It’ll
be interesting to see how one of Amazon’s new (well, ish) business models plays
out. I’m talking Amazon Locker, the ordering option that, instead of having
your purchases delivered to your front door, allows you to designate a secure
locker (well, I assume it’s secure) in some location that’s presumably
convenient, and you can go there to pick it up.
I
get it that there are issues around packages left on people’s doorsteps—big
enough issues that Amazon has another
delivery option for you: Amazon Key. With Amazon Key, if you’re a Prime
customer (and I don’t know why you’d order more than twice without being a
Prime customer), you can install an Amazon-provided digital lock on your front
door. When you have a delivery, the Amazon-authorized delivery person goes
through some sort of authentication process and then is able to open your door
and leave the package inside your house. You, of course, can follow all this
via an Amazon Key app on your mobile phone.
(I’m
seriously not wild about this, primarily because of the third-party delivery
services ranging from—at best—FedEx, to—at worse—USPS, who delivers the
last-mile for UPS in many cases, and does all Saturday/Sunday deliveries. Well,
I suppose there’s one possibility even worse than USPS; that would be DHL. But
I’m leaving them out of the equation. My point is, these are contractors or
sub-contractors, and I would not want them inside my house under any
circumstance. I also don’t see how Amazon can guarantee against theft in these
conditions. We’re basically talking a TSA-baggage handler finger pointing ring
of non-accountability. So, no.)
Well,
okay, back to Locker. I bring it up because for me the whole point of paying
for home delivery is, you know, home delivery. As in: delivery to my actual
home. Not some locker somewhere I have to drive, park, find, unlock, schlep to
my car, drive home and then again schlep from my car to my house. For me, it
ain’t “delivery” unless it’s delivered.
(I became a big Amazon consumer when I lived in a third-floor walk-up in the
Valley They Call Silicon. Other things being equal, I’d much rather the UPS guy
carry the laser printer, office chair and 40 pounds of bird seed up two flights
of stairs instead of me.)
This
is especially an issue in urban environments, like the Metro DC area. Just in
the Greater Reston-Herndon Metroplex in Fairfax County, going two miles can
take 15 to 30 minutes, depending on time of day, high school sporting events,
weather and other variables. I don’t see why I should do the work I’m paying
Amazon to do. (I also avoid the self-serve supermarket checkout lanes for the
same reason. You’re not giving me a discount for doing that, so I’m not doing
it.)
Case
in point: I saw this one at the Whole Foods store in Vienna, which is about 25
minutes away from me on a Saturday morning with no football games or Christmas fairs.
Let
me just say that there is absolutely no value proposition around making me
drive to Vienna at any time to pick up a package of cute socks, or an Italian
fountain pen, or 40 pounds of bird seed.
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