One of the remedies proposed, tying product reviews to the manufacturer instead of the storefront is a very difficult thing to implement.
Manufacturers are in a fundamental conflict with Amazon precisely because they desire to fully control the retail channels and set their own promotions, online discounts etc. and capture most of the surplus themselves while still segmenting the market and, for example, selling at different prices through certain local distributors.
Amazon has the exact opposite incentives, they want distributors of the same brand to compete amongst themselves so they can offer the lowest global prices, and that it's Amazon and its users that capture most of the surplus.
This is the root of the forgery problem Amazon can't solve, manufacturers aren't willing to vouch for their products when sold in secondary channels they do not fully control. So this means they will not collaborate on the "global rating" scheme either.
acdha · 10h ago
> This is the root of the forgery problem Amazon can't solve
Has chosen not to solve. They could trivially improve the situation by ending the practice of commingled inventory so a seller could be held accountable for counterfeit or stolen items but that would cost more so they don’t.
luckylion · 8h ago
How do they handle it when you get your inventory sent back? I.e. you send them 100 pieces of X and after three months you tell them to send them back to you. Do they just take 100 pieces of X out of their general inventory, or do they know which ones were yours? Because otherwise it seems like an obvious scam where you could send in trash and get real items back.
acdha · 8h ago
I don’t know but based on the number of people I know who’ve gotten clearly counterfeit or repackaged items from official storefronts on Amazon, I would assume they just take 100 units out of that bin.
whatever1 · 2h ago
Commingling only happens at the frontend. For each item the vendor is tracked. Physically they are in different bins and more likely in different warehouses. So if you buy a product and it turns out fake, Amazon can trace back the vendor for the particular item you received.
It helps with inventory availability with the cost of risk of bad customer experience in case of fraud.
fhkatari · 3h ago
RFID is a possible solution. Tags are now about five cents, and likely to drop further in price with volume. Newer tag designs can be sewn in the seams of garments and shoes.
cornholio · 1h ago
Commingling is optional to Amazon vendors, all they have to do is track each item with a plain individual sticker / QR tag. They opt not to do it and track using the generic product barcode since it's cheaper and simpler.
So if they can't be bothered to attach a zero cents sticker on the item, a 5cents rfid tag is out of the question.
somat · 1h ago
Ehhh, My experience is the opposite(perhaps it is what you buy) manufacturers hate dealing with the end customer directly, customer-service is huge pain and not part of their core competence. So the manufacturer always goes through resellers, distributors, middle-men.
Personally I hate it, I would love to buy directly from the manufacturer instead of playing roulette with the distributor.
somat · 1h ago
> "Star ratings on major platforms increasingly cluster between 4.3 and 4.9, leaving buyers little room to distinguish products."
The good ol' 7 out of 10 problem. Where the entire lower half of the rating system is unused.
The way I solve it is to have 0 be the middle, If the transaction exceeded expectations you can give it a +1 if it failed to meet them give it a -1 (thumbs up/down if you prefer) you can even throw in a +-2 if you want to allow for more subtlety of expression
semitones · 1h ago
and now all of your reviews will cluster around 0.7-0.9. And what will you have accomplished?
zkmon · 8h ago
I'm recently seeing some ads on TV, that make me avoid ads by any means. There simply weirdness and harmfulness to eyes mixed and served. I think this is being done to attract viewer attention, which became 99% of the goal, rather than being informative or signaling. Sometimes there is hardly any indication what the actual product is, and how it is relevant to whatever weirdness that took up most of the ad time. Things like putting a mouth on the forehead of people, fast flickering scenes, and I can't even dare to speak about other weirdness. Oh god, the ad designers are a desperate bunch for attention. I'm really fearful of touching TV remote. And if these ads really liked by people, then I'm fearful of the future of the world in the hands of these people.
joules77 · 6h ago
"media time" or the amount of time Americans consume media is not rising (6-7 hours a day). So no great new user growth + no great screen time growth. But the Ad industry revenues are growing at 15-20%.
With a population of ~300 Million the US ad industry generates 400 Billion in revenue. Avg Bounty of >1000 bucks a year per person.
The only way to pull that off is to keep injecting more and more ads everywhere and make everything more tempting to watch.
The biggest threat to these companies is if time spent consuming media drops.
majormajor · 5h ago
You don't need more advertising to get the revenue to keep rising.
All you need is two things:
1) a zero-sum game where the amount spent by companies on advertising is less than their profit margin
2) advertising channels that perform in a way that can be correlated with short-term outcomes
"We can afford to up our ad spend by 0.5% to try to gain an edge."
You juice your market share or total sales numbers for a quarter, everyone is happy.
Then your competitor does the same.
Assuming your advertising is equally effective, you may have netted out to about where you started. But you've both ratcheted up your spend and likely won't reduce that short of a macro change or parent company health issues.
And if certain advertising performs better than others, one company can very well make long-term gains here, if they have writers and producers and talent who are making more compelling pitches.
But it still ramps up the total advertising industry spend even with a fixed supply of ad capacity, if it gets a bidding war going.
As long as you don't have 100% market share with 0 competitors, advertising will look like a very compelling short-term ROI option.
Even if time spent watching media drops it may not squeeze a lot of parts of the advertising sector so hard - it'll just push demand into smaller buckets which will increase the prices for those buckets. Look at the crazy revenue sports television broadcast advertising has been doing as other forms of TV go away with commercial skipping or lower-ad-load streaming.
Of course, at SOME point the increases can't be sustained. Even the most profitable products have a limit to how much money could be possibly directed towards advertising. But we don't appear to be particularly close to demand being satisfied.
nitwit005 · 1h ago
I personally suspect in many industries there is a sort of informal agreement about what is reasonable spending on sales and marketing.
If any single company spends more, and succeeds in gaining advantage purely by spending more, all their competitors will generally just be forced to follow.
But, no one really wants to follow that to the logical conclusion of spending all possible dollars on marketing.
majormajor · 1h ago
> But, no one really wants to follow that to the logical conclusion of spending all possible dollars on marketing.
Sure, just like nobody wants to spend all possible dollars on rent.
But outside of "we just can't afford it anymore" external economic factors shocking the system, the natural incentives point to a slow and constant ratcheting up.
IMO this would be a good reason to have further regulations on advertising - locations, frequency, accuracy - since we're gonna be saturated with it otherwise.
benjiro · 6h ago
Here is my question. Who is paying for it all to get to a 1000 bucks bounty per person / year?
The same question, who is paying for all the data collection they do on customers?
You keep hearing about xxx billion dollar industries but where is that money coming from? The add and data collection industry in the US is probably a trillion dollar market or more, but ... does it really work? Sure, focused ads on some youtube channel about product that may be of interest, but all the rest is such a mess.
I do not buy more stuff because some ads showed up. Sure, they can be informative that there is a new car released, or something like that. But there is no desire to buy XXX cleaning product because they spammed it on TV.
Same argument with "what use is getting all my personal data, down to the things we do in bed". Sell it to specific companies? But what do they really gain from it. It does not feel like we are getting better products as a result of all that user data. O, people are not happy about Y product. You do not need invasive data collection for that, you see it in your revenue numbers.
It often feels like a lot of industries are just there to self sustain themselves. Nobody ever got fired for buying advertisement or personalized data. So companies keep spending on it, people keep pouring over the data, analyzing it, but its like nobody has common sense and its all a scam that inner feed itself.
I am not saying that advertisement does not work to grow a product, but especially unknow one's but the moment product reach a specific mass...
joules77 · 5h ago
When you look at the $$$ on hourly basis rather than yearly it all drops to cents. Basically its become very cheap to flood everyone with ads. And since Attention is a scarce resource we get everyone who wants to capture attention trapped in an arms race for it.
The big threat to the whole system is when the amount of time per day people spend consuming media starts to drop thanks to fatigue and finding better things to do.
whatever1 · 1h ago
It would be nice if we could cut the middle men and let the companies send us directly checks. I would love to be getting a 1000$ advertising check per year.
They pay the same, I will keep buying whatever my friends suggest me to buy. Win - Win
sheiyei · 7h ago
I'm pretty quick to never-again a company which advertises in a way that makes me sick. A certain electronics store chain that operates here in the Nordics, which someone is bound to recognise, is on my ban list for psychedelic surrealist shock advertising.
Not that I see much ads any more anyway, what with Ublock Origin, Blokada 5 and Youtube ReVanced.
ElisaChemy · 4h ago
Totally agree,I think things got incrementally worse after TikTok’s release though. It’s like the content (including ads) is getting so chaotic and overstimulating that I walk away feeling mentally exhausted. All of it is just noise designed to hijack attention for a few seconds.
CommenterPerson · 8h ago
As a consumer, my reaction to all this is simply to stop looking and stop buying. Unless it's something urgent, I put it on a list and wait. Many times the need goes away. Better than dealing with all this crap.
mattlondon · 14h ago
The cited research that buyers use price as an indicator of quality was from 1985. Does that hold true these days?
My gut suspects not?
Perhaps in the early and mid 80s you could still buy quality products, but now is seems 99% of things are just mass-produced where ever it is cheapest. People are conditioned on Amazon to find the same product from a jumble-of-letter manufacturer who is selling the exact same thing at the lowest price. I do not trust that if I buy a "known brand" for a product that it is going to be any different from a similar same no-name thing that is 20-30% of the price (...and very possibly built in the same factory). If it's all low quality crap (which a lot of the time it is) then you may as well get the cheapest one
Sadly you need to rely on things like YouTube videos to actually get any kind of idea on if the item is trash or not, and even then there is the risk of paid-reviews so you need to take multiple sources into account, who they are, trust levels etc. it's sad. Either that or - and I know this is madness - go to a physical store and inspect the goods before you buy it.
I would argue that the article is correct that quality is often secondary to speed of delivery and cheapness though. Amazon has totally won there.
neom · 9h ago
Anchoring still exists and is something people use, price for sure impacts how people view things, if you make 3 price points for your product, say... $20/mth, $200mth and $25000/mth, you can often push people into the middle package more easily, it's called the Goldilocks effect. Pricing and positioning well is a lot of work simply because people for sure still use price as a strange yardstick, and as someone who figures out how to price things and position them for a living, it can be very...frustrating.
dqv · 8h ago
> The cited research that buyers use price as an indicator of quality was from 1985. Does that hold true these days?
> My gut suspects not?
You are correct that price is no longer an indicator of quality.
A $374 vacuum ranks at #4 while a $1049 vacuum ranks at #8. That is a HUGE price gap for items that are supposed to be of similar quality. The reason for the gap is irrelevant to this discussion too, because we are talking about the relation between price and quality.
And people try to blame the consumer for both sides of the issue.
People shrug and say it is the consumer who demands cheaper products and that is why they are of such low quality (despite what you say, which is that price and quality are much less connected than what people selling you things want you to believe), but then when those same consumers initiate returns, people cry foul like the consumer is somehow maliciously buying shit quality products and returning them to spite honest companies who just want to do right by their customers.
Notice anything in that "Why returns are a big problem" section? A neat rhetorical trick which attempts to get inattentive readers to believe that the bulk of all returns are just people trying on clothes and returning the ones they don't like. Now, if it really were the bulk of all returns, they would have surely mentioned this, because it would buttress their point.
They did not, because they can not, because, I have a suspicion that the $890 billion worth of returns is primarily due to reverse/negative demand for shit products. I suspect those return numbers creeping up year over year are consumers getting annoyed with retailers for not curating products in a way that considers quality and longevity.
As the featured article mentions, Amazon does mark products as frequently returned, but I am not sure it really helps that much.
> Sadly you need to rely on things like YouTube videos to actually get any kind of idea on if the item is trash or not, and even then there is the risk of paid-reviews so you need to take multiple sources into account, who they are, trust levels etc. it's sad. Either that or - and I know this is madness - go to a physical store and inspect the goods before you buy it.
And even then, they miss important details, because most reviews only talk about the product in terms of the out-of-box experience. But how good is the product after two years? After four? Even the vacuum review I linked does not really comment on longevity.
> I would argue that the article is correct that quality is often secondary to speed of delivery and cheapness though. Amazon has totally won there.
I think it is starting to change where people are getting really tired of shit quality and that is going to continue to be reflected in the returns data. Returns do not make customers whole - they do not get a refund for the time they had to spend researching, procuring, and ultimately returning the product. I imagine companies are going to be in for a rude awakening when they have to reverse course and not only increase quality but also decrease the price because no one wants to spend hard-earned money on expensive junk during a recession.
silvestrov · 5h ago
> the bulk [...] trying on clothes and returning the ones they don't like
If this was really the case then Amazon would not have a "frequently returned" concept as this would penalize sellers doing nothing wrong.
"frequently returned" warning makes only sense when the majority of returns are due to lack of quality control.
fragmede · 13h ago
If I buy a $100 projector vs a $1,000 one, or a $20 curling iron vs a $200 one, the order of magnitude difference does make for a better product, I find.
typewithrhythm · 9h ago
I don't think it's the price giving information there though. I can find many projectors being sold in the 1000 range that do not compare to the best in the 100 range.
Yes I agree that there are better products for more money, it's just that I have to filter by something else because I can't trust that the price corresponds to performance for any given listing.
9dev · 12h ago
Maybe. But what about the Audi vs. Volkswagen? A Ninja blender vs. a KitchenAid? A memory card from SanDisk vs. a no-name brand? A shirt from Fred Perry vs. H&M? And these were brands you probably know. What about the products in niches, where you don’t have experience, or products are sufficiently similar? Do you always know whether a product is more expensive because of the brand, or because it’s objectively better?
ekianjo · 11h ago
because car brands belong to very few auto makers, a lot of cars with different names use the same chassis across brands, the same engine, and probably the same electronics as well. so you end up with most of the difference being esthetics these days, at least for cars within roughly the same price range.
CommenterPerson · 8h ago
FYI Consumer Reports' "Best Buy" ratings used to reliably indicate very good quality and low price. The seem to have changed it to "Recommended" and enshittified it.
esperent · 17h ago
Regarding the Oatly ad at the top (Another ad for our oat drink providing no reason at all why you should try it), this ad does have a signal. It's a humblebrag. It's saying, our product is so well known, and the reasons for using it so obvious, that we don't need to say anything. It's cementing Oatly brand in the minds of anyone who already thinks that they should be switching to non-dairy milk for any reason (health, environment, etc).
mattlondon · 14h ago
It's I think what we used to call "brand advertising".
Just like random "coca-cola" billboards at the side of a road or a sports stadium
efitz · 12h ago
I once read an article that said basically that some ads were targeted at people who had already bought the product, to prevent regret for paying a premium price. The example given was TV commercials for BMW cars but I can see that applying with the oat milk drink.
dehrmann · 4h ago
The version I head was they're placed to remind you that you made a good choice, and for your next car, you should make the same good choice.
esafak · 5h ago
So the regret increases the premium! Funny when you think about it.
xnx · 16h ago
Also that it is the drink of nonconformists and creatives. Many of their other ads cross way over into tryhard cringe for how "random" they are.
cnity · 15h ago
Tryhard cringe for us, but likely very funny and edgy to, say, 5-10 year olds. It wouldn’t surprise me if there wasn’t an attempt to center Oatly for coming generations as an investment.
andrepd · 10h ago
It's funny and edgy for adult segments as well, unfortunately. Advertising works.
card_zero · 2h ago
It looks like it's in Vienna ("gewista"), but is delivering its huge vacuous message in English.
spyckie2 · 14h ago
I wish someone did an analysis of their marketing. I really hope it was a huge flop because it’s just awful.
I despise their horrible advertising and marketing copy in general and I sometimes just have to tell myself, “it’s just oat milk no need to boycott it because some edgy marketing consultant forces you to read their nonsense”.
mattlondon · 14h ago
It's in your head. Someone did something right.
spyckie2 · 2h ago
hmm after some research I'm inclined to believe that 1) oatly is the best tasting product on the market, 2) it's the distribution channels that was the success, not the marketing copy, and 3) spending massive amounts of capital into growth of a good product will always yield growth.
So no... I stand by what I said, I think they did a lot of things wrong in the marketing department, in spite of having a really solid product.
neehao · 17h ago
agree..
amelius · 12h ago
The ad is basically saying "You consumers don't know how to use your brains and will buy our brand just because we showed a picture of it". Terrible.
abetol · 9h ago
Gen-X doesn’t want to be manipulated.
Millennial advertising doesn’t adhere to 20th century advertising norms.
Gen-X is getting older and needs fiber and to lose weight, so they respond to “oats”.
Millennials and Gen-Z want healthy-looking drinks that are trendy and fun, because they’ll never be able to pay off their college loans and grew up during a time where politics were divided and assume we may all die from global warming and WW3 so they just want to be healthy and happy.
This ad is trying to say, “We’re not going to say this is healthy, or will make you feel free, or is a fast meal substitute. It’s just oat milk.”
That pretty much appeals to all of them.
ses1984 · 10h ago
To me it looks like a parody of advertising in general which rarely provides reasons.
9dev · 12h ago
Nope. It builds on prior exposure to Oatly marketing in other channels, which they famously are good at.
The market for oat milk consumers mostly consists of people that had actively made a choice about drinking oat milk already.
bowsamic · 12h ago
Not really, it’s more of a brag about how oatly has fully solidified itself as _the_ choice for so many, basically like Nutella
soared · 18h ago
Those formulas have to be comedy but it seems like it’s trying to be serious.
neehao · 17h ago
agree. they seem hasty but didn't notice anything obviously wrong but may be i missed something ...
neehao · 17h ago
appears the math was updated
gsf_emergency_2 · 17h ago
Yes. Comedy is suboptimally optimal
mrkramer · 3h ago
>Ratings compression
Star ratings on major platforms increasingly cluster between 4.3 and 4.9, leaving buyers little room to distinguish products.
Last year I was skimming through IKEA furniture and majority of reviews are 4 or 5 stars. And that makes me think that people who don't like IKEA products are either so pissed that they do not want leave 1 star review or IKEA removes bad reviews.
Tijdreiziger · 3h ago
I’ve definitely seen IKEA products with bad reviews.
ArtTimeInvestor · 16h ago
CPA pricing removes the burn
Not true. There is limited ad space which all advertisers compete for. No matter which model, CPC or CPA, the advertiser who pays most gets the ad placement.
Its similar to SEO. Nobody says "Oh my god, advertising via SEO is free, what a blessing!". It's still a competition. It's still a zero sum game.
ajb · 14h ago
He's not saying advertisers don't compete. He's saying it changes from advertising being a massive risk as well as a cost, to just a cost. So the auction is won by the company with the biggest instantaneous profit margin on a SKU, instead of the one with the biggest war chest that can afford to risk on that massive prime time slot. This change in incentive favours shitty products.
jrm4 · 6h ago
There may be something interesting here to think about, but I'd argue that the following statement is literally much more useful than that entire article.
"When advertising, appealing to emotion is much more important than information or logic."
mrala · 17h ago
Since the article doesn’t mention it, CPA stands for cost per action.
closewith · 13h ago
Cost Per Acquisition (of a new customer).
amelius · 12h ago
How do they know if the customer is new or not?
HEGalloway · 11h ago
tracking via cookies (that expire after X days) or some kind of identifier in the CRM
closewith · 11h ago
Normally in e-commerce, it's based on email or phone number. In physical retail, they use all sorts of tactics, from loyalty cards to facial recognition (where legal, which it shouldn't be).
sgt101 · 13h ago
How can consumers respond to get useful information and enable themselves to make better decisions when exchanging their resources for goods?
- use other information channels like review media (fashion sites)?
- trust secondary sites like brand retailers (IE. John Lewis in the UK?)
????
dazc · 5h ago
I used to buy from John Lewis since they tended to have a curated selection of products and the reviews (where they exist) haven't been gamed. I don't recall a purchase that I have regretted.
Not so sure now they are becoming just another drop-shipper but there are few alternatives in the UK.
maartenscholl · 15h ago
This has little to do with equilibrium analysis, it is just the market for lemons story but for the ad space. You need to investigate the buyers and what they believe about brand quality.
dreamcompiler · 5h ago
I love that this reduces to math a "special theory of enshittification" because it describes how no-name vendors can profit from the "general theory of enshittification" put forth by Doctorow that describes the platform monopolies like Amazon under which the vendors operate.
seydor · 14h ago
That explains the success of platforms like Temu: every search generates many identical products that are all dirt cheap, which makes my search much easier. I find myself buying a lot faster because there is not a lot of variety and relatively little trickery/ads
bravesoul2 · 13h ago
Are we talking about the same Temu that pops up a spinning roulette wheel telling you have 100% off and to install the app to get the offer? (Catch is... it isn't 100% off and it's BS)
dazc · 5h ago
I have heard Temu being described as a store where no sane person would buy anything. This suggests marketing purely to sane people isn't the best route to success?
phatfish · 9h ago
Yup no idea, Temu is peak gamified shopping. The parent could just be fully on board with being conned though.
nottorp · 4h ago
Maybe the parent just runs with all kinds of ad blockers / privacy options on, because I haven't seen that roulette thing on Temu.
Or perhaps, if it's infrequent, I just ignored it as obvious bullshit. I only did one order off them experimentally last year.
asdff · 1h ago
Reviews are basically useless today. I'm sorry but it is true. Pick any hobby you deeply understand enough to not require handholding by a reviewer, and watch the reviews about that segment. It is a joke, pure PR. "This one is good but this one is pretty gooder" None of these sponsored reviewers want to bite the hand that feeds them and gives them free product to review for their channel. They never go very deep into anything. Classic Gell-Mann amnesia
Customer reviews are also useless. 10 people go 5/5 no comment. One guy goes 3/5 "good thing." ???? Another person didn't hold it right and rated it 1/5, another person got a defective product customer service would have replaced if they had reached out and rated it 1/5.
IMO the solution is doing actual due dilligence. What is the spec sheet? What is actually relevant to what I am doing? How was this thing made? What are the tradeoffs of using this technique in in this product vs other techniques? Where does this featureset stand against other offerings in this segment and pricepoint?
You can do all of this yourself from the primary materials, the product pages, etc. It also doesn't take longer than you'd spend agonizing over yet another half dozen 20 minute review videos. And you'd end up better informed than most content producers, most customer reviewers, even most redditors on the relevant subreddit.
You operate along these lines and all 5 friction points mentioned in the article become irrelevant. You don't give a shit about the brand, you care about the merits of the component. Prolific advertisement is no longer required as a signal for quality since you are actually evaluating the merits of the component directly and not using proxy signals. Return status also doesn't matter because you are evaluating the merits of the component directly. Ratings don't matter. Pricepoint also doesn't matter because you don't include price in your analysis save for comparing capabilities across a price point vs assuming costly product = better.
And of course maybe you are bad at estimating a components merit. Maybe you are suffering from Dunning Krueger effect. For most things in life this hardly also matters because the effective difference between a most optimal product and one that is merely good enough is basically zero especially when you lack the ability to determine the differences between perfect and good enough (probably means that precision is not required for you use case).
Manufacturers are in a fundamental conflict with Amazon precisely because they desire to fully control the retail channels and set their own promotions, online discounts etc. and capture most of the surplus themselves while still segmenting the market and, for example, selling at different prices through certain local distributors.
Amazon has the exact opposite incentives, they want distributors of the same brand to compete amongst themselves so they can offer the lowest global prices, and that it's Amazon and its users that capture most of the surplus.
This is the root of the forgery problem Amazon can't solve, manufacturers aren't willing to vouch for their products when sold in secondary channels they do not fully control. So this means they will not collaborate on the "global rating" scheme either.
Has chosen not to solve. They could trivially improve the situation by ending the practice of commingled inventory so a seller could be held accountable for counterfeit or stolen items but that would cost more so they don’t.
It helps with inventory availability with the cost of risk of bad customer experience in case of fraud.
So if they can't be bothered to attach a zero cents sticker on the item, a 5cents rfid tag is out of the question.
Personally I hate it, I would love to buy directly from the manufacturer instead of playing roulette with the distributor.
The good ol' 7 out of 10 problem. Where the entire lower half of the rating system is unused.
The way I solve it is to have 0 be the middle, If the transaction exceeded expectations you can give it a +1 if it failed to meet them give it a -1 (thumbs up/down if you prefer) you can even throw in a +-2 if you want to allow for more subtlety of expression
With a population of ~300 Million the US ad industry generates 400 Billion in revenue. Avg Bounty of >1000 bucks a year per person.
The only way to pull that off is to keep injecting more and more ads everywhere and make everything more tempting to watch.
The biggest threat to these companies is if time spent consuming media drops.
All you need is two things:
1) a zero-sum game where the amount spent by companies on advertising is less than their profit margin
2) advertising channels that perform in a way that can be correlated with short-term outcomes
"We can afford to up our ad spend by 0.5% to try to gain an edge."
You juice your market share or total sales numbers for a quarter, everyone is happy.
Then your competitor does the same.
Assuming your advertising is equally effective, you may have netted out to about where you started. But you've both ratcheted up your spend and likely won't reduce that short of a macro change or parent company health issues.
And if certain advertising performs better than others, one company can very well make long-term gains here, if they have writers and producers and talent who are making more compelling pitches.
But it still ramps up the total advertising industry spend even with a fixed supply of ad capacity, if it gets a bidding war going.
As long as you don't have 100% market share with 0 competitors, advertising will look like a very compelling short-term ROI option.
Even if time spent watching media drops it may not squeeze a lot of parts of the advertising sector so hard - it'll just push demand into smaller buckets which will increase the prices for those buckets. Look at the crazy revenue sports television broadcast advertising has been doing as other forms of TV go away with commercial skipping or lower-ad-load streaming.
Of course, at SOME point the increases can't be sustained. Even the most profitable products have a limit to how much money could be possibly directed towards advertising. But we don't appear to be particularly close to demand being satisfied.
If any single company spends more, and succeeds in gaining advantage purely by spending more, all their competitors will generally just be forced to follow.
But, no one really wants to follow that to the logical conclusion of spending all possible dollars on marketing.
Sure, just like nobody wants to spend all possible dollars on rent.
But outside of "we just can't afford it anymore" external economic factors shocking the system, the natural incentives point to a slow and constant ratcheting up.
IMO this would be a good reason to have further regulations on advertising - locations, frequency, accuracy - since we're gonna be saturated with it otherwise.
The same question, who is paying for all the data collection they do on customers?
You keep hearing about xxx billion dollar industries but where is that money coming from? The add and data collection industry in the US is probably a trillion dollar market or more, but ... does it really work? Sure, focused ads on some youtube channel about product that may be of interest, but all the rest is such a mess.
I do not buy more stuff because some ads showed up. Sure, they can be informative that there is a new car released, or something like that. But there is no desire to buy XXX cleaning product because they spammed it on TV.
Same argument with "what use is getting all my personal data, down to the things we do in bed". Sell it to specific companies? But what do they really gain from it. It does not feel like we are getting better products as a result of all that user data. O, people are not happy about Y product. You do not need invasive data collection for that, you see it in your revenue numbers.
It often feels like a lot of industries are just there to self sustain themselves. Nobody ever got fired for buying advertisement or personalized data. So companies keep spending on it, people keep pouring over the data, analyzing it, but its like nobody has common sense and its all a scam that inner feed itself.
I am not saying that advertisement does not work to grow a product, but especially unknow one's but the moment product reach a specific mass...
The big threat to the whole system is when the amount of time per day people spend consuming media starts to drop thanks to fatigue and finding better things to do.
They pay the same, I will keep buying whatever my friends suggest me to buy. Win - Win
Not that I see much ads any more anyway, what with Ublock Origin, Blokada 5 and Youtube ReVanced.
My gut suspects not?
Perhaps in the early and mid 80s you could still buy quality products, but now is seems 99% of things are just mass-produced where ever it is cheapest. People are conditioned on Amazon to find the same product from a jumble-of-letter manufacturer who is selling the exact same thing at the lowest price. I do not trust that if I buy a "known brand" for a product that it is going to be any different from a similar same no-name thing that is 20-30% of the price (...and very possibly built in the same factory). If it's all low quality crap (which a lot of the time it is) then you may as well get the cheapest one
Sadly you need to rely on things like YouTube videos to actually get any kind of idea on if the item is trash or not, and even then there is the risk of paid-reviews so you need to take multiple sources into account, who they are, trust levels etc. it's sad. Either that or - and I know this is madness - go to a physical store and inspect the goods before you buy it.
I would argue that the article is correct that quality is often secondary to speed of delivery and cheapness though. Amazon has totally won there.
> My gut suspects not?
You are correct that price is no longer an indicator of quality.
Look at this stick vacuum review, for example: https://vacuumwars.com/vacuum-wars-best-cordless-vacuums/#1
A $374 vacuum ranks at #4 while a $1049 vacuum ranks at #8. That is a HUGE price gap for items that are supposed to be of similar quality. The reason for the gap is irrelevant to this discussion too, because we are talking about the relation between price and quality.
And people try to blame the consumer for both sides of the issue.
People shrug and say it is the consumer who demands cheaper products and that is why they are of such low quality (despite what you say, which is that price and quality are much less connected than what people selling you things want you to believe), but then when those same consumers initiate returns, people cry foul like the consumer is somehow maliciously buying shit quality products and returning them to spite honest companies who just want to do right by their customers.
Look at how this article is written: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/retail-returns-890-bill...
Notice anything in that "Why returns are a big problem" section? A neat rhetorical trick which attempts to get inattentive readers to believe that the bulk of all returns are just people trying on clothes and returning the ones they don't like. Now, if it really were the bulk of all returns, they would have surely mentioned this, because it would buttress their point.
They did not, because they can not, because, I have a suspicion that the $890 billion worth of returns is primarily due to reverse/negative demand for shit products. I suspect those return numbers creeping up year over year are consumers getting annoyed with retailers for not curating products in a way that considers quality and longevity.
As the featured article mentions, Amazon does mark products as frequently returned, but I am not sure it really helps that much.
> Sadly you need to rely on things like YouTube videos to actually get any kind of idea on if the item is trash or not, and even then there is the risk of paid-reviews so you need to take multiple sources into account, who they are, trust levels etc. it's sad. Either that or - and I know this is madness - go to a physical store and inspect the goods before you buy it.
And even then, they miss important details, because most reviews only talk about the product in terms of the out-of-box experience. But how good is the product after two years? After four? Even the vacuum review I linked does not really comment on longevity.
> I would argue that the article is correct that quality is often secondary to speed of delivery and cheapness though. Amazon has totally won there.
I think it is starting to change where people are getting really tired of shit quality and that is going to continue to be reflected in the returns data. Returns do not make customers whole - they do not get a refund for the time they had to spend researching, procuring, and ultimately returning the product. I imagine companies are going to be in for a rude awakening when they have to reverse course and not only increase quality but also decrease the price because no one wants to spend hard-earned money on expensive junk during a recession.
If this was really the case then Amazon would not have a "frequently returned" concept as this would penalize sellers doing nothing wrong.
"frequently returned" warning makes only sense when the majority of returns are due to lack of quality control.
Yes I agree that there are better products for more money, it's just that I have to filter by something else because I can't trust that the price corresponds to performance for any given listing.
Just like random "coca-cola" billboards at the side of a road or a sports stadium
I despise their horrible advertising and marketing copy in general and I sometimes just have to tell myself, “it’s just oat milk no need to boycott it because some edgy marketing consultant forces you to read their nonsense”.
So no... I stand by what I said, I think they did a lot of things wrong in the marketing department, in spite of having a really solid product.
Millennial advertising doesn’t adhere to 20th century advertising norms.
Gen-X is getting older and needs fiber and to lose weight, so they respond to “oats”.
Millennials and Gen-Z want healthy-looking drinks that are trendy and fun, because they’ll never be able to pay off their college loans and grew up during a time where politics were divided and assume we may all die from global warming and WW3 so they just want to be healthy and happy.
This ad is trying to say, “We’re not going to say this is healthy, or will make you feel free, or is a fast meal substitute. It’s just oat milk.”
That pretty much appeals to all of them.
The market for oat milk consumers mostly consists of people that had actively made a choice about drinking oat milk already.
Last year I was skimming through IKEA furniture and majority of reviews are 4 or 5 stars. And that makes me think that people who don't like IKEA products are either so pissed that they do not want leave 1 star review or IKEA removes bad reviews.
Its similar to SEO. Nobody says "Oh my god, advertising via SEO is free, what a blessing!". It's still a competition. It's still a zero sum game.
"When advertising, appealing to emotion is much more important than information or logic."
- use other information channels like review media (fashion sites)?
- trust secondary sites like brand retailers (IE. John Lewis in the UK?)
????
Not so sure now they are becoming just another drop-shipper but there are few alternatives in the UK.
Or perhaps, if it's infrequent, I just ignored it as obvious bullshit. I only did one order off them experimentally last year.
Customer reviews are also useless. 10 people go 5/5 no comment. One guy goes 3/5 "good thing." ???? Another person didn't hold it right and rated it 1/5, another person got a defective product customer service would have replaced if they had reached out and rated it 1/5.
IMO the solution is doing actual due dilligence. What is the spec sheet? What is actually relevant to what I am doing? How was this thing made? What are the tradeoffs of using this technique in in this product vs other techniques? Where does this featureset stand against other offerings in this segment and pricepoint?
You can do all of this yourself from the primary materials, the product pages, etc. It also doesn't take longer than you'd spend agonizing over yet another half dozen 20 minute review videos. And you'd end up better informed than most content producers, most customer reviewers, even most redditors on the relevant subreddit.
You operate along these lines and all 5 friction points mentioned in the article become irrelevant. You don't give a shit about the brand, you care about the merits of the component. Prolific advertisement is no longer required as a signal for quality since you are actually evaluating the merits of the component directly and not using proxy signals. Return status also doesn't matter because you are evaluating the merits of the component directly. Ratings don't matter. Pricepoint also doesn't matter because you don't include price in your analysis save for comparing capabilities across a price point vs assuming costly product = better.
And of course maybe you are bad at estimating a components merit. Maybe you are suffering from Dunning Krueger effect. For most things in life this hardly also matters because the effective difference between a most optimal product and one that is merely good enough is basically zero especially when you lack the ability to determine the differences between perfect and good enough (probably means that precision is not required for you use case).