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
Amazon Alexa listens and transcribes everything you say
Amazon Alexa transcripts cannot be deleted You can delete voice recordings so Amazon can't listen to your conversations with Alexa anymore, but text records are a different story. Amazon doesn't need to hear your voice recordings to know what you've said....
Jeff Bezos unveils plans to send a spaceship to the moon
"It's time to go back to the moon, this time to stay" The billionaire unveiled his unmanned lunar lander Blue Moon and spoke of his hopes to send people to the moon by 2024. Jeff Bezos has announced he is going to send a spaceship to the moon, reports SKY...
Amazon may have fully automated warehouses in 10 years
It’s going to be a while before the robots take over The future of Amazon will undoubtedly involve artificial intelligence and robotics, but it’s an open question at what point AI-powered machines will be doing a majority of the work. According to Scott...