To be fair, you're never automatically given a free trial without you knowing, you have to actually click 'try amazon prime'.
This, plus you can cancel it as soon as you've signed up to it. You still get it for the trail period.
To be fair, you're never automatically given a free trial without you knowing, you have to actually click 'try amazon prime'.
Happy to have Prime for the free/quick delivery. I'm still to wade in for this Christmas.
It now includes the old LoveFilm (TV shows and films) as well as Prime Music (c1m tracks I believe), Prime Photos (free back-up of all your photos) and a Kindle lending library (a limited selection of e-books you can borrow to read free of charge).
Well worth it, I think.
Why?
Normally excellent service means I don't have to fight traffic going into town, don't have to pay ridiculous parking charges, free returns. You're right, best avoided. Now where did I put my car keys-I fancy sitting for ages in traffic then paying more than necessary for Christmas gifts?
Shouldn't you admit to an itsy bitsy conflict of interest though when puffing Amazon ?
Does it bother you?
I've used Prime for years. I've never pushed Prime on here despite Amazon repeatedly pushing me to push it. That's primarily because I'm lazy, however.
But, yes, if people choose to buy from Amazon having clicked through from NSC then NSC earns a small amount of commission.
If, however, someone does want to try Prime for free (to get your Christmas presents on time), please click here to do so: http://www.amazon.co.uk/tryprimefree?tag=northstandcha-21 NSC will get three English Pounds if you do.
Prime is brilliant.........if you use Amazon regularly.
Free next day delivery plus Amazon video (some very good shows, I'm watching the Man in the High Castle at present) and music.
I'm sorry, but I still believe you're probably mistaken there.
It won't have been the exact same item from the same merchant. If you are with Prime, Amazon promotes the Prime-able listings, but you'll still have non-Prime-able Marketplace sellers available to you. So what is presented to a Prime member and a non-Prime member (or non-signed in user) may look different as when you are logged in as Prime member, Amazon knows stuff about you which shapes the algorithm as to how things are presented.
The £6 item would have been available to the Prime member, it may not have been as obvious however due to the prominence of the Prime-able item.
I'd be very interested if you were able to find a single example of where the same item is being sold by one merchant at two difference prices based on Prime membership.
Have to admit I was 1 of the 1000's that fell for the "3 months free Prime" to get a delivery quickly once and completely forgot to cancel it, and didn't realise until they took £79 from bank account.
I know it is 100% my fault, but I really do think it is an abhorent practice to do it the way they do. Here, have something for free, but if you forget in 3 months time we're going to charge you £79.
They don't make it clear, quite the opposite in fact, but if you sign up for the free trial you can cancel straight away and still use Prime until it expires.
You don't appear to understand how the marketplace works then. Sometimes you win, sometimes lose with Amazon. But it is not a con that Amazon's price was higher in this instance, that's just a specific variable. The cheaper set was sold by an independent seller, not Amazon so why would you expect Amazon to pay for quick postage from someone who is not them?Also be careful about goods not covered by Prime.
Earlier this year I needed a present to be quickly delivered and signed up for Prime, thinking about future purchases.
Last week I wanted to buy a Box Set. Amazon had it but another company on their site had the same product £6 cheaper (both were new).
So I purchased the cheaper one and surprise, surprise not covered by Prime. So to purchase the goods direct from Amazon I would have had to pay £6 more to use Prime I had already paid for. Nice profits!!!
You don't appear to understand how the marketplace works then. Sometimes you win, sometimes lose with Amazon. But it is not a con that Amazon's price was higher in this instance, that's just a specific variable. The cheaper set was sold by an independent seller, not Amazon so why would you expect Amazon to pay for quick postage from someone who is not them?
Yes, but they are third party sellers. The money, most of it, goes to the seller who pay Amazon a fee, like eBay, for hosting their product.Because I bought it on Amazons site and they took the money. So this wonderful Prime isn't such a deal after all.
Have to admit I was 1 of the 1000's that fell for the "3 months free Prime" to get a delivery quickly once and completely forgot to cancel it, and didn't realise until they took £79 from bank account.
I know it is 100% my fault, but I really do think it is an abhorent practice to do it the way they do. Here, have something for free, but if you forget in 3 months time we're going to charge you £79.
They pay you for slower delivery if you have prime? So if you order 80 items and get £1 back each time prime is effectively free?I previously subscribed to lovefilm. When Amazon took it over, they replaced the lovefilm streaming service with amazon prime, but only the video streaming part.
I worked out that I was paying around £72 a year just for the video stream, so decided to get rid of that and sign up to amazon proper, so for a mere 7 pound extra I get all that I had before, plus free music streaming, free delivery (though like the other poster above, I usually go for the no-rush delivery in exchange for digital credit and have accrued over £20 of credit in the last couple of months - thanks in part to black friday weekend offering £3 credit instead of £1) and early access to lightning deals. I don't have a kindle device, so don't benefit from their free book service (it didn't work through the app on my ipad last time I tried).
Same here, last year.Yep, same here. Fortunately, they didn't kick up too much of a fuss when I cancelled and asked for a refund.
They pay you for slower delivery if you have prime? So if you order 80 items and get £1 back each time prime is effectively free?