Amazon reputation takes a plunge
Amazon is dealing with a tsunami of online buying and shipping since the pandemic lockdown started and it continues to grow. Fulfillment centers are overloaded, causing shipments losses and delivery delays.
Amazon has added more than 400,000 employees to its workforce since the beginning of the pandemic, and is now looking for 75,000 new employees throughout the country to cope with this situation.
Despite all these efforts, Amazon’s reputation among consumers continues to decline, according to new rankings from Axios/Harris 100 poll. Amazon, which stood at No. 1 the first two years of the survey (2017-2018), gradually dipped to 2, 3 and now 10.
Another recent survey from Sitecore found that 30% of consumers even feel guilty after shopping on Amazon, mainly due to environmental issues and working conditions at Amazon fulfillment centers.
But the funny thing is that a guilty conscience is not enough to stop them coming back to Amazon for price and convenience. Over 68% of those surveyed are members of Amazon Prime. 54% say they typically go to Amazon first when shopping online, before checking search engine results.
Old habits die hard.
More Amazon news
Amazon is going to need a lot of robots
Amazon wants to ship you anything in 30 minutes Analysts predict that Amazon will try to add robots and automation to its entire operation. It is inevitable given Amazon's focus on efficiency and pleasing customers. Amazon is burning through billions to...
Former Amazon executive on the 5-star rating system
Amazon rating system developers ended up being too protective of it According to the former Amazon executive, the online ratings and reviews model was a good solution at first, but the team ended up being too protective of it. Dan Lewis spent many years at...
Nike stops selling its products on Amazon
Nike is just ‘tip of the iceberg’ of companies ditching Amazon Nike’s decision to stop selling merchandise to Amazon is the start of brands opting to go directly to consumers, says internet entrepreneur Tim Armstrong. “The direct-to-consumer movement will...