But recently, Amazon has faced a new threat to that model. Tens of millions of Americans have started shopping on Shein and Temu, two Chinese-owned e-commerce platforms that send products directly from China with no middleman. The shipping takes longer, but the prices are lower. Shein specializes in women’s clothing and accessories, such as $6 crop tops and $12 sundresses. Temu’s core strengths are household items, decorations, and electronics; you can buy a $52 Android tablet and a $3 box of latex-free gloves.
Now Amazon, for once, is slowing down. Earlier this week, The Information first reported that Amazon plans to follow the Shein and Temu playbook and open a new online store for low-cost products shipped directly from China. It will focus on unbranded clothing and household items priced under $20 and weighing less than a pound; orders will arrive in nine to 11 days—a relative eternity compared with how long most of its customers are used to waiting. A spokesperson for Amazon didn’t refute any of these details, saying only that the company is “always exploring new ways to work with our selling partners.” When given the choice, Amazon seems to have realized, lots of people will choose stuff that is really cheap over stuff that arrives really quickly.
In certain ways, Amazon is already a lot like Shein and Temu. All three platforms rely on some of the same factories and merchants in China to manufacture products. When Temu launched, in the fall of 2022, I reported that it was selling electronics from at least a handful of the same Chinese suppliers that Amazon used. As of this past December, there was a roughly 10 percent overlap between Temu sellers and Amazon sellers, according to the technology-investment consulting firm Tech Buzz China. When I did quick searches on Shein and Amazon earlier this week, I found that the same Chinese merchants were offering a number of identical products on both sites, including dog toys shaped like Stanley cups and pink memory-foam slippers. But on Shein, they were a few bucks cheaper. If the products are the same, why are Amazon’s prices higher?
The most fundamental explanation is that when customers buy things on Amazon, part of what they are paying for is the quick delivery. That speed is possible because Amazon has poured billions into building warehouses and other logistics infrastructure in the United States. Fast shipping is a convenience that comes at a cost. In other contexts, consumers understand and accept the trade-off they’re making for convenience, however begrudgingly. Most of us get that part of why buying a sandwich at the airport is expensive is because it's faster and easier than packing one at home before a flight.
On Amazon, the trade-offs are less clear: The items tend to be cheaper than at your local store, after all. But what Amazon didn’t anticipate is that consumers would eventually be given appealing options that come directly from the source.
by Louise Matsakis, The Atlantic | Read more:
Image: Paul Spella/The Atlantic; Sources: Getty.
[ed. This is news? I've got a Prime account and can't remember the last time I actually got 2-day shipping (and I live an hour and a half from Seattle). Maybe you need to regularly complain to get on a priority list or something. Re: Temu. Everyone I've talked to that's ordered from them has been happy with the products they've received; others who haven't all cite the same reservation: ie., giving personal information to China. And that's worse than giving it all to Amazon?]