Posts Tagged ‘amazon’

Amazon Gift Recommendations

Tuesday, January 1st, 2008

While doing my Christmas shopping I got to thinking, Amazon has all the data to make the best gift recommendations. I don’t mean the cheesy gift recommendations you see on most sites - the new gadgets and doohickeys that make you say “oh neat” but you know nobody will ever use.

I mean, I need to buy a gift for my sister. I know she buys from Amazon all the time. Why can’t I tell Amazon that I am shopping for my sister and see the same products Amazon shows her as recommendations?

I know there are some privacy concerns here. I’m not proposing that Amazon go down the same path as Facebook with Beacon and just share my purchases with anybody. But Amazon already allows me to exclude purchases when making recommendations to me. Why not add another option that allows me to let my friends and family use this purchase to see future recommendations for me. They don’t need to see the actual purchase. I’m just giving Amazon permission to show them recommendations based on this purchase. It’s essentially me telling Amazon, “Encourage my friends and family to buy more like this for me.”

I know Amazon already supports Wish Lists. But I want to be surprised. i don’t want a gift that I asked for, I want a gift similar to what I asked for that I might never discover on my own.

Amazon Prime: Saves Time and Money

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

While I love real world bookstores, I also love the convenience of buying from Amazon. I can spend countless hours browsing books via the “Customers who bought this also bought …” feature. It’s addictive and time consuming.   

In the past, if I wanted a book, I would add it to my cart and keep browsing until I had $25 worth of books to trigger the free shipping. I realize I wasn’t really saving money by doing this - in fact, I was doing exactly what Amazon wanted me to do by purchasing more - but I rationalized it by thinking I’d rather spend my money on more books rather than just shipping. What I didn’t account for was the time I was wasting. Every time I wanted to buy a book, I’d spend another 1/2 hour to an hour browsing other books until I crossed the $25 threshold.  At that rate, I might as well go to a real world bookstore and buy the one book I was originally looking for.  

Thankfully, Amazon introduced Amazon Prime and solved this problem for me.  I pay $80 a year for free 2 day shipping.  My average purchase price has dropped from over $25 a purchase to about $10 a purchase and instead of spending an hour on Amazon each time I think of a book I want,  search for it, click on the 2 day 1-Click option and go away. I spent less on books and I save time.   

The only problem I see with this new system is the wastefulness of shipping one book at a time. If only Amazon offered a feature where they added an option to wait until I had some number of books in my queue before they shipped them. Of course, then I’d have to reconcile my “I want it now” urge with my desire to be friendly to the environment.