lot not to like about Amazon; but delivery is rarely one of them...

    17. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by wyHunter · · Score: 1

      This is my observation as well for the same reason. And I'm happy to deal with other online vendors - but it frosts me if another 'online vendor' is really a rebadged link to amazon, mostly because ... why?

    18. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by Penguinisto · · Score: 2

      He did - granted, back in the day(TM, pat. pending), mail-order was literally the only way many folks could even get anything, let alone have that much variety to choose from. Sure, you could have the local general store do it for you, but you paid the markup, and odds were good that the store just used the same catalog to order the stuff.

      BUT... timelines aside, it's the same mechanism, minus the Internet/computer bit, and with a slightly longer timeline.

      Now pricing/monopoly-wise, a better analogy would be comparing Amazon to Bethlehem Steel or Standard Oil...

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    19. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing beats the convenience of being able to have the item in your hands THEN AND THERE, NO WAITING.

      So sayeth the dying business model. Some (many... probably most) of us simply have better things to do with our time than to spend it at a store.

      This is why I rarely shop online.

      Send my regards to General Ludd.

    20. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by Penguinisto · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Catalog sales were much less efficient.

      There is no "search" option in a catalog. You had to manually flip through a bazillion pages looking for what you wanted....

      Back before the days of search DB stacks and Index servers, paper catalogs (and even a lot of non-fiction books) had this thing in the back called an Index. It's that section of the book or catalog where every item was listed in alphabetic order, then listed the page number that contained that item's price and description (and maybe even a picture). If you couldn't find it directly from the index, you flipped to the right section (sporting goods, jewelry, whatever), started leafing through it, and if they sold it, odds are perfect that you found what you were looking for within that section.

      Depending on the individual's level of literacy at the time, it took like a minute or two, tops.

      Regards,
      An old fart who remembers having to find stuff without typing a word/phrase into a search box. ;)

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    21. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Items that Wal-mart sells for $4 might be $7-8 at Amazon, because they have to account for the shipping.

      While standing inside Walmart, I very often price-compare items on the shelf to what I find in the Amazon app, and in my experience, for what I want, it's typically the exact same price. As such, unless I need it immediately, I'll usually just put it into my Amazon shopping cart right then and there, because my Amazon Chase Visa gives me 5% back on Prime purchases, whereas the best I can do with anything else in my wallet is 2% back on Walmart purchases (and even then, there's a low ceiling on cash back for that category).

    22. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by torkus · · Score: 1

      Except there are millions who disagree because their use case differs from yours:

      Those who live in large/busy cities where driving isn't convenient (or NYC where car ownership is just uncommon)

      Those times when you don't need something immediately

      Those times when it's easier to wait 2 days (or less) than spend the time to go to the store

      Those times when you simply CAN'T go to the store (kids, sick, busy, traveling, etc.)

      Things you can't get locally ...and so on.

      Now, I've seen plenty of cases where amazon is selling common household items at significantly marked up prices compared to the local mass-mart. But that's also in a big city where people care less about their bottle of soap costing $2.50 or $5.82 because it just shows up at their door in a day.

      --
      You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
    23. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by torkus · · Score: 2

      It's actually quite comical to see the 'instant gratification' generation(s) happier with 2-day delayed gratification over the inconvenience of shopping!

      Granted it does let people be even more lazy...I mean save the time they'd spend shopping.

      --
      You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
    24. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing beats the convenience of being able to have the item in your hands THEN AND THERE, NO WAITING.

      One of the reasons that online shopping has done so well, is that there are so many situations for so many people, where something can beat the convenience of having the item in your hands then and there, no waiting.

      Have the exact item I want instead of something "hopefully close enough" and I'm willing to wait. Beat the price, and I'm willing to wait. On the other hand, sometimes I need to have the item in my hands, then and there, no waiting.

      Having the desired item in my hands immediately without waiting, is just a feature. It's a feature to be traded for other features, and we all have our own exchange rates and experience situations where it varies. (Perhaps to you, it always outweighs all other factors absolutely, because in-hands-now is of infinite value, whereas have-exactly-right-thing is worthless, and having lower price is worthless. Ok. But for many people, the values are less extreme and compete with one another more often.)

      The Sears & Robuck model didn't die. That company did. The model lives on and has undergone performance improvements, and it's called Amazon and it offers what a lot of people want.

    25. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by sexconker · · Score: 1

      A Nintendo Switch? They have it

      If you want to pay 3rd party scalper prices, sure.
      If you just want a Switch at the normal price, nowinstock.net and brickseek.com are your best bets.

    26. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by AuMatar · · Score: 1

      Its a matter of what you're looking to optimize for. Most of us hate shopping, and don't actually need the item immediately. Shopping takes time, effort, expense (gas and wear/tear on a car, or bus fare). Online shopping takes a shipping fee. I'd far rather pay 4 bucks cash than an hour of time.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    27. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by CrashNBrn · · Score: 1

      And the advantage to Sears, or even Costco today is that the company has vetted the products it wants to sell. Even Ebay does a better job of vetting the products on its platform.

      Case in point, Ebay forces similar products (that are clearly the same item) from different sellers to be grouped together. Compared to Amazon which obfuscates such things. For example, on Amazon do a search for portable fan, sort by price highest to lowest, the same fans will start to appear at the $100ish price point, and will continue to appear all the way down to $25 or less. On Ebay all of those clearly same listings would be grouped together and there would be no implied fake prices, as all the sellers are forced to compete.

    28. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "That oddball movie? They have it"

      Except for when they don't. I recently tried to obtain a pretty obscure movie (Duel of the Masters) and finally found a listing for it on Amazon. A third party, but "fullfilled by Amazon". So I order and it never arrives. I check and it was "delivered" a few days before. I contacted vendor who said "wait another week or two". I contacted Amazon who said, "what order".

      Not only was the oddball movie not available through Amazon, but I had to go through the credit card company to have the charges reversed. While the cretinous third party vendor is out the amount, Amazon gets to keep their cut of the sale -- it just comes out of the third party's hide instead of the customer.

      Amazon may be the future, but it isn't what people who shop there expect.

    29. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by porges · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you'd go to the store and there were all these robots wearing clothes, but they were all broken and just standing still. Disappointing.

    30. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have the exact item I want instead of something "hopefully close enough" and I'm willing to wait.

      That one cuts both ways. For items that come in a variety of colors, sizes, shapes, etc., you often can't tell if it is the exact item you want from the online description. Descriptions are often inaccurate, incomplete, or for the wrong version and are inconsistent between different vendors, manufacturers, and sometimes even specific products. And if you're working on a project with many dependencies, having infinite options online doesn't really help. Sometimes you just need a bunch of options in front of you to piece together into the desired solution. Otherwise, you're just ordering something "hopefully close enough" and putting off the next steps until is gets there.

    31. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It just means I don't have shop in person with pompous douche bag like you.

    32. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? You think one instances with one seller is proof of something?

    33. Re:The Cheaper Assumption by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 1

      I don't and have *never* used Amazon because I thought they were cheaper. I live in WA state, so I've always had to pay sales tax, unlike the rest of the country until recently. I use them today for the following reasons, in order of importance:

      - One-stop convenience. I buy almost everything from Amazon except groceries these days, and it's vastly easier to find exactly what I want or need.
      - Delivery. It comes to me, and I don't have to futz around in awful Seattle traffic.
      - Security. Amazon seems to know how to protect my CC info. I don't trust most websites or even local stores with POS machines to have any security.
      - Customer service. Whenever I've had an issue, Amazon took care of it quickly and completely. Even when I didn't ask for a refund, in some cases.

      --
      Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
  7. Good luck with retail distribution, Remodeez by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really, I do wish you good luck.

  8. That's Just Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Giving us all a rare reason to root for Microsoft.

    Don't do this. O365 and Azure are a bigger trap than AWS.

    1. Re: That's Just Wrong by slazzy · · Score: 2

      Don't use either one. There are plenty of great smaller vps cloud providers. My infrastructure is split between digitalocean, linode and vultur for fault tollerance. I can drop one in a second if they have packetloss, downtime or increase prices too high.

      --
      Website Just Down For Me? Find out
    2. Re: That's Just Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ^ This. I use them and AWS. Its easy to scale and bail.

  9. camel camel camel by Mouldy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's already known that amazon have dynamic pricing - it's not a stretch to assume that mechanism could be used for shady reasons.

    At risk of sounding like a cheesy advertisement: That's why I use camel camel camel!

    For those who don't know; it tells you the price history of any product on amazon - so you can see if they've hiked the prices before putting it on sale or just in general if the price is lower or higher than normal.

    1. Re: camel camel camel by hunter44102 · · Score: 1

      FYI For some reason Camel doesn't seem to include prime day prices(or lightning deals) in the history. Not sure why but may have something to do with the way the prices on prime day show as a subtraction(lightning deal) from the regular price. So Camel may not pick it up. For example these binoculars were 50 dollars on this last prime day. But camel says lowest price ever was 59 dollars https://www.amazon.com/gp/prod...

    2. Re:camel camel camel by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Indeed. If it looks too good to be true, I check C3 . Sometimes it really is a deal, sometimes it isn't.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    3. Re:camel camel camel by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      It's already known that amazon have dynamic pricing - it's not a stretch to assume that mechanism could be used for shady reasons.

      Ummm, I'm not aware of a non-shady reason. I suppose fire sales on overstock, but since they are moving away from owning the items in the store, instead just doing fulfillment, even that risk is going away.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    4. Re:camel camel camel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not the dynamic pricing that is the problem, in principle (supply and demand), but the deceptive way that is presented that is the problem. If you advertise a discount that is actually the full, normal price, and artificially inflate the price immediately before the "discount" is advertised, then that is being dishonest.

      I realize it is a standard technique that has been used in retail for ages, but people have been calling out that kind of trickery as dishonest in regular retail for as many years too. Making it "on the web" and "dynamic" doesn't make it any less sleazy.

      If Amazon wants people to trust their purchases *they* should be the ones providing a price history, not an outside party, though it's good to know such a thing exists.

    5. Re:camel camel camel by rikkards · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Came for this
      It actually saved me about $40 when they decreased the price $40 a day after I bought something. Basically went like this:
      Me: Hey I bought this yesterday and you dropped your price
      Amazon: We don't price match
      Me: Ok I want to return my order with free shipping paid by you (50lb item BTW) and order a new one
      Amazon: ok we will match the price just this once

      Damn straight I will try again if that happens

    6. Re:camel camel camel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another good tool is Keepa, which can be installed as an add-on to chrome. It'll pop up a widget that shows you a graph of historical prices for any product it has data on. It's good for knowing what's a low and what's a high.

    7. Re: camel camel camel by CrashNBrn · · Score: 2

      I think CCC only picks up changes that affect an item's price for at least a day - most of those prime lightning deals are 4 hours max. A thing to keep in mind with those, if the item isn't a name brand, check it's competitors... frequently a lightning deal is a discount on a no-name-like product that is overpriced, and has competitors that sell an equal or better product at the same sale price (potentially less) every day.

    8. Re: camel camel camel by omnichad · · Score: 1

      You can use it to see if the current price is actually low compared to its average price. You can't use it to track Lightning deals, and part of that might be how limited of a time the price is valid - but probably more because the sale price doesn't change.

    9. Re:camel camel camel by LordKronos · · Score: 1

      Indeed, and actually Camel can also be used to show that the complaint in this story is actually mostly a non-issue.

      https://camelcamelcamel.com/re...

      The complained about the price spiking right before prime day. However if you look at that product's history, you can see it also has a history of the price spiking once a month for the last 5 months. Granted all of those spikes were in the $15-$16 range, while the pre-prime-day spike was at $19. So it may have been a bit more extreme, but it's not particularly unusual. And I looked up a lot of things on prime day through camel and I didn't see any suspicious pricing claims on anything I looked up.

      I think the story here is more about Jason Jacobs, founder of Remodeez, a small company that is trying to drum up sales for it's footware deoderizer by starting some BS story about Amazon to catapult themselves into national media attention

    10. Re:camel camel camel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Just be warned that Amazon will drop your Prime membership if you return items too many times (legit returns or not) and there is no way to appeal this.

      https://www.moneytalksnews.com/will-amazon-cancel-your-account-for-too-many-returns/

    11. Re:camel camel camel by cahuenga · · Score: 2

      LOL.

      Back in the day I had a flip-phone with one of those nub antennas that had broken off. I walk into the Verizon store and ask the guy at the counter to fix it as I had the phone insured, and guy says he can't do that because it still works. I look at the dude and say "I'm going to go outside to the parking lot and have a horrible accident and then I'll be right back for my new phone".

      He fixed it

  10. Sneaky bastards by AlanObject · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I needed a USB drive yesterday and when I went online to get one I noticed Amazon said that since I had a Prime account it was eligible for free same day delivery. On top of that their price was about $15 less than the local retail. (This was a 5TB Seagate, now in service backing stuff up).

    So I ordered, scheduled for delivery in the afternoon, and it came and I thought pretty amazing.

    What I didn't notice until later is that although there was no shipping charge there was a $12 tip for the driver ordered by default. Even had I noticed I don't pull tips from working guys/gals so the end result is that the "free" shipping cost me more than had I just gone with Amazon's regular next day free shipping.

    Caveat emptor and all that. I am all for regulated free market capitalism and I don't think Bezos/Amazon is evil but it is sort of ironic that real the effect (whether it was the intent or not) of AP delivery was to get me to pay the low-end worker directly for work that Amazon now doesn't have to pay for.

    And that's all I have to say about that.

    1. Re:Sneaky bastards by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 2

      I've had mixed success with same-day shipping around here. The first time I used it Amazon had the same price as Best Buy but free one-day shipping instead of me driving 15 minutes each way to Best Buy seemed like a good deal. I needed the item that day. It still wasn't here at end of day, and they didn't seem to understand that's a big problem.

    2. Re:Sneaky bastards by JohnFen · · Score: 2

      What I didn't notice until later is that although there was no shipping charge there was a $12 tip for the driver ordered by default.

      That sounds like a shipping fee to me.

    3. Re:Sneaky bastards by link-error · · Score: 1

      I've never seen this 'tip' fee you are referring to. However, the 'free 1 day delivery' only applies if you have at least $35 in total items that are all eligible for free 1 day delivery. Otherwise, 1 day delivery does have a fee which depends on a few different factors, but I've seen this fee from $3 up to $20 or more. I never do it however, because I usually have something on my wishlist that qualifies that I'll add in, or I'll default back to the 2 day shipping.

      --
      -Unresolved symbol? Byte me!
    4. Re:Sneaky bastards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is. I have been a driver in many capacities and $12 for a tip is $10 outside of normative range. Even then, no tip should be the default. This isn't a restaurant where the waitress gets paid $3 an hour. Delivery drivers rarely make less than $15.

    5. Re:Sneaky bastards by Cinnamon+Beige · · Score: 1

      Depends on the pay scheme. Your standard established delivery service drivers get paid well; if to-your-door delivery is a standard thing for the business, it's probably safe to expect they pay decent wages for it too. (Still, offering a can of cold soda on a hot day or a takeaway cup of hot coffee is not rude, especially if they regularly deliver to you.) Gig economy, food delivery, businesses branching out into delivery, and anything extra from the first group? Tip.

  11. Consumerism at its best by Etrahkad · · Score: 1

    "SALE", "DISCOUNT", "% OFF", "LIMITED OFFER", "GOING OUT OF BUSINESS", "BUY 2 GET ONE", "BOGO", All scream the same to those who are paying attention: Oh you are raising your prices for these products. Have you people ever wondered why it is a sale only on specific items? How are trends set.. by those who have the most money? If you seriously thought you were getting a screaming deal from Amazon during this day.. you are a consumer, don't be afraid, just keep living paycheck to paycheck and You Must Have The Best Stuff and nothing should stop you from that goal. You Must Have what other people have.. because You don't have it... and they do. .. Now on to what I truly want to say: The vendor is butt hurt because they didn't get the payout that Amazon did on this great "sale day".

    1. Re:Consumerism at its best by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 1

      I like the "Buy two for the price of two!" specials.

      --
      #DeleteFacebook
    2. Re:Consumerism at its best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My father was anti-consumerism his whole life. He scrimped, saved, and fixed everything he possibly could rather than buy new. He invested in dividend paying stocks, and watch his neighbors buy large boats, ATV's, additions to the house, etc. By the time he was in his 70's, he was a millionaire (although you wouldn't have realized it if you visited him).

      Then he got cancer, had to go into a nursing home because he couldn't take care of himself any longer, and within two years he was dead and the nursing home had every dime he ever denied himself pleasure for so that he could save, while everyone else had their nursing home stays paid for by Medicaid because they had not saved anything when they were younger.

      Moral of the story? Enjoy it while you can.

    3. Re:Consumerism at its best by EvilSS · · Score: 1

      I like the buy 2 for the price of 10 I see on amazon (usually via third party sellers). Or the occasional buy 2 for the price of 2.5 or 3 that can be found at Target sometimes (Target math is so bizarre it has memes dedicated to it).

      --
      I browse on +1 so AC's need not respond, I won't see it.
    4. Re:Consumerism at its best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moral of the story is that we need to get rid of Medicaid.

    5. Re:Consumerism at its best by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 1

      The worst is some third party sellers on Amazon.ca

      What costs USD$1.25 ends up costing CAD$3.75 + CAD$30 shipping.

      --
      #DeleteFacebook
    6. Re:Consumerism at its best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (Target math is so bizarre it has memes dedicated to it).

      Target's unit price for toilet paper is the number of rolls per pack divided by 100. Their unit prices for soda can vary by orders of magnitude between items of the same size at the same price. I'm not sure it can even be called "math."

  12. Other sites will help you with that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do people not use a site like camelcamelcamel to check the price history a bit?

  13. ALWAYS shop around by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

    Playing the high-low-middle game is common in sales; it's to provide the perception that you, the consumer, are getting a good deal. The reality, you're getting screwed, and it's your fault for not shopping around. I never said it makes it right, or just, but in a free market, half the onus is on the consumer as well. And no, this isn't the first time Amazon has pulled shenanigans like this. Even before the BitCoin craze, I've often found video cards to be at or exceeding MSRP by a great margin. Sometimes you can get a deal but avoid the hype and know the MSRP before you buy.

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
  14. In other words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Amazon is no better or worse than just about every other retailer when it comes to misleading promotions.

    Feel free to contribute names of outstanding exceptions.

    1. Re:In other words by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      In the UK, it is illegal to advertise a sale price unless you have sold the same item at the pre-discount price for a certain period, so pretty much any shop here is an exception to this.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    2. Re:In other words by OhPlz · · Score: 1

      No one would ever dare defy the law!

    3. Re:In other words by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      They do sometimes, but the fines get pretty large and if you do it repeatedly then they're significantly more than you're likely to make from the sale.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    4. Re:In other words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a Brit in the US it amazes me how often the US fails to do something that is so obvious to the rest of the world, eg:
      1) the aforementioned waiting period for declaring a sale price
      2) free health care
      3) banning power sockets near water (kitchen sink, bathroom etc)

    5. Re:In other words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Although in truth the UK the shop only needs to have been offering that higher price for a certain time *at at least one location*.

      Which is frequently a 'training location' shop where they train employees, far from any potential customers. Strictly it is a genuine retail outlet and they will take your money, but no-one ever shops there. Not the least reason being that they charge full retail all the time.

      So even if an item is normally sold at 40% off retail by default, when they sell it at 50% off retail they advertise it as being a 50% discount, not a ((60-50)/60*100)% discount (which is only a 16.66% discount from their usual price in most outlets, for those of you who are following along)

    6. Re:In other words by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      I'd have to look it up, but I was under the impression that this was changed a couple of years ago and that chain stores were now required to have the item on sale at the full price at at least 50% of their locations.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  15. That's why they had record sales by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Inflated prices

  16. Yeah, but FREE shipping by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After you pay $100 they give you FREE shipping for a year!!!! You can't beat that!

    1. Re: Yeah, but FREE shipping by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Considering the number of orders I place in a year, you really can't.

      Don't assume that everyone can't do math and is confused by how this all works. Some of us are smart enough to get it and are happy to be subsidized by those who don't.

    2. Re: Yeah, but FREE shipping by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I know. I signed up for Prime a few years ago SOLELY for Amazon Video but once I had that "free 2-day shipping with no minimum" hanging over me, it came in handy quite a few times when I needed immediate replacements for consumables and I didn't need to worry about "oh, dammit, it costs $4 but it'll cost $10 to ship it" or "What else can I buy so that my order reached $50?"

      And then there's the 2-day shipping that arrives over the weekend, which is really sweet.

  17. Know your prices... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

    I buy a lot of stuff on Amazon but I don't keep a running list of prices. Newegg is a different story. Most of their promotional prices are the same prices they charge every day, and the promotional discounts are just enough to reduce the sales tax being charged. A good deal is once in a blue moon.

    1. Re:Know your prices... by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 1

      You're about the size of a small moon, so it fits.

      Have some Spam with Cheese for your whine.

    2. Re:Know your prices... by freeze128 · · Score: 1

      They should call it SPEEZE.

    3. Re:Know your prices... by butchersong · · Score: 1

      I don't use newegg for anything anymore except as a source of reviews sometimes or to build out what I want then source elsewhere. It's a crappy thing to do but they're just not the company they used to be.

    4. Re:Know your prices... by TheFakeTimCook · · Score: 1

      I buy a lot of stuff on Amazon but I don't keep a running list of prices. Newegg is a different story. Most of their promotional prices are the same prices they charge every day, and the promotional discounts are just enough to reduce the sales tax being charged. A good deal is once in a blue moon.

      Newegg is, and has always-been, one of the worst, slowest, most unscrupulous mail-order retailers in history.

    5. Re:Know your prices... by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Newegg also the same problem as Amazon where they allow third parties to sell in their "marketplace", you have to be somewhat diligent if you want to make sure you're buying from Newegg proper and not some other (often sketchy) seller. The other big problem with this is they let the third party sellers create their own listings so they've basically spammed the shit out of Newegg's once totally awesome search with pages of garbage results, eliminating one of the big draws to going to Newegg in the first place. Nowadays, if I need something tech I'll go to B&H, who very often will carry it. Or if I want to take my chances buying out of someone's garage or some shipper out of China I'll just go to eBay.

  18. Whats that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Prime Day, is that where `mericans use that day as an excuse to spend money knowing more than well that the prices aren't actually that good?

    Who would have thought?

  19. Shocker! by mrun4982 · · Score: 1

    You mean to tell me Amazon follows the same business practices of virtually every single retail business when having big "sales"!? Say it ain't so, lol.

    1. Re:Shocker! by TheFakeTimCook · · Score: 1

      You mean to tell me Amazon follows the same business practices of virtually every single retail business when having big "sales"!? Say it ain't so, lol.

      I always think back to a Mad Magazine piece called "What they say (and what it really means)". One of the "panels" showed a supposed "Sale" sign that sc reamed in gigantic type:

      Prices Slashed by 50% !!! ...and then below it, in much smaller print...

      (on things we increased the price by 50%)

      That economic lesson has stayed with me since I was about 12 years old.

    2. Re:Shocker! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      cool, so you get the item at 75% of original value - sounds like a sale to me

      price * 1.5 * 0.5 = 0.75*price

    3. Re:Shocker! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you increase a price by 50%, then reduce that price by 50%, you're still looking at a reduced price. Those 50%'s don't cancel each other out.

    4. Re:Shocker! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think your joke relies on American high-school maths being substandard.

      50% of (100% + 50%) = 75% of the original 100%, or 25% off. Which is not too bad for a sale.

      Mind you, I had a Scottish high school education.

  20. Always check the prices by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    https://camelcamelcamel.com/remodeez-Footwear-Deodorizer-Charcoal-Moisture/product/B016ZZWL6E

  21. BestBuy lost my business the other day for worse. by Maven0 · · Score: 3, Informative

    You guys seem to think that this is bad. I was in BestBuy the other day to buy a new keyboard and mouse. I decided to look up reviews while i was standing there and noticed that the price on the BestBuy website beat the one in the store for the keyboard by $30, the mouse by $15, and the mouse pad I was also grabbing by $5. I HAD TO ASK THEM TO PRICE MATCH THEIR OWN DAMN WEBSITE!

  22. Prime day sucked this year by wardrich86 · · Score: 1

    Not sure if it sucks more and more every year or what... last year's Prime Day was pretty good, though. This year really didn't have many sales, and they were all on dumb shit.

    1. Re:Prime day sucked this year by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Depends on what you wanted. $399 for the Oculus Rift, controllers, and a $100 Amazon gift card (net $299 for the Rift+Contrl) was pretty sweet considering I already order a bunch of stuff from Amazon and that $100 was as good as cash to me.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    2. Re:Prime day sucked this year by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

      Not sure if it sucks more and more every year or what... last year's Prime Day was pretty good, though. This year really didn't have many sales...

      I thought last year's Prime Day was garbage, but this year, I bought a PS4 Slim w/Uncharted 4 for $229, and it came with a free download code for The Last of Us Remastered. I was able to convince my wife to let me buy it since I told her we'd drop Comcast & get PlayStation Vue instead.

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    3. Re:Prime day sucked this year by CrashNBrn · · Score: 1

      Depends on what you were looking for. We got a California King Memory foam mattress for $450, a memory foam topper for $100. About a third the cost of an American name-brand mattress ($1500+), and about 25% discount on the mattress regular price. Suguru at half price, among other smaller ticket items.

    4. Re:Prime day sucked this year by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

      We didn't buy much we hadn't intended to buy already but waited to see if went on sale. It was still better than the first one, that was just a bizarre collection of junk.

    5. Re:Prime day sucked this year by wardrich86 · · Score: 1

      Probably a real disappointment for people that are running out of lube from the first go-around.

    6. Re:Prime day sucked this year by wardrich86 · · Score: 1

      Hey, that's pretty good. I was just looking for some decent nerdy shit... keyboards, peripherals, etc. Maybe some new boardgames and head phones. The US prime day was probably way better than the Canadian one.

    7. Re:Prime day sucked this year by wardrich86 · · Score: 1

      From what I'm reading here, the US Prime Day was pretty sweet. The Canadian Prime Day was shit.

    8. Re:Prime day sucked this year by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man, I didn't know that bundle came with Last of Us, or I would have bought it. There are only a few PS4 games I want to play, and that's one.

  23. In some ways, Amazon is insufficiently managed. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 5, Informative

    There are many, many other defects in Amazon management. Every web page, for example, tries to sell you something else before giving full information about a product.

    Playing games with prices is EXTREMELY self-destructive. People buy much more from companies they know they can trust. When a company can't be trusted, customers must spend time thinking carefully about every item before buying.

    Amazon abuses employees, according to news reports:

    Inside Amazon: Wrestling Big Ideas in a Bruising Workplace (Aug. 15, 2015)

    Worse than Wal-Mart: Amazon's sick brutality and secret history of ruthlessly intimidating workers (Feb. 23, 2014)

    Amazon Under Fire Over Alleged Worker Abuse in Germany (February 19, 2013)

    Jeff Bezos, the CEO of Amazon, owns a spaceflight company, Blue Origin. Would you fly into space with a company whose owner makes abusive web pages?

    1. Re:In some ways, Amazon is insufficiently managed. by Penguinisto · · Score: 2

      Exactly this. I know too many colleagues who thought it would be mega-cool to work for Amazon, only to discover to their horror that they went to work for a giant, angry boiler-room with shit management.

      I've lost count over how many direct and blatant job offers I've seen in my mailbox (via linkedin)... Unless I find myself unemployed, I just shitcan them without a word. I prefer my sanity, thanks much.

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    2. Re:In some ways, Amazon is insufficiently managed. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Always always always check historical prices on Amazon before buying anything. CamelCamelCamel is a good resource for doing that.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    3. Re:In some ways, Amazon is insufficiently managed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This.
      Amazon will screw you sideways with a smile unless you are an educated shopper.

    4. Re:In some ways, Amazon is insufficiently managed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'd also suggest MyAlerts, who has been tracking their prices for years (previously under the name TrackIf)

    5. Re:In some ways, Amazon is insufficiently managed. by lgw · · Score: 4, Informative

      Every web page, for example, tries to sell you something else before giving full information about a product.

      Only because it works. Every pixel is fine-tuned for maximum sales, and continuously validated. I'd rather see the product details above the other products, but then I'm a geek and so hardly representative of the greater shopping public. (I've heard it doesn't matter: most people just ignore everything and scroll down to the reviews.)

      Playing games with prices is EXTREMELY self-destructive. People buy much more from companies they know they can trust.

      This part of your post has been proven false by experiment. Oh, sure, it sounds truthy, but experiment trumps opinion. JCPenny has it's entire business built on this sort of deceptive sale. A CEO came along and tried to end the practice, start having non-gamed sale prices, and the business cratered. Shoppers wanted the "sales", even long after everyone knew the game. Not sure why, not what I would have expected, but you can't argue with reality.

      People just aren't strictly rational as consumers, and have all sorts of oddball preferences.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    6. Re:In some ways, Amazon is insufficiently managed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly what I was thinking.

      Amazon price swings are so ridiculous that even there are websites dedicated to track them.

      I use my own script, but have bookmarked CamelCamelCamel to also check the 3rd party graphs.

  24. Amazon Is Just Fulfillment by CycleFreak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Any manufacturer of sufficient size should be able to put up a web-based order portal where end consumers can buy their products. All they need is fulfillment. The maker of a product should easily be able to undercut any price offered by a retailer. In the past, they never did that because distribution was extremely difficult. This is no longer the case. Wholesale pricing. Distributor pricing. Retail pricing. Bugger all that! Make your product, accurately determine your costs and sell it directly to consumers for 10% more. Charge for shipping. Don't be fooled, shipping is never free. It may be included in the price so it's somewhat hidden, but it's never free.

    Granted, Amazon does fulfillment extremely well. But all you (as a manufacturer) has to do is ship your stuff. Give reasonable delivery times (5 - 7 business days, for example) and people will buy it. Save lots of money or get the product tomorrow? People will almost always choose to save $$.

    Cutting out the middle man has never been easier.

    1. Re:Amazon Is Just Fulfillment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Granted, Amazon does fulfillment extremely well. But all you (as a manufacturer) has to do is ship your stuff. Give reasonable delivery times (5 - 7 business days, for example) and people will buy it

      No I won't. NewEgg has this and I won't buy shit from NewEgg if I can get it on Amazon. You know why? Returns. If you have to return something to NewEgg you have to go to FedEx yourself and pay for shipping. Then you have to wait days until they issue your refund. If I need to return something to Amazon I just check a box online and UPS shows up to my house and takes it away for free. Within an hour of UPS scanning the pickup I am refunded.

      Amazon is beating the hell out of retailers because Amazon understands it's about service, not just about price. Most retailers still haven't figured this out.

    2. Re:Amazon Is Just Fulfillment by foghelmut · · Score: 1

      I've had great experience with Polk Audio's eBay page.

    3. Re:Amazon Is Just Fulfillment by bad-badtz-maru · · Score: 1

      Fulfillment is the differentiator, though. Walmart's failure to compete with Amazon is an example of this. They have one of the largest fulfillment infrastructures worldwide, but their home delivery "solution" is to send employees to your house in their own car. And I'm sure that will fall apart if they had any significant home delivery volume coming into the host stores. Nearly all distribution is geared towards shipping palletized freight from one loading-dock-equipped facility to another. Fedex, UPS, USPS, and Amazon are the large exceptions.

    4. Re: Amazon Is Just Fulfillment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you can drop it off for free or pay for a pick up from a carrier, least in my experience.

    5. Re:Amazon Is Just Fulfillment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe if you take paypal or Android Pay. I'm kind of done with giving random internet sales portals my credit card info.

    6. Re:Amazon Is Just Fulfillment by tsstahl · · Score: 1

      A certain return percentage is inevitable. To account for it you have to build the systems your retail customers already have in place. Now you are in the widget selling business, and the widget manufacturing business.

      It makes more sense to ask one of my retail partners *cough* Amazon *Cough* to provide me a branded web presence and sell the product within 5% of my retail customers. This way I'm still in only the widget manufacturing business and have another avenue for good will among the populace.

    7. Re:Amazon Is Just Fulfillment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah no shit they can do that but they don't want to. A) It really pisses off the "middlemen" as you call them (or distribution channel aka the place they make most of their money, as they call it) and B) it gets them involved in customer service which is just not cost-effective. Having dinner with the costco buyer four times a year and selling $5 million of product is fine, having an army of customer service reps to deal with angry, awful people is outside the manufacturer's core competency. Plus the costs of serving retail are exactly why the middlemen cost more. Do you think that Amazon's costs (with robot warehouses) are going to be higher than yours?

    8. Re:Amazon Is Just Fulfillment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Make your product, accurately determine your costs and sell it directly to consumers for 10% more. ... Cutting out the middle man has never been easier.

      In theory - yes.
      In reality - no.

      - You assume consumers make rational purchasing decisions - I promise you they do not.
      - You assume your product is already so well known that no marketing is required and "if you build it they are guaranteed to come" - I promise you that will not happen.
      - You assume distribution channels to consumers are easy and economical to do via UPS/FedEx/USPS/freight shipping - I promise you are they not.


      There are many additional factors to consider here, several of them noted nicely here:
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      Your argument has merit for a handful of use cases. For everything else - there's Amazon/eBay/other online marketplaces.

  25. I don't shop there anymore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Looks like I missed out on nothing

  26. Re:BestBuy lost my business the other day for wors by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve · · Score: 1

    You guys seem to think that this is bad. I was in BestBuy the other day to buy a new keyboard and mouse. I decided to look up reviews while i was standing there and noticed that the price on the BestBuy website beat the one in the store for the keyboard by $30, the mouse by $15, and the mouse pad I was also grabbing by $5. I HAD TO ASK THEM TO PRICE MATCH THEIR OWN DAMN WEBSITE!

    I want to be clear that my response is not a joke. You actually found a worker to complain to? The last time I was in Best Buy I had to go to the greeter guy at the front of the store and demand that he send a drone to the only cash register they had open so we could actually check out. The 2 guys in front of me apparently had been there for 5+ minutes waiting for somebody to actually work the cash register. I saw maybe 5 or 6 workers in the entire store. One of the big problems of retail now is that they have stuff they want to sell you, but they can't afford to pay people to actually work there any more so you have to wander all over the store to find somebody who can help you if need it or even find somebody willing to check you out.

  27. Re: BestBuy lost my business the other day for wor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The "premium" you pay covers the operating costs roof the store (rent, power, employees.) It sucks, but that's business.

  28. Camelcamelcamel is your friend by Solandri · · Score: 1

    Just wish they stored a price history for other stores besides Amazon. You can see a spike to $18.94 on Prime day. Now I'm curious if the other spikes correspond to other Amazon "sales".

    https://camelcamelcamel.com/remodeez-Footwear-Deodorizer-Charcoal-Moisture/product/B016ZZWL6E

  29. Look at Amazons Discussions website... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    About Amazon Prime customers getting screwed with by Amazons AMZN_US local delivery service. There are thousands of complaints about false delivery tracking, missing shipments, ignorant delivery drivers, and customers so pissed off that they cancel their Prime membership.

    1. Re:Look at Amazons Discussions website... by freeze128 · · Score: 1

      I have experienced this exact thing. Fortunately, Amazon customer service is TOP NOTCH, and was willing to correct the errors to my complete satisfaction.

    2. Re:Look at Amazons Discussions website... by cloud.pt · · Score: 1

      Not always top notch.

      They have a policy that refunds are only done to the original purchasing card (note: I am not from the US and this was on Amz UK).
      I had a warranty return made 1 month before the full warranty ended (details: fitbit dislodged itself from the bracelet, and lucky me, they had no more stock ). Problem: I use virtual prepaid cards, and that card was no longer associated with my account. I am in the process of contacting my bank to get letterhead from it stating the associated refund transfer never reached my account. The bank itself is doing the same thing to the government entity that issues those virtual prepaid cards... Long story short, I am still waiting for the 130 bucks to get to my account, 2 months after the item was returned, and I expect a good 2 more of redtape.

      Nice and courteous as they may be, they are completely adamant about changing that policy and refunding me in store credit or to another credit card.

    3. Re:Look at Amazons Discussions website... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is not an Amazon thing. This is a government thing. This rule is mandated by the government for anti-money-laundering purposes.

    4. Re:Look at Amazons Discussions website... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, they are top notch a couple of times, then they put you on a black list for a couple of years when you will get no favours at all. In understand this in the case of some abusive customers (there are a few people on the slickdeals site for example who have no moral compass at all) but when the complaints that get you blacklisted are caused by genuine problems with Amazon then you realise how much of a monopoly position they have.

  30. Saw this. by CODiNE · · Score: 1

    Raspberry Pis listed as $50 or so "regular price" but marked "down" to $35 their actual price.

    --
    Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
  31. Amazon peaked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I started ordering from Walmart. It's faster and has better prices.

  32. Interesting. by Dishevel · · Score: 1

    You mean Amazon does the same shit every retailer has always done?

    The big story is the people who are fooled by this. About 15% of the population is incredibly stupid. Let us stop fucking up the world trying to drag these fuckers with us.

    --
    Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
  33. Breaking news! by JohnFen · · Score: 1

    The major retailer Amazon is engaging in the underhanded tricks that nearly all major retailers engage in.

    Rule #1: Don't believe a retailer when they claim they're giving you a great deal. Comparison shopping often reveals the lie.

  34. nothing illegal, perhaps unethical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Amazon plays on peoples psyche, they don't necessarily have the best deals...if it is a food price for you then buy it...if not, don't! Complaining after you find the item for a lower price just means you just found out you're too lazy to "shop", and that sour taste is just the reality of buyers remorse...take a walk in the park with a dog...you'll feel better.

  35. I never look at the % off anymore by toejam13 · · Score: 1

    Sales are often little more than a price scam. It has been shown time and time again that many stores raise their prices before a sale in order to give the illusion of a discount during the sale. Or they do it to give the impression that their product is more upscale since it originally came with such a high base price.

    If you use price tracking websites or comparison apps, you can see in the historical pricing that stores often raise their prices shortly before large sales events. Black Friday and store closure liquidation sales are often the worst. I've been to stores claiming 80% off, yet found cheaper prices down the street.

    So do yourself a favor: ignore the signs saying x% off and just look at the final price. Compare it to other stores and historical data. Then figure out the real x% off based off the lowest price you can find. Probably not such a great deal, right?

  36. Re:BestBuy lost my business the other day for wors by JohnFen · · Score: 1

    In all fairness, by now everyone should know that Best Buy is usually the worst possible place to buy anything.

  37. Fine Print by freeze128 · · Score: 1

    The article even mentions that the "was" price on an item is collected from previous sales on Amazon ***AND OTHER RETAILERS***. I think this means that if *ANYONE* sold this $9.99 item for $20.00, then Amazon can use the $20.00 price as a "was" price.

    camelcamelcamel probably won't notice that....

  38. Doesn't Bezos own the Washington Post as well? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmm...

  39. Re:BestBuy lost my business the other day for wors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They got sued over 7 years ago for doing that. The public web site had one price, their internal site had a higher price. When people would come into the store and say they thought the item was supposed to be cheaper, their 'associates' would bring up the internal site and say "See, it actually is that higher price."

    Last time I bought something at Best Buy (a trackball, last year) it was mismatched from the sale price online. I didn't noticed until I got home, so the next day I went back to complain. I was very surprised when they said the store pricing was a mistake and they updated the displayed price.

  40. "Shady" by dcw3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Disclaimer: Not talking about this particular case.

    Many of the comments talk about "shady" practices. What many here are failing to understand is that if it's not illegal, it's legal, and businesses are going to do it in order to maximize profits. It's the rare case when they won't act that way...typically when there's concern about some sort of bad press that could affect the bottom line. But in general, if we don't want businesses doing things we consider shady, they need be made illegal, or regulated...especially when it becomes monopolistic.

    And FWIW, I'm saying this as a conservative, small government fan.

    --
    Just another day in Paradise
    1. Re:"Shady" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those comments are not saying the practice is legal or illegal. Do you think the word "shady" means the same as either the word "legal," or the word, "illegal?"

      What do you think the word "shady" means?

    2. Re:"Shady" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it is illegal.

  41. Amazon "Subscribe and Save" another scam .... by King_TJ · · Score: 1

    My wife has tried, time and again, to order household goods we use often with Amazon's Subscribe and Save service. The idea is nice.... Just have the system auto re-order what you need on a set schedule so you never run out of toilet paper or shampoo or deodorant or ??

    The problem is, when we find a product on it we want at a price we like, the re-orders often stop after the first or MAYBE the second time we get a shipment. The reason? Amazon claims the item was discontinued. That or we purposely cancel the order after the price suddenly shoots way up from what we initially agreed to pay. And on those items they just discontinue? Again, the alternatives always seem to cost a lot more - to the point we do better just shopping locally.

  42. Pretty short sided of you to think that's it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    There are a ton more reasons manufacturers dont want to sell directly to the public. Source, I work for a manufacturer.

    1. Invoicing - invoices don't reconcile themselves automatically.
    2. Logistics - all these one-off deliveries don't package and label themselves.
    3. Returns - these things require a ton of manual intervention to process, rectify and account for.
    4. Partner Relationships - Many existing distribution contracts have clauses to prevent direct to consumer sales. Even if they dont have such a clause in place you are risking damaging a relationship with your redistributors which could have huge impacts to your business (see reasons 1-3).
    5. It takes capitol, resources and focus to run an efficient direct to consumer fulfillment center. Most manufacturers would rather (and smartly so) focus on making quality products and leave all the other business stuff to large distributors and re-sellers.

    Have a good day!
           

    1. Re:Pretty short sided of you to think that's it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This, this right here!
      Can't believe the parent of this comment is marked as insightful when it is clear that who ever wrote it is obviously uninformed or generally misinformed.

  43. Re:BestBuy lost my business the other day for wors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wait til they have service kiosks to answer questions / close a sale with remote workers. Then maybe enough on site workers to stock the shelves, clean the bathrooms, and man the security podium. Probably end up with less than a dozen employees to work at one location.

  44. CamelCamelCamel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On my end, I just now check with CamelCamelCamel because I suspected they did.
    But I have to admit that on the last Prime Day (on .fr) I didn't see any article with a discounted price based on an increased one, in those I did check.

    mlw.

  45. Ummm...Can You Say Black Friday? by charles05663 · · Score: 1

    Amazon Prime Day is just black Friday on a different day...

  46. Gullible by ledow · · Score: 1

    Old trick, yes.

    But does it work if you have an ounce of common sense? I was quite interested in Prime day - I give Amazon a LOT of business and Prime is worth it just on postage costs alone, let alone the freebies thrown in.

    However, everything I looked at on Prime day didn't look... anything near amazing. A bit Meh, if I'm honest. I didn't buy a single thing, even the things already on my wishlist. Because nothing made me say "Oh, that's a good deal" or "That's come down in price" or "I better get that while it's cheap". It was all just... comparable pricing to what I would expect from anywhere else.

    Are people really that gullible that just because you say it's 10,000% off they fall for it and pay even normal retail price when they didn't really know they wanted the item anyway? It's a sad state of affairs if people haven't educated themselves by now. I can sort of understand some old granny who's not all there falling for it, but people buying shit from Amazon on a special advertised day, with a Prime account? It doesn't make any sense.

    I treat Steam the same way. The first Summer Sales were amazing, I picked up SO MANY games, and bonus things that I was *excited* for the next sale. And then it has been Meh ever since. I look at a game that's 50p off and think "50p extra yesterday or tomorrow, or wait until it really comes down in price" and it's just not worth it. If it was $5 off, maybe, especially if it's a really cheap game. But even there, if I ask "am I going to be annoyed that I didn't get this discount?" pretty much the answer is no. And that's on a site where I spend mostly "fake" money - marketplace money earned from selling off cards that I don't do anything to get except run a game and then Alt-Tab back to my browser.

    But spending real money on a deal that, give it a week, and you could probably price-match on anyway? Are people really that stupid?

    1. Re: Gullible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You obviously didn't look at this year's Steam sale.

      Every item on sale, with some exceptions to early access games, was discounted by 50% or more.

    2. Re: Gullible by Whorhay · · Score: 1

      Still didn't buy anything. There were a couple games I thought about buying but decided the odds of me actually playing them were low enough that I'd just hold on to my cash. I've gotten more play time out of a couple bucks spent on Terraria than almost any other game in my library. Most huge budget AAA games have to get down to below $5 before I'll seriously consider buying them, because I know I'll likely only get a few hours out of them if I ever bother installing them to begin with.

    3. Re: Gullible by ledow · · Score: 1

      Not at all true, in the slightest.

      In fact, the wishlisted games I had that went on sale barely hit 20% for the most part.

  47. Re:BestBuy lost my business the other day for wors by Gilgaron · · Score: 1

    Got a good deal haggling on appliances! But yeah... it is mostly a giant cell phone kiosk now.

  48. Forced to collect money? THE HORROR! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Forced to collect money? THE HORROR!

    So if it's not being sent to the state.. that means Amazon is just collecting it unnecessarily and collecting interest.

    Nice return on investment for money that isn't Amazon's.

    1. Re:Forced to collect money? THE HORROR! by reboot246 · · Score: 1

      No, the 8% sales tax that I pay to Amazon goes back to my state. The state keeps half and distributes the other half to the counties. Amazon adds tax seemingly at random. One time they charge it and the next time they may not, even on the same item. Yeah, it puzzles me, too.

  49. maybe do some research? by WillgasM · · Score: 1

    Even if Amazon says it's marked down 99%, you should probably do a quick search to see if another vendor has it for less, unless we're talking about something sold exclusively through Amazon.

  50. More about Amazon insufficient management: Drones by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1

    Jeff Bezos is not as bad as Donald Trump, but Bezos says and does things that show he isn't thinking carefully.

    Remote control over drones can ALWAYS be eliminated or hijacked by radio frequency interference.

    Technology ALWAYS has failures, like those at Three Mile Island, Fukushima Daiichi, and Chernobyl.

    Amazon drone delivery: nine ways it could go horribly wrong (March 26, 2015)

    I don't want drones near where I live. Will drones be allowed near where Jeff Bezos lives?

  51. Amazon? Or Third-party? by MDMurphy · · Score: 1

    What I couldn't glean from the references was whether it was Amazon selling, or a third-party, where the historic price was jacked up. I looked at products from the company complaining and found third parties selling for much more than the $9.99, from $18 up to $40-something. I've seen that often on Amazon, for small things, with third parties offering at 10x the price.
    One explanation I'd heard was someone's dynamic pricing reacting to another's dynamic pricing, causing a price spike.

    What I'm not clear on then, is Amazon's comparable price based on an offering price or a price where something was sold? And is it limited to Amazon's offerings or open to third parties? I would not be surprised to learn that a 3rd party sold an identical item to an unsuspecting customer for a higher price in the not too distant past.

      I've never understood why these third parties offered those items for such higher prices. My only thought is that they might keep one in stock, ready to be sold to the first person who comes to buy when Amazon happens to be out.

  52. Revolution when comrade? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Capitalists gonna capitalize.

  53. China? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just want to know how to block stores that drop ship via china e-packet without telling you beforehand. That and ridiculous "stores" like carolina microwave where every single insignificant item is $500 or more apparently just hoping you'll click by accident.

  54. i too have been bait and switched by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but since i run a business and ordering parts and such are a must, ive been bait and switched by newegg and amazon multiple times. usually for me its if i add somehting to my cart to see shipping, and come back a day or two later, price hike. good luck trying to deal with this, i have photos and timestamps and still noone gives a fuck.

  55. We did this at Nordstrom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We did this every year at Nordstrom for their annual sale. We would roll the racks into the back, then roll out the new racks for the sale with lower quality stuff. After all the women were done fighting over the clothes and the sale ended, we rolled out the regular merchandise. The only stuff that was left on the floor was clearance stuff we just wanted gone. Buyer beware.

  56. Their prices certainly weren't impressive by sarbonn · · Score: 1

    It's true that their prices were pretty bad this time around, which automatically makes me think they jacked up the price and then brought them down as "on sale". I shop Amazon all of the time, so I'm constantly paying attention to prices there. Nothing seemed impressive to me on that day. What I did discover was that they kept trying to sell me LOTS of stuff that I would never buy in a million years. Mostly junk. Every time I thought I saw a large ticket item, it was already sold out, or the item was "out of sale", even though I never saw it on sale to begin with.

    --
    Sarbonn's blog: http://www.sarbonn.com/blog
  57. This is retail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hate to break it to you, but this is retail, not just Amazon but all retail. Leading up to any holiday such as Black Friday or Christmas, retailers slowly increase the price of goods so its not noticeable, then offer "discounts". A family member of mine worked in retail for their entire life until retirement and explained to me their process.

  58. JCPenney is closing 138 stores. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1

    "JCPenney has it's entire business built on this sort of deceptive sale. A CEO came along and tried to end the practice, start having non-gamed sale prices, and the business cratered."

    JCPenney is closing 138 stores. (March 17, 2017)

    Overall, JCPenney's abuse of customers hasn't been successful, apparently.

    (There may be a problem with the conclusion that JCPenney's price abuse caused the company's failures. My understanding is that there were many other areas of poor managemen at JCPenney. So, it would require considerable analysis to discover all the elements of failure.)

    1. Re:JCPenney is closing 138 stores. by lgw · · Score: 1

      Time-wise, the company fell apart when they stopped the price abuse. For whatever that's worth, correlation vs causation etc, but shoppers weren't at all happy per the JCP financial docs.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    2. Re:JCPenney is closing 138 stores. by Cinnamon+Beige · · Score: 1

      Time-wise, the company fell apart when they stopped the price abuse. For whatever that's worth, correlation vs causation etc, but shoppers weren't at all happy per the JCP financial docs.

      If it is causation, actually, I'd say that it suggests less that consumers want sales, and more that getting caught committing it in any way breaks customer trust. If you're ending the practice and not because your predecessor left in a scandal over that? Spin it as "Every day is a sale at Foo Store!"--not "We've been gouging you in the past but we're not gonna keep doing it, honest!" I mean, does that second quite sound believable?

    3. Re:JCPenney is closing 138 stores. by lgw · · Score: 1

      No, really, there was a lot of market research on this. People like fake sales. Really they do. It's the festive atmosphere or somesuch, even if the price isn't better. Most people aren't obsessive geeks focused on price alone.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    4. Re:JCPenney is closing 138 stores. by Cinnamon+Beige · · Score: 1

      This isn't mutually incompatible. I've seen those studies too, and what I remember is that what seems to drive it is that customers perceive it as a deal--which you can blow pretty damn easily by admitting to price abuse or by being caught engaging in it.. You're going to be hurt more by a reputation for ripping off customers than you are going to be hurt by having your sale prices being only a small amount less than your regular prices.

      After all, most people aren't obsessive geeks focused on price alone. As long as they're actually lower--or you're pretty openly using the sale to give people the old price for a bit longer before the new price kicks in--then you're in the clear. (The major time I've seen the second happen, I'm rather certain the store itself wasn't the one raising the price but the manufacturer. They put it on sale pretty much whenever they've an excuse--the old price was that product's Goldilocks spot.)

  59. Meh, its what they all do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This isn't news, if you think Amazon isn't manipulative your an idiot. I've actually seen much better prices on other sites, and never assume Amazon is always cheaper. Shop around people, that's what the internet is for. I use Prime a lot and it more then pays for itself in savings. But I don't buy everything from Amazon and I doubt I ever will.

  60. All costumer contact retail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has but one mission with price, to knock your fucking head off.
    And you are the biggest suckers the world has ever seen.

  61. The Feel Good Effect by n329619 · · Score: 1

    If you are a slashdotter, you are automatically excluded from the Feel Good Effect, because you won't feel it.

    The term came out from a video source, but based on psychology. When two human were given a separate price tag with one that is $5 and one that is $10 with a 50% off discount. The one who had the 50% off discount felt happier with the price than the one who had the flat price of $5, even though it is the same in the end.

    This is because humans especially uneducated will feel better when they see something there that make them feel smart about their purchase, often time it will be about cost saving.

    This is why you will see pricing like:
    -$6.25 at 20% discount
    -Only for $4.99
    -Buy two get one free at $15
    When you know exactly they are still the same $5.

    This effect has also been shown when a chain store decided not to apply this 'shady' practice, their profit dropped significantly. So it is essential to apply this practice to ensure profit in some store.

    In Amazon case, it may be the best for their business as a whole to apply this practice. Nonetheless, Amazon should have at least gotten the consent of vendors prior to doing this practice on the listed items, as the Feel Good Effect doesn't work on educated customers and the product determines the customers base. It could very much backfire when the product is meant for educated customers.

  62. JC Penneys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Playing games with prices is EXTREMELY self-destructive. People buy much more from companies they know they can trust.

    This part of your post has been proven false by experiment. Oh, sure, it sounds truthy, but experiment trumps opinion. JCPenny has it's entire business built on this sort of deceptive sale. A CEO came along and tried to end the practice, start having non-gamed sale prices, and the business cratered. Shoppers wanted the "sales", even long after everyone knew the game. Not sure why, not what I would have expected, but you can't argue with reality.

    People just aren't strictly rational as consumers, and have all sorts of oddball preferences.

    I knew nothing about Pennys gaming sale prices, too busy living life etc. I think perhaps you are greatly overestimating what people know and how many of them know it.

  63. Bait and switch too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At least, if reviews on products are to be believed, Amazon is also pulling the same bait and switch crap that a retail store I used to work at pulled. Namely, advertise a desirable product and a reduced price, then ship the person an open box returned stock of the item as new. It is difficult to tell if customer reviews are just a result of a 3rd party seller pulling that crap since Amazon doesn't list the seller in the customer review, regardless of "Verified Purchase" status.

  64. Isn't this called a sale? by cj9er · · Score: 1

    Isn't this exactly what clothing retailers (and most others) do during the holidays or any other major sale? Isn't this pretty well known by now?

  65. I believe it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I checked out a few "deals" on Prime day and compared them to other online retailers. Very few of them turned out to be true deals -- in fact, several of the "deals" on Amazon were more expensive than on other e-tail sites (and, in some cases, even more expensive than the same product on Amazon in a different size/quantity than was being offered in the Prime deal, on a unit basis).

    I'd say only about 1 in 10 Prime day "deals" were actual deals. However, those that were deals were pretty good deals. I scored a small home appliance for $80 on Prime day. The next lowest price I found on that same model was $120 plus shipping.

    As with any purchase, caveat emptor -- if you overpay for something, that's your fault.

  66. All the online sites seem to do this by robinsc · · Score: 1

    When they have these sales they invariably jack up the prices before hand. even offline shops seem to be following ths trend.

    --
    Linkedin http://in.linkedin.com/in/robinsaikatchatterjee
  67. What the hell... by martinfb · · Score: 1

    This is not a new tactic by retailers.

    Yet, in light of the proof of a little more than half the American public being idiots - as per the last election (any half-brain would not vote for Trump) - now seems a good time to pull this one off.

    --


    Self-importance and self-indulgence is the root of ALL evil.
  68. not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    not surprising at all. not the least bit.

    This is amazon & bezos we are talking about after all,

  69. A big company is giving away free money? by allo · · Score: 1

    So, you really believed, that they have too much money so they make up a day to give away products for less than they are worth?
    That's marketing and everybody with a rest of a brain cell knew it before.