• IN PERSON
    IN PERSON
  • ON CAMPUS
    ON CAMPUS
  • IN BUSINESS
    IN BUSINESS
  • ON TARGET
    ON TARGET
INFO

Founded by Professor Freddy Tran Nager, Atomic Tango is an L.A.-based marketing-and-media firm that fuses creativity and strategy to stir the imagination and leave the competition shaken.

INQUIRIES
Atomic Tango
11301 W. Olympic Boulevard #445
Los Angeles, California 90064-1653
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn

All site contents ©2022 Atomic Tango LLC
Made in Los Angeles

CONTACT INFORMATION
River Street, Blue Building
5690-970 New York City
+1 234 567 890
9-13 & 14-19
hello@verve.com
LATEST TWEETS

Could not authenticate you.
  • IN PERSON
    IN PERSON
  • ON CAMPUS
    ON CAMPUS
  • IN BUSINESS
    IN BUSINESS
  • ON TARGET
    ON TARGET
logo
To Blog

Alexa, How Truly Good Was Amazon’s Prime Day? No, Really

July 21, 2019
-
Marketing
-
No comments
-
Posted by Freddy Tran Nager

by Freddy Tran Nager, Founder of Atomic Tango + long-time Amazon customer and questioner…

I’m reading Amazon’s press release about its Prime Day results (“Alexa, How Good Was Prime Day?”), and though it sounds impressive — “sales surpassed the previous Black Friday and Cyber Monday combined” — it left me wanting to know more.

Unfortunately, I don’t have an Alexa, so if you do, would you please ask her (him/it/whatever) the following?

Alexa, how many Prime Day purchases were simply shifted from other parts of the year?

In other words, instead of buying on an ordinary day, did consumers hold off until Prime Day? For example, how were sales the day after Prime Day?

Alexa, how profitable is Prime Day compared to other days?

Not only are Amazon’s product prices lower on Prime Day, but operational costs are likely higher as well. Amazon workers go on “mandatory overtime” to pack and ship the 175 million items sold worldwide.

Alexa, I hear Prime Day’s real purpose is to compel consumers to sign up for Prime memberships at $119 each. While Amazon claims more membership registrations on those two Prime Day days than on any other — yay, cash flow! — how profitable is that in the long run?

Prime membership includes infinite free shipping, discounts at Whole Foods, plus access to all of Amazon’s high-cost Hollywood entertainment, just to name a few perks. (I’m sounding like an ad here, but I don’t work for Amazon or own any of their stock.) Now, as a consumer, I love all that, but as a business analyst, I crave insights. Is Prime truly profitable, or mostly a customer-loyalty play?

Alexa, speaking of Hollywood, when will Amazon’s Lord Of The Rings series be released?

Just asking for a nerd friend.

Tags
Amazonecommerceretail
PREVIOUS POST
Shoes? Fine. Box? Hell Yeah!
NEXT POST
Under The Influence At The Washington Post (An Interview)

Freddy Tran Nager

Let’s hear it for uncommon sense: that inner itch that inspires us to stray from the herd, ditch the training wheels, and leap into the fast lane. After all, it’s the risk takers who get featured and interviewed. No one ever remembers who won “honorable mention.” And in today’s saturated marketspaces, the greatest risk is taking no risk at all.

So whether you’re seeking enlightenment or just entertainment, pull up an Eames, pour yourself a cold one, and enjoythe latest uncommon sense — and our 2 cents — from Atomic Tango Founder & Professor Freddy Tran Nager and friends. Our 300+ posts are sometimes serious, satirical, skeptical, even silly, but never stale.

Subscribe To Our Free Newsletter
Don't miss a beat — subscribe to the Atomic Tango Marketing Forensics newsletter. From case studies to critical analysis, each issue goes behind the hype to reveal what’s new, what’s noteworthy, and what’s nonsense in marketing and media — plus,mandatory martini recipes. No fees. No commitments. No regrets. All good stuff. Note: you must be over 18 to subscribe.
Follow Atomic Tango On Twitter

Invalid or expired token.

Leave a Comment

Your feedback is valuable for us. Your email will not be published.
Cancel Reply

Please wait...
Submit Comment →

Related News

Other posts that you should not miss

All Hail The Early Adopters: 4 Reasons To Thank The Fanatics

October 15, 2011
-
Posted by Freddy Tran Nager
by Freddy J. Nager, Founder of Atomic Tango LLC + Moderate Fanboy It’s predictable: Apple releases a new product, and the devout start camping out at the Temple O’ Jobs to be one of the first to lay their hands upon it. And just as predictably, people will ridicule these fanatics, usually with aspersions about […]
Read More →
Marketing
4 MIN READ
Supreme Brick

Sometimes The Product Is Just An Excuse: When Brands Come First

February 20, 2015
-
Posted by Freddy Tran Nager
by Freddy Tran Nager, Founder of Atomic Tango + Branding Enthusiast; Supreme Brick image via top-brands-shopping on eBay… In the marketing version of chicken-and-egg, we marketers love to debate which should come first:
Read More →
Marketing
8 MIN READ
zombie economy

Retail’s Return From The Dead: Signs Of The Zombie Economy — Or Reports Of Deaths That Were Greatly Exaggerated?

December 27, 2017
-
Posted by Freddy Tran Nager
by Freddy Tran Nager, Founder of Atomic Tango + Guy Who Did A Fair Amount Of Shopping This Xmas; Photo by Daniel Jensen on Unsplash… Just this summer, many “experts” proclaimed the death of American brick-and-mortar retail, and that Amazon would eat everyone’s lunch. When Amazon subsequently bought Whole Foods (make that “organic free-range lunch”), […]
Read More →
Marketing
3 MIN READ
NEWSLETTER
Subscribe for free advice and attitude about marketing, media, and other mischief.
LATEST POSTS
  • January 24, 2019
    What’s The Deal With Influencer Marketing? The Complete Interview
  • May 26, 2021
    Apocalyptic Prose And Poetry: An Unexpected Zombie Treat
  • February 1, 2021
    Micro-Raving: A Saga Of Brand Prejudice And User Experience Gone Wrong
  • January 16, 2021
    “Did You Hear…?” How Musicians Can Leverage Word Of Mouth
CONNECT

All site contents ©2022 Atomic Tango LLC

Made in Los Angeles
Alexa, How Truly Good Was Amazon’s Prime Day? No, Really - Atomic Tango - Creative Strategy For The New Marketspace