What the title says. Every year I hear everyone at work go buzzing about Prime Day, and then when I’d go check what items were on sale they were mostly cheap gaff and a bunch of minimally discounted tech products. Am I missing something that’s optimal to get around this time of year?
Ive been needing to restock some home stuff, water filters, air filters, etc. Then a few things we’ve had on the list to buy, but just hadn’t gotten around to it, new dish drying rack, raised garden bed. I checked camelcamelcamel as well.
Oh and something completely frivolous, I got the latest Kindle Paperwhite, cause it’s waterproof and USB C. I traded in my older kindle for 25$. Now I can finally stop carrying that micro USB cable when I travel.
I got the best deal of all: canceling my Prime membership. I’m saving tons of money! 🤡
(but seriously, screw Amazon and their monopolistic, anti-labor practices)
fun fact, the term “monopolistic” refers to a specific, relatively competitive type of imperfect competition, and not to monopoly competition. You’re thinking of monopoloid practices, or in the case of their labor practices, oligopsonistic (having only a few buyers and many sellers).
There might be some good deals, but since it’d involve shopping at Bezos’, I’d try to avoid it nonetheless
If you already had something in mind to get, and you check the price (camelcamelcamel.com is a great resource for Amazon price tracking) and it’s on sale, that’s optimal. Other than that, it’s usually Amazon devices and other Amazon products that have the best deals (Fire TV, Kindle, Echo, etc.)
Not so much. I use it as an occasion to look through my wishlist to see if there are any legitimate discounts on quality goods from actual brands, and I’ve rarely seen anything. As far as I can tell, it’s generally fictional discounts on bootleg junk sold by made-up Chinese brands like BANGOOSMILE.
I even popped a few things into camelcamelcamel and on many of them you could see how something was selling for $30 for months, then the day before Prime Day, they bumped the price up to the fictional MSRP for a minimal amount of time so they could claim it was on “sale” for like 66% off or some nonsense.