'Amazon Prime Day'? is now the biggest shopping event in history

'Amazon Prime Day' is now the biggest shopping event in history

Last week Amazon Prime Day became the largest shopping event in history by selling more products than last years Black Friday and Cyber Monday combined. A mind blowing 175 million items were bought in just 48 hours which is a 75% jump on last year - that's more clicks than a school of chatty dolphins.

In the 5 years since the inception of Prime Day the e-commerce sale has grown almost exponentially and the estimated value of transactions this year is put at over $6 billion dollars (source: IgnitionOne). The real numbers even rocketed past the predictions made by the likes of JP Morgan and Merrill Lynch. Experts also predicted that consumer savings were well over $1 billion dollars. Top sellers included Amazons own heavily discounted tech with the likes of the Echo, Dot and Fire flying off the warehouse shelves.

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This year saw grocery items added to Prime Day for the first time and as a consequence products as diverse as bottled water, laundry detergent and paper kitchen towels sold in vast quantities in certain countries.

It's interesting that Amazon choose to run Prime Day on a Monday and Tuesday given that most people are likely to be at work. One might assume that the online promotion would be best run at a weekend when people have more leisure time to consider their purchases but research shows that in the modern working environment, and with instant access to Amazon via their various devices, ordering from work is not seen as a barrier. In fact, many people go one stage further and choose to have their purchases delivered to their office rather than their home.

Ordering from and delivering to your workplace is a phenomenon I witnessed first hand several years ago in China with people getting their Alibaba purchases ordered from and sent to the office. No huge surprise then that last year Alibaba bought a $1.4 billion stake in Focus Media, Chinas leading digital marketing specialist in the workplace. The same trend for office based marketing now appears to be taking off in the West. Paul McBeth, International Marketing Head at Executive Channel Network said:

"the digitisation of the consumer journey has placed the workplace at the centre of purchase decision making moments with 63% researching / buying on Amazon during work hours"

Talking of Alibaba, their annual Singles day promotion has estimated sales of anywhere between $25 and $60 billion dollars but the figures cannot be accurately verified as no official statement on revenue are released.

Even attempts by retail giants like Walmart and other online marketplaces such as Ebay, who both launched high profile consumer alternatives to Prime Day, did little to quell the runaway success of Amazon's offering.

So has Amazon peaked with Prime? Unlikely. Analysts are already predicting that Black Friday this coming November will smash this new record set by Prime Day by at least $1 billion dollars.

Do you use Amazon Prime? If so, why? Do you find it convenient to shop from the office? And maybe even get your items delivered there? As ever, I am keen to hear your thoughts...

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Andrew Baber

Executive coach

5 年

Thank god for that! I was worried it might not work out so well for Amazon and they may not have enough money left over to pay their employees a living wage or... y'know... a bit of tax, somewhere in the world.

回复

Well done to anyone involved in working through Prime Day, whether in the Amazon warehouses or with associated businesses. Know it takes more than just one day to prep and then a frenzy to deal with the marketing teams’ visions and head office targets, all because we’re sheep who can’t resist a bargain.

Khyati P.

Obsessed with CRMs | Silo-Breaker | Business Mapper | Data Digger | Process Automator | Tech Consolidator

5 年

Guilty! Always placing amazon/Asos orders in between meetings/lunchtime. It is just so easy :)?

Daniel Ashford

Living my best life!

5 年

Just another day to me

Paul McBeth

International Strategic Sales and Marketing Director at Executive Channel Network (ECN)

5 年

Fantastic piece Steve. Today's workplace is a consumer place ! Our office looks like an Amazon delivery centre due to the number of orders arriving

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