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9 votes
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Inside eBay’s cockroach cult: The ghastly story of a stalking scandal
11 votes -
Do you think that Shopify could soon rival Amazon?
Notice: This has been cross-posted to another website, and re-worded I currently work in the eCommerce industry, and have hands-on experience building up a Shopify site from the ground up. As I...
Notice: This has been cross-posted to another website, and re-worded
I currently work in the eCommerce industry, and have hands-on experience building up a Shopify site from the ground up. As I watch all of the developments that Shopify makes both from a technical development standpoint and logistical standpoint, it becomes more and more clear to me that Shopify can begin to take on Amazon directly.
The introduction of Shop app, which aggregates all shipments into a single application including those outside of Amazon, also allows users to browse products from any particular Shopify store. The app also notifies you of any shipping updates, and when packages have been delivered.
From a technical standpoint, Shopify's main attractions come down to a few things: order management, credit card processing, customer management, and plugin integrations. This is the core of Shopify's platform for both larger and smaller businesses. Though due to Shopify's requirement of using their CMS to serve your content, enterprise users have to look elsewhere in order to build something called "headless builds", which essentially use alternate CMS mixed with Shopify's CMS to continue serving their content.
There are a few companies that make such software in order to build out a fully custom site while still using the Shopify platform as its core, though at the moment they are a little 'hacky' but still fully functional. Given the interest in Shopify's platform at such a high level, they are very likely working on their own headless framework which could allow for 1) mainstream stores to integrate their existing platforms into a unified Shopify marketplace, and 2) to allow stores to build out fully custom websites using the Shopify platform at its core and also enroll them into a unified Shopify marketplace.
Amazon has mostly become a front for cheap Chinese-made products, laden with review manipulation and questionable product quality. By instead bringing large brands on board with a unified Shopify marketplace, those stores can sell quality products backed by their brands which can gain trust from customers, and will give rise to smaller brands that may have been unnoticed by larger populations.
[ For example, I recently bought a pair of shoes from a very popular Shopify store: they represent quality, comfort, and eco-friendliness. I personally find myself more willing to spend money on quality products from companies I know I can trust. ]What's everyone's thoughts? Are there any general problems that could come from Shopify trying to jump-start a full-blown marketplace? Do you think that companies would be willing to integrate their ERP's and CMS's with whatever API's or headless framework Shopify decides to build out?
9 votes -
Amazon wants to win over Sweden – the Swedes have other ideas
7 votes -
Amazon's launch of a Swedish retail site has caused embarrassment – confusing, nonsensical and occasionally vulgar product listings scattered across the catalogue
6 votes -
Unstaffed, digital supermarkets transform rural Sweden – Lifvs start-up has opened nineteen stores across the country, choosing remote places that have lost their local shops
15 votes -
Amazon deletes 20,000 product reviews written by seven of its top ten UK reviewers after a Financial Times investigation found they were written for profit
18 votes -
Japanese convenience store chain begins testing remote controlled robot staff in Tokyo
6 votes -
Amazon moves closer to drone delivery with US FAA approval
4 votes -
Six former eBay executives and employees charged with aggressive cyberstalking campaign targeting a couple who published an online newsletter critical of the company
23 votes -
Amazon liable for defective third-party products rules CA Appellate Court
6 votes -
A personal account of a fake Amazon reviewer
15 votes -
Woolworths pays the Australian Communications and Media Authority $1 million fine for spam marketing emails
6 votes -
Microsoft to permanently close all of its retail stores, with locations in NYC, London, Sydney, and Redmond being converted to "experience centers"
10 votes -
Thinking about opening a web store, looking for advice
I am mulling over starting a side business that would involve selling physical products. I would like to set up a web store for this, but want to keep the amount of web development I have to do to...
I am mulling over starting a side business that would involve selling physical products. I would like to set up a web store for this, but want to keep the amount of web development I have to do to a minimum. I would also not like to invade my customers' and potential customers' privacy. Can anyone recommend a way to approach this? I'm a software developer, but don't do much web development and don't really want to do development for this project beyond just getting the site up and running. What options exist for setting up a simple web store?
I've done a search and see things like Shopify. I've heard of them and get the impression they're reputable, but other items in my search seemed kind of scammy. Are there things I should look out for in this space?
8 votes -
Walmart shoppers will be able to find goods from Shopify merchants
4 votes -
How lockdown is changing shopping for good
8 votes -
Apple Store's temperature checks may violate EU privacy rules, says German data protection office
5 votes -
The anti-Amazon alliance
6 votes -
Amazon glitch stymies Whole Foods, fresh grocery deliveries
7 votes -
Why Amazon knows so much about you
18 votes -
People in Canada’s remote Arctic capital are obsessed with Amazon Prime
6 votes -
Amazon doesn’t report its warehouse injury rates — but we have an inside look
13 votes -
Behind the Smiles - Amazon’s internal injury records expose the true toll of its relentless drive for speed
8 votes -
Profile of a fake Amazon reviewer, who has received over $15,000 of products for free in exchange for posting five-star reviews
17 votes -
Amazon changed its search system to boost more-profitable listings, including its own brands
19 votes -
The people who built Etsy dreamed of remaking commerce with their bare hands. Fifteen years later, its sellers are being asked to compete with Amazon.
11 votes -
Apple will give indie repair shops the tools to fix iPhones
7 votes -
Amazon has ceded control of its site to third-party sellers. The result: thousands of banned, unsafe or mislabeled products.
14 votes -
What does Amazon's "Top Brand" badge actually mean?
7 votes -
EU opens Amazon antitrust investigation
8 votes -
"Amazon's Choice" is given to products automatically and doesn't indicate quality - Many have troubling product defects and warnings, as well as review manipulation
25 votes -
Don’t know which toaster to buy? There’s a website for that: When did recommendation sites become such a central part of the online economy? And are they changing the way we shop?
8 votes -
Walmart wants employees to deliver products to your fridge - Available in three cities this fall
11 votes -
The making of Amazon Prime - An oral history of the subscription service that changed online shopping forever
6 votes -
Buying from Amazon: Three steps to find what you need and avoid fake reviews | No Sweat Tech
7 votes -
Walmart unveils an AI-powered store of the future, now open to the public
6 votes -
Your very public Amazon shopping history is a window onto your soul
11 votes -
Google is rolling out AMP for Gmail to let you shop and fill out forms without leaving your inbox
22 votes -
Office Depot and tech support firm Support.com will pay $35 million to settle FTC allegations that they tricked consumers into buying costly computer repair services
7 votes -
Australia's Myer department stores to stop selling Apple products
5 votes -
Instagram adds in-app checkout as part of its big push into shopping
3 votes -
What exactly is Amazon? This is the question that has consumed me for the last ten years.
7 votes -
Amazon to launch new grocery-store business, distinct from Whole Foods
12 votes -
Amazon announces "Project Zero", a program which will allow brands to directly remove counterfeit listings
11 votes -
I tried to block Amazon from my life. It was impossible
13 votes -
Amazon unveiled Key for Garage—a system that allows Amazon drivers to unlock garage doors to make secure deliveries.
15 votes -
Prime and punishment: Dirty dealing in the $175 billion Amazon Marketplace
10 votes -
Instacart and Amazon-owned Whole Foods are parting ways
6 votes -
Looking to cancel Amazon Prime for ethical reasons (and quality decline) - what are my alternatives for online shopping?
For the past few years, I've grown more and more uneasy with Amazon's business practices. I think it's time to move on. Not to mention the declining quality in products since international...
For the past few years, I've grown more and more uneasy with Amazon's business practices. I think it's time to move on. Not to mention the declining quality in products since international shippers were added (as discussed in the podcast Reply All).
I'm addicted to the convenience of 2 day shipping, even though we use Amazon less and less, I like knowing I have that option.
I've been considering a Costco membership instead - how does their online shopping and shipping times/prices compare?
I've also considered using Jet more but I don't know much about their ethics, does anyone?
Open to other alternatives and discussion about business ethics here.
33 votes