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Recently online businesses are taking much longer to ship their products. It's not just Amazon, the behavior is endemic to the whole of internet retail, at least as far as large companies go. For a while I thought the cause was deliberate delays intended to squeeze customers to pay for faster "shipping", actually meaning faster processing. But I just had what is, to me, an epiphany. They're not delaying shipment because they want to squeeze the customer, they just don't have the product yet. Through vertically integrated supply chains and with decreasing inventory sizes they're saving huge amounts of money. At the expense of customer satisfaction. When you order a product recently the order bumps a huge automated supply chain. All the way from raw material through sub-assemblies, to the finished product. It used to be that there was more than enough inventory in each part of the system to immediately supply it. But now any part of that supply chain is liable to not have the thing Now. Maybe it's an hour for a breadboard and way down the line another hour for three gears.

Whatever the cause, while they're not making each order as it's ordered they're still squeezing every bit of flexibility out of their supply. They're making up for an inability to anticipate demand by making demand wait for them. It's just that they're able to catch up fast enough that most people don't notice. It's a 'managed dissatisfaction" thing.

So just remember when you order a widget, that widget, the one destined for you, hasn't actually been made yet. The ones "in stock" have already been ordered. And when they print that label so they can pretend it's been shipped it's one of several delaying tactics designed to hide deliberate slowness.

tldr; Amazon lie. Amazon say have arrow but not make arrow yet.

Recently online businesses are taking much longer to ship their products. It's not just Amazon, the behavior is endemic to the whole of internet retail, at least as far as large companies go. For a while I thought the cause was deliberate delays intended to squeeze customers to pay for faster "shipping", actually meaning faster processing. But I just had what is, to me, an epiphany. They're not delaying shipment because they want to squeeze the customer, they just don't have the product yet. Through vertically integrated supply chains and with decreasing inventory sizes they're saving huge amounts of money. At the expense of customer satisfaction. When you order a product recently the order bumps a huge automated supply chain. All the way from raw material through sub-assemblies, to the finished product. It used to be that there was more than enough inventory in each part of the system to immediately supply it. But now any part of that supply chain is liable to not have the thing Now. Maybe it's an hour for a breadboard and way down the line another hour for three gears. Whatever the cause, while they're not making each order as it's ordered they're still squeezing every bit of flexibility out of their supply. They're making up for an inability to anticipate demand by making demand wait for them. It's just that they're able to catch up fast enough that most people don't notice. It's a 'managed dissatisfaction" thing. So just remember when you order a widget, that widget, the one destined for you, hasn't actually been made yet. The ones "in stock" have already been ordered. And when they print that label so they can pretend it's been shipped it's one of several delaying tactics designed to hide deliberate slowness. tldr; Amazon lie. Amazon say have arrow but not make arrow yet.

(post is archived)

[–] 2 pts

Right. sry. Amazon sucks. I agree.

Amazon tell grug... give clam now and Amazon bring wood. Amazon promise many, many loads wood keep campfire burning. Grug give Amazon clams. Amazon no bring wood. Grug mad. Amazon no even chop down tree yet. One big nose chief of Amazon tribe steal from many tribes. Grug must invent rope.

[–] 1 pt

no, its not just amazon and its not just america

its everywhere

its industrial gaslighting

not actually having a go at you directly here but the whole 'get over it, its just...' is the end game of the gaslighting. the gaslighter fucks with someone sucessfully and gets backed up by someone completely random and not attached and the person making the complaint gets isolated and is led to believe theyre the problem.

BUT THEY AINT

Deliveries and shit are just like any other contract, you make a purchase of a specific product that is due on a particular day or within a specific timeframe, thats exactly what you should get, whether thats having a fucking pool installed, having an ebay order delivered, or ordering a fucking meal at mcdonalds, anyone not giving you exactly what you were contracted to recieve within the timeframe given is the fucking issue not the person making the complaint.

this shit needs to stop because its exactly why it works. and it happens to you to i fucking guarantee it.

[–] 0 pt

Yes it does happen to me. I mostly just brush it off, though.

I've come to accept affirmative action as legalized racial discrimination on the federal level against White folks as a permanent part of Clown World.

I didn't say I like it.