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Thread: Amazon Pricing Policy

  1. #1
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    Amazon Pricing Policy

    I'm trying to figure out Amazon's pricing policy. I'm in the market for a DSLR camera. A couple of weeks ago, Amazon had it for $649. Since I don't need it for about a month, I waited to purchase. About 10 days ago, they dropped the price to $614. Then over the week end, when I checked on it, they had it at $584 on Sat morning but when I went back in the evening to make the purchase, it was back at $614. This morning it's back at $649.

    It's not that big of a deal, and since I'm not in a hurry, I just started to wonder about their pricing policy. I kept going to their site to look at the camera, mainly to make sure it was the right choice for my needs.

    My question is this, since they can track what I look at and the frequency, can they change the pricing automatically, just to me, each time I check in, taking it up and down to motivate me to pull the trigger?

    Any thoughts.

    Perry

  2. #2
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    Sometimes Amazon will react to a sale at another retailer, especially with electronics. Once the stock at the other retailer is depleted they raise the price back up. Amazon has at times experimented with changing prices based on information they know about you, but I am not sure if they still do that. If you see a different price call someone else and have them check the price on Amazon to see if it is the same price you see.

  3. #3
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    Perry they can change the price after you have paid for a item---- I bought something super cheap-----paid for it and got a email back the next day explaining that it was a type-O. I like buying from Amazon but it does have it's down sides.
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  4. #4
    Amazon isn't an exclusive store. They sell items for other people. You can setup your own store on Amazon yourself and sell through them. They take the order, you ship it.

    They pull from a number of people for each item, so it's whoever's offering whatever price they have at the moment. Company "A" might have had it for $649 and sold out, then Company "B" could have listed it for $614, then Company "C" listed it for $584, but Company C might have only had 1 or 10 at that price, and once sold out, they aren't listed in the search.

    It depends on a lot of variables, it's not like you're just looking at 1 store, like they used to be.
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  5. #5
    I've noticed the same thing about prices. But if you can wait, the price usually goes down again. You just have to keep checking and be ready to jump when the price reaches your goal.

    Mike
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  6. #6
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    You can go to camelcamelcamel.com (yes, that really is the address) Put in the Amazon product and it will give you a graph of the item showing the price swings. You can also put in the price that you want to pay, and you will receive an e-mail if the price drops below what you have set.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by Perry Holbrook View Post
    My question is this, since they can track what I look at and the frequency, can they change the pricing automatically, just to me, each time I check in, taking it up and down to motivate me to pull the trigger?
    I've always wondered if prices are changed based on your browsing.

    Go to BandH.com instead.
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    Last edited by Myk Rian; 11-01-2012 at 3:32 PM.
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  8. #8
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    FrozenWarrior.com also has a price history you can click on from most Amazon pages and it will show you a 3 month history of price on that item in graph form. Very interesting to see the lows and highs. Also lets me know how something I'm interested in is currently priced as to the best price. Changes my buying habits sometimes.
    Also, remember the Creek gets a cut of your purchase price if you go thru the Creek's portal to do your Amazon shopping. Hope that is still in effect. Jim.
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  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Perry Holbrook View Post
    I'm trying to figure out Amazon's pricing policy.
    Some prices might be set by a computer algorithm, which doesn't preculde your figuring it out, but it suggests the policy might not be explainable as normal human judgment.

    This is an interesting video lecture on how prevalent algorithms are in everday life: http://videos.liftconference.com/vid...ose-algorithms

  10. #10
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    My question is this, since they can track what I look at and the frequency, can they change the pricing automatically, just to me, each time I check in, taking it up and down to motivate me to pull the trigger
    I wondered the same thing & decided to test it out.
    I created a seperate profile for Amazon and used a different computer on a different network in another part of the country to log in and check the prices against what my normal account showed.
    The prices always matched.
    I did it with random items and used, maybe, half a dozen different profiles and remote networks over a couple of months.
    (It helps to have customers scattered all over the place when your in the IT field and want to do this kind of thing)

    I'd say the odds are that Amazon doesn't track you for price setting on an individual basis.

  11. #11
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    Thank you, all. Always good to learn something.

    Perry

  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by Rich Engelhardt View Post
    I'd say the odds are that Amazon doesn't track you for price setting on an individual basis.
    Amazon was charging different prices for different users back in 2000. I'm pretty sure they quit doing that a long time ago.

    Orbitz is/was showing Mac users higher priced hotels first when doing a search. Their research showed that Mac users tend to spend more so they showed them more expensive hotels first.

  13. #13
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    Camera was back at $584 this morning. I guess it does pay to wait, sometimes.

    Perry

  14. #14
    Robert,

    Thanks for the tip. I bookmarked the Camel site.

    Quote Originally Posted by Robert McGowen View Post
    You can go to camelcamelcamel.com (yes, that really is the address) Put in the Amazon product and it will give you a graph of the item showing the price swings. You can also put in the price that you want to pay, and you will receive an e-mail if the price drops below what you have set.


  15. #15
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    Brian,
    I wasn't aware of that - thanks for the info.
    My wife and I didn't start shopping on Amazon until after 2000.
    What sparked my curiosity about it was my wife had checked the price of something on her computer and later, I checked the same item on mine and the price was different. I don't recall if it was higher or lower.
    Being in IT/computer support, it was easy enough for me to remote into other systems and check the prices from there.
    No Macs though - I only supported PC's.

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