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  How Amazon convinced you to pay up for shopping

How Amazon convinced you to pay up for shopping

Published : May 2, 2016, 6:30 am IST
Updated : May 2, 2016, 6:30 am IST

Amazon is clearly entering its Prime.

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 30TECH4.jpg

Amazon is clearly entering its Prime. Meaning, of course, its $100 annual membership programme, now a decade old, which has accomplished the remarkable feat of convincing millions of people to pay an annual fee for the privilege of, well, shopping.

Prime is now central to Amazon’s strategy of dominating the world of commerce. What started as a yearly fee for free two-day shipping now offers a sometimes bewildering array of perks, including household product subscriptions, one and two hour Prime Now delivery, streaming music and video, e-books, groceries (for an additional $200 a year), photo storage and more.

“Prime has become an all-you-can-eat, physical-digital hybrid,” Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos wrote in his annual shareholder letter in April. He wants the service to be such a good deal that you’d be “irresponsible” not to sign up, he wrote.

Why the emphasis on Prime Simply put, members of the loyalty program shop more frequently and spend more money, analysts say.

Prime shoppers helped drive Amazon’s surprise profit surge in the first quarter. Shares of the e-commerce giant jumped in after-hours trading Thursday after it reported a 28 per cent jump in revenue, to $29.13 billion. Net income was $513 million, compared to a loss in the year-earlier quarter.

Amazon doesn’t release detailed numbers on Prime, although Bezos wrote that Prime has “tens of millions” of subscribers. Wedbush Securities analyst Michael Pachter estimates there are about 50 million Prime members.

Even a 25 per cent price increase in 2014, the only one for Prime in 10 years, hasn’t appreciably dampened enthusiasm for the program. Membership grew 51 per cent last year, including 47 per cent growth in the US, according to Bezos.

Pachter estimates that Prime members spend about four times what others do, and account for about a third of all Amazon purchases. “That’s why Prime matters,” he said.

Tawnie Knight in Tuscon, Arizona joined Prime about two years ago for the convenience of free shipping. Since then Amazon has become her default shopping site.

“I call it the $100 cart, because every time I go on there I spend about $100,” she said. “Before Prime I probably spend around the same amount, just with other retailers like Walmart.”

Brandon Kraft joined Prime when it began 10 years ago to get cheap textbooks while in school. Now he finds it essential — with five kids ranging in age 17 months to 6 years at home — for ordering diapers and wipes and other household goods. “I think it’s fair to say we spend $125 or $150 a month at Amazon that we wouldn’t have been spending if we didn’t have Prime,” Kraft said.

Location: United States, New York