Amazon pushes shoppers to its own brand before clicking ‘buy’
Amazon has introduced a new feature that markets its private-label brands right before consumers add rival products to their shopping carts.
The Washington Post conducted dozens of product searches and saw offers for a “similar item to consider” featuring an Amazon brand appearing just above the area where shoppers click to add a purchase to their cart.
The boxes reportedly touted lower-priced Amazon versions of everyday items.
“It’s an ad at exactly the moment the customer is ready to buy,” James Thomson, a former senior manager in business development at Amazon and now a partner at brand consultancy Buy Box Experts, told the Washington Post. “I don’t see how that’s not unfair.”
Amazon defended itself in a statement to the Washington Post, the promotion to the way any store would push its own private-label goods.
“Like any retailer we promote our own brands in our stores, which provide high-quality products and great value to customers,” Amazon spokeswoman Nell Rona told the paper. “We also extensively promote products from our selling partners.”
More Amazon news
Jeff Bezos took the controls of some huge robotic hands
Bezos Expects Robotic Hands To Be Ready Within 10 YearsJeff Bezos took control of a pair of giant remote-controlled robot hands at Amazon's re:MARS robotics conference in Las Vegas.The hands don't just mirror the movement of the person wearing the gloves —...
Amazon may soon face an antitrust probe
Here are 3 questions the FTC is asking about it The Federal Trade Commission has been questioning Amazon’s competitors about its Prime service and how it competes with its own marketplace sellers. Amazon and its fellow tech giants will soon find themselves the focus...
Amazon is working on a device that will read human emotions
Amazon brings sci-fi tech to life Amazon is developing a voice-activated wearable device that can recognize human emotional state, turning Sci-fi tech into reality The wrist-worn gadget is described as a health and wellness product in internal documents...