+86 15546883080 (China mainland) +852 6554 1700 (Hong Kong)  [email protected]

Amazon is loosening its grip on customers

Amazon is testing a new feature for sellers that will let them contact customers directly by email to notify them of things like new product announcements or sales.

It’s a major change from Amazon’s current policy, which is to limit the amount of interaction between customers and companies that sell on Amazon, outside of resolving things like returns or order issues.

The new “Manage Your Customer Engagement” tool won’t let companies just spam previous customers with promotional emails. They’ll only be able to contact Amazon users who have specifically chosen to follow a particular company, and Amazon (not the sellers) will be the one to actually send out the emails, writes TheVerge.

Crucially, Amazon isn’t giving sellers blank-check access to customers’ personal contact information. Rather, Amazon will tell brands how many customers have opted to receive the emails, along with performance metrics for the campaign (the specifics of which haven’t been disclosed at this time) but not the names, information, or email addresses of individual customers.

The new email campaign option is a free service for sellers, but it’s only available to brands registered through Amazon’s Brand Registry program.

More Amazon news

Amazon may have fully automated warehouses in 10 years

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...

read more
Amazon AI automatically fires low productivity workers

Amazon AI automatically fires low productivity workers

Amazon workers are supervised by AI If the system determines the employee is failing to meet production targets, it can automatically issue warnings and terminate contracts without a supervisor's intervention Documents obtained by The Verge show how...

read more