64 points

Prime Day is just Black Friday in July. Amazon is trying to get rid of old stock.

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39 points

If you have an idea of what you want before the sale starts and know how much the standard price is you can still be lucky and get a good deal. You just have to be careful not to get sucked in to a non deal.

For example, I was looking out for an Apple Watch. There is a good sale on them but they only have a limited set of body and strap combinations. I don’t want any of the straps on offer so it negates almost all of the discount as I’d be paying £50 for a strap that I wouldn’t use.

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10 points

Aren’t there some website that track this?

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32 points

camelcamelcamel.com is the big one, I believe.

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8 points
*
Deleted by creator
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5 points

I have no idea where the name came from, but there’s CamelCamelCamel.

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4 points

I use the Keepa browser extension

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5 points

This entire comment is the perfect explanation for my issue with people getting excited over Black Friday/Prime Day. I see so many people every year excitedly saying (or at times bragging), oh I got this, I got that, and it was so cheap. But unless you were already looking at that thing you haven’t saved money. You’ve actually spent more than you would have if it wasn’t on sale.

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49 points

In Europe there’s a law that forces stores (online but also physical) to post also the lowest minimum price in the last month.

So it would be €199 €64 (lowest price in the last 30 days: €39)

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15 points
*

Amazon US doesn’t do that, but they do show a “lowest price in 30 days” badge that is actually truthful (appears when the item is on sale and the sale price is the lowest in the last 30 days). Of course, there’s some sellers that game it by increasing their prices over 30 days before Prime Day.

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5 points

I dont think it includes procong due to coupons though.

If a product had a minor coupon (e.g <5$) and the product was discounted to that price without coupon, it would still advertise lowest price despite it not really changing.

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11 points

I don’t know if it’s a law here too in Canada, but Amazon.ca works the same. What sellers do to get around this just make a new listing for products at inflated rates so they can then discount them for “sales”, while simultaneously setting the regular listing to unavailable until the “sale” is over.

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7 points

Using a browser addon that tracks price history, we found a bunch of “deals” on Amazon US that had raised the price 30 days ago and are now flagged “Lowest price in 30 days!”. The “deal” price was almost always the exact same price it was 31 days prior.

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2 points

Do you know a good extension for iOS?

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6 points

In the U.S. that’s a big “fuck you buddy, Ima get mine,” from congress.

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5 points

I’m in Europe and have never seen this in my life, what I have seen is advice price which is another scam in itself.

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4 points

It’s the omnibus directive from 2019, maybe your country didn’t ratify it yet. For example my country is slow & lazy and ratified it only a few months ago

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2 points

Thank you!

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1 point

Here you have an example:

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3 points

On Germany’s site it was rampant with crap like that that had it’s price raised literally 3 days before the prime day

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2 points

There is a law for that? never seen that. where can you see this information on amazon for example?

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39 points

Not to defend Amazon, but in past years the comments in Reddit on this issue pointed out that Amazon has requirements on markdown percentages to qualify for prime day and lightning sales. As a result, vendors who control their price will artificially increase their price over the days leading to prime day and then apply the “discount”.

I do wish that if that were the case that Amazon actually address it as they should be able to detect that pattern. I unfortunately think they don’t care as they make money regardless. I just wish they care a bit more about earning and keeping trust.

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8 points

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09P8BPPQW

Here’s the product page. You can see how it’s 46% off $119, but if you want, you can also buy it at $89 regular price. They’re now not even increasing the price of the item, they’re just claiming it’s higher.

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8 points

The normal price is $89.99, which represents a 15% discount off the MSRP of $119.99 (that they’re claiming). The current price of $64.99, is a discount of 42%, which represents an additional 27% off. I don’t think this listing necessarily proves the point.

That being said, companies absolutely do engage in this kind of bullshit. This one may have done it itself in order to claim the MSRP at $119.99.

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4 points

Amazon could use the average price over the last 3 months l, but they don’t care.

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8 points

Exactly. They have all the data in the world, but I’m sure they are doing what’s optimal for their profit.

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25 points

Common Amazon deception. Mark up a product’s base cost artificially, then take a “percentage off” to bring it back down to near the base price it always is. Maybe slightly more expensive or cheaper, but usually just a smidge away from the normal cost. It’s for the illusion of “being on sale.”

Use an Amazon price tracker site (like camel camel camel for example) so that you can always call out Amazon and make sure that you’re getting their actual lowest prices when you have to buy from them.

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8 points

Classic Kohl’s strategy, not sure if they did it first, but its the first place I saw it used in early 2000s.

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15 points

A handful of years back, JC Penney made a huge deal about stopping this practice in their stores, where everything is on “sale” all the time. Sales plummeted even though the actual product prices stayed the same. They immediately reversed course.

Hard to blame them. Human brains are weird.

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5 points

Penneys also stopped accepting coupons and it turned out that most of the older ladies who made up the lion’s share of the clientele loved coupons (who would have thought?). They also hired a retail exec from Apple (Ron Johnson) and he embarked on disasterous changes to stores and other things that regular customers hated. This is a great article that is titled “The J.C. penney Disaster Timeline” from 2012: https://www.businessinsider.com/the-jcpenney-disaster-timeline-how-ex-apple-guru-ron-johnson-is-destroying-the-company-2012-6

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4 points

As a marketing guy, I have this story in my back pocket to illustrate how hopelessly self-destructive we are.

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2 points

Furniture stores are infamous for that. They make a big deal of closing down for a day and marking every item in the store with a big discount, but what they don’t tell you is they jack the price way up first before applying the discount.

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19 points

my credit union emailed me today about Prime Day deals, wtf?!?

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4 points

Amazon started in may sending a massive email campaign to all affiliates with referral links reminding prime day, if an user buys something using the link, the affiliate (in this case your credit union) will get a 5% commission

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2 points

more reasons to want to run for office in my credit union.

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