The golden age of DVD online sales
Posted: Sat Sep 22, 2007 3:17 am
Can anybody remember the dawn of both online shopping and the DVD format?
I ask because prices were insanely cheap - Amazon and others, such as the long since bankrupt DVDExpress would be in competition with each other and regularly offer discounts of 50%-60% on new titles. You often could apply promotional codes to these discounts too!
Plus, the pound was strong against the dollar then from my own point of view (it sort of went ga-ga for a while after Black Wednesday) - I sometimes got discs for free or for the stupidly low price of £4-6 each. Amazon.Com sent me Braveheart on DVD simply because it was the most requested disc to be released and.... actually I don't know why really. But I got it. Free.
But those days didn't last. When online shopping was new, the shops thought if they hooked you in, you would become a loyal customer. But then price comparison sites started up, and they realised nobody would be loyal online. (Saying that, I do have a strong loyalty to Amazon because they have always treated me right).
Sadly, those "golden days" got me addicted to buying DVDs. Even when the price shot up, I bought just as many.
Curse you, "Golden Days" of DVD buying! And Curse you God for making me this way! It's your fault I have so many round, shiny, discs.
I ask because prices were insanely cheap - Amazon and others, such as the long since bankrupt DVDExpress would be in competition with each other and regularly offer discounts of 50%-60% on new titles. You often could apply promotional codes to these discounts too!
Plus, the pound was strong against the dollar then from my own point of view (it sort of went ga-ga for a while after Black Wednesday) - I sometimes got discs for free or for the stupidly low price of £4-6 each. Amazon.Com sent me Braveheart on DVD simply because it was the most requested disc to be released and.... actually I don't know why really. But I got it. Free.
But those days didn't last. When online shopping was new, the shops thought if they hooked you in, you would become a loyal customer. But then price comparison sites started up, and they realised nobody would be loyal online. (Saying that, I do have a strong loyalty to Amazon because they have always treated me right).
Sadly, those "golden days" got me addicted to buying DVDs. Even when the price shot up, I bought just as many.
Curse you, "Golden Days" of DVD buying! And Curse you God for making me this way! It's your fault I have so many round, shiny, discs.