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Amazon’s desperate Video On Demand promotions

Posted on 2010-06-28 By Jon No Comments on Amazon’s desperate Video On Demand promotions

Last night I was surfing Amazon MP3 for some new music, nothing exciting really.  While extremely rare, I decided to splurge and buy an entire album.  Before I had even begun the track downloads, I had a new email from Amazon.  To be exact, it was an email stating:

Your recent order entitles you to a promotional code that you can apply on your next qualifying order.

Now, I get these promotion emails on a fairly regular basis from Amazon, but this one caught my eye.  Since I spent more than $7.99 on Amazon MP3, I have received a $4.00 promotional code towards

Amazon Video On Demand.  I have not used VOD and I have no intention of doing so.  If I’m going to spend money on something, either it is a service (like internet access) or a tangible product.  MP3s are tangible in my book, but streaming on demand is not, so I will not buy it.

That being what it is, $4 from an $8 order (granted mine was $10) is a 50% kick back.  While this isn’t the largest credit I’ve gotten, it certainly is the highest percentage.  The last promotional code I received was $5 in MP3s for a $60 video game.  I like the credits that stay in the same categories (new video game gets you a discount on a future game or game related purchase), but I seem to get a lot of them for their Video On Demand service.  Maybe I’m misreading it, but I think there is desperation in Amazon’s pushing of VOD.

Maybe they need to be desperate.  Maybe they are having a hard time selling you something (say Fringe Season 2 in HD) you don’t own for $47.99, when you can actually own it (Fringe Season 2 on Blu Ray) for $48.99.  As much as it pains me to say this, I’d rather use iTunes for my video needs.  At least that way I have the content on my own hard drive (though having it DRM’d isn’t of much use).

Stupid Companies Tags:amazon, blu ray, credit, DRM, Fringe, itunes, mp3, promotion, tv series, video on demand, vod

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