I’ve been on it since things got bad in the US. And in most cases, I found a good replacement. Different Pizza delivery, book order, convenient even, most of the time.
For general products I switched to Otto (Germany) mostly, Thalia for books. And I was able to get the biggest recent order through there (two big screens, screen mount, cables), as well as some smaller ones. Alternate would have been another option.
Cost is significantly higher, often +10 % - +20% for the same product and no free shipping.
But what I miss most is convenience. The whole process at Amazon is just working great, especially for stupid people with bad attention (that might be me). Miss a little detail, and you ordered with advanced payment, adding double the clicks and inputs to do a wire transfer. Or not realise you did that and wonder why the product never ships a few days later. Buy from a marketplace seller who ships through DHL, but can’t use a DHL pickup location anyway.
What I always disliked about Amazon was the exploitation of employees. How much does that even save per product? I bet that the people handling my order would be happy with EUR 2 extra split among them, as they certainly handle many orders per hour, and I’d be happy to pay that. Is there really no market for high convenience with fair prices?
I do have 10 minutes extra per day to work through a lacking order flow for a good cause, but it would take lots of resources to catch up to that level of convenience.
I haven’t ordered from Amazon in years so I don’t know how better things got, but I remember exactly why I stopped, and that’s because of the variety and convenience of ordering literally anything from smaller e-commerce sites in Sweden, using Prisjakt to discover the best products.
What my way of shopping differs from most people who order from Amazon is that I don’t want to be “inspired” to shop. I shop only what I need and for that I want the best, based on specifications and maybe the few detailed reviews made months after purchase that I may find for some products.
When I see a shopping platform using words like “inspiration”, “season” and “for you”, my rectum clinches.