In Germany Amazon usually delivers next day. So does just about everyone else, since all it takes is packaging and getting the order to any postal carrier on the same day.
Returns are unproblematic almost everywhere since a 14 day on-questions-asked return policy for online purchases is EU law (and most online shops voluntarily extend it to 30 days). Sure, I have to package it myself, but that's no different than German Amazon.
Sure, Amazon is great, but so is almost everyone else (at least in Germany). Amazon's main advantage is only learning one interface and one set of processes for everything.
Absolutely not. Amazon is the only company that reliably shows when they'll deliver, even before you order. Other companies tend to indicate deliveries within 1-2 days or 2-3 days if items are in stock. You never know when the cut off time is and if they ship out on Saturdays. I know that's a very hard problem to solve logistically but as a customer I don't care.
I just ordered electronics online in Germany, not via Amazon. It was in stock with a reputable stores. Still, my order from 9am got shipped two days later. Maybe Covid related but Amazon would've shown me that before I placed the order. Returns are fully automated with Amazon, very few other online retailers in Germany have that.
Also the no questions asked return policy is pretty unique. If I get a defective item I don't want to argue with the seller why it doesn't work, I just want to have a working replacement tomorrow. Amazon always delivers on that, others very rarely do.
I'd love to get away from Amazon and I'm not even that price sensitive. But until a shop matches their customer service, I'll stay with Amazon for 99% of my orders.
Unfortunately I have to agree with this view. I'm in the UK and I've ordered from many vendors, including food from brick and mortar shops which offer the option to purchase online.
Although in the majority of cases things went well, the two things that really set Amazon apart is (A) the fact that it acts like an arbiter in favour of the buyer (which I argue it should be the standard anyway) and (B) it doesn't haggle or makes it difficult to return faulty or products I'm unhappy with for whatever reason. Again, though I didn't need to return many products for the most part, when I did need to do that a number of sellers made it cumbersome for me to do so.
For a more recent example, I've ordered food from Morrisons online (a UK supermaker chain) and one of the products was not in there. There was no easy way to get it fixed somehow (like a partial refund or something), which reminded me once again why I buy on Amazon even though I'd very much prefer not to.
> Absolutely not. Amazon is the only company that reliably shows when they'll deliver, even before you order. Other companies tend to indicate deliveries within 1-2 days or 2-3 days if items are in stock. You never know when the cut off time is and if they ship out on Saturdays. I know that's a very hard problem to solve logistically but as a customer I don't care.
Except in NL ... that's exactly what the other stores do when they say "order before 22:00 and have it delivered the next day!", almost entirely without doing the things that make people dislike Amazon.
> Also the no questions asked return policy is pretty unique. If I get a defective item I don't want to argue with the seller why it doesn't work, I just want to have a working replacement tomorrow. Amazon always delivers on that, others very rarely do.
We have a 30-day "change your mind" policy required by law, I thought that was a EU policy, but I guess it's Dutch ..
> Also the no questions asked return policy is pretty unique.
The 14 day period to return something you've purchased online (or by post or by phone), starting after receipt of the goods, is EU law.
Choosing local/national, ethical, tax-paying retailers is easily worth a very occasional inconvenience for me. Using Amazon pushes that inconvenience onto the warehouse staff, and whoever the government's current spending cuts are affecting.
Ordered items on the 24th (a Friday) and they said normal delivery was expected on the 30th (next Thursday) and premium would show up on the 27th (next Monday). Didn’t want to pay for Prime, so went with the standard shipping. Received the items the next day on the 25th (Saturday).
I’m not complaining, but I’ll never trust the Prime/premium shipping again which now just feels like a scam.
On of the major online shops here, bol.com, has a thing for most of their products "Order before 23:59, in your house tomorrow." Generally the other bigger Dutch online shops do the same. Even during current busy times, I've not had them fall short on that.
With the returns, isn't it an EU requirement that they take a return no-questions within something like 2 weeks?
> Amazon is the only company that reliably shows when they'll deliver, even before you order.
Except when it's not reliable and it arrives 2 days later. Or, in the case of the used book I ordered a while ago, there's no indication of when or how it'll be delivered and only at the start of delivery it suddenly tells you that it'll take at least a month to ship because the product is on the other side of the planet.
Amazon is usually pretty good, but even with Prime it rarely takes less than 3-4 days to deliver, most local shops are at least a day faster. And with those I can be sure they won't sell me fake products mixed with genuine ones.
This is maybe true for items shipped by Amazon itself but Amazon nowadays is a marketplace. I twice ordered something where it said 5-7 days, turns out it's shipped from China and took several weeks to arrive. The not-on-stock-despite-saying-so with other shops happens but not very often in my experience.
> In Germany Amazon usually delivers next day. So does just about everyone else
YMMV. I order Amazon/Others about 70/30. The vast majority of shops I order from have longer delivery times, 3-4 days from the time of ordering is what I’m used to.
And then there is Amazon Logistics which recently started becoming a thing in Lübeck. They are on the level of DHL and sometimes surpass them, with other stores you sometimes have to live with the horror of Hermes or DPD. Hermes and DPD are high-risk carriers that only usually deliver and if they do, who knows when. DHL at least is good most of the time. Amazon Logistics is super fast, usually has live GPS tracking and when someone couldn’t find my entrance yesterday (it’s a bit complicated), I got a call, explained where exactly it is, and they set a marker on their internal app for my address.
And while Amazon also still uses DPD or Hermes, if their delivery doesn't work or they brought it to a shop kilometers away, you can just get a replacement from Amazon and will get a refund for the other item once it's back with them. Other sellers threaten to block you for that. I get that it incurs an extra cost on them but I just don't have to time to spend an hour just to pick up a delivery even though I was home all day.
Not in my experience. Most shops ship with DHL, so I order delivery to one of my Packstationen. If DHL brings it into a Postsubsidiary or somewhere inconvenient I just leave it there until it's sent back and reorder.
Interesting how these things have a variable performance between countries -- in the UK DPD is one of the better couriers (informing you of a 1 hour slot when delivery will happen, including a mini-map and 'you are delivery 46, van currently doing delivery 24' info on the status page) whereas Amazon Logistics' rep is somewhere between 'merely OK' and 'worse than average'.
Returns are unproblematic almost everywhere since a 14 day on-questions-asked return policy for online purchases is EU law (and most online shops voluntarily extend it to 30 days). Sure, I have to package it myself, but that's no different than German Amazon.
Sure, Amazon is great, but so is almost everyone else (at least in Germany). Amazon's main advantage is only learning one interface and one set of processes for everything.