Don’t automatically buy stuff on Amazon. They’re often not the cheapest and they’re a scummy company.
Not on Amazon, but I bought myself a nice t-shirt. It got me compliments and made me feel better about myself.
Alternatively, do always look on there because they’re often the cheapest and all companies are scummy.
Amazon regularly beats out the brick and mortar stores in my country who reamed us for decades before we got access to the global market.
just wait for the reaming you’ll get when everybody but amazon goes out of business in your country
It’ll be exactly the same as it was before than, the maximum people could pay before it affected sales.
Maybe thats the problem with people these days!
People only care about price so now everything is built as cheap as possible, corners cut everywhere so now everything is shit… because it needs to be cheap! It’s getting harder to find anything that seems built to last more than a year.
As scummy as Amazon might be, they’re still the only company that offers anything that resembles convenience. eBay could’ve challenged Amazon but profit over service and those in charge walking round with their head up there arse’s and now it’s a poor copy of aliexpress that seems to be 90% chinese crap in the UK! I’m not wasting an hour trawling every online store when I know Amazon has it… so what if its £3 more!
And sadly the cheap money has gone and no-one wants to offer a better Amazon because there’s money in it because… everyone wants everything cheap! 🤦♂️😞
They’re often not the cheapest
No, but they’re consistently reasonably close to that. I’m not likely to pay drastically more on Amazon than elsewhere.
What they do have is a very large selection, which is a major benefit; I don’t want to deal with eight different retailers and eight different orders when I can just hit Amazon.
At a lesser scale, this is what made department stores do so well.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Department_store
A department store is a retail establishment offering a wide range of consumer goods in different areas of the store, each area (“department”) specializing in a product category. In modern major cities, the department store made a dramatic appearance in the middle of the 19th century, and permanently reshaped shopping habits, and the definition of service and luxury.
Amazon’s basically done the same, writ large. They can offer pretty much anything you want from a consumer standpoint at a single location.