Quote:
Originally Posted by Dr. Spivey
Some sellers use an algorithm to set prices. It tracks other sellers and as supply diminishes, price increases. Some sellers will go back and lower the price eventually, to sell the last item. Others use the high price as a place holder. If more of the same item become available for sale, they just have to lower the price, rather than relist the item.
Amazon dictates a minimum shipping rate, per item, on third party sales. Either something is a deal or it isn't. Don't fixate on what percentage of the price is "shipping". For instance, lots of used books and cds are priced at .99 or 1.99 with 3.99 shipping. The sellers are obviously using the mandatory shipping rates as part of their profit margin. So what?
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Well, that's why I say "no thanks" instead of making the purchase
I'm talking about items that I think are worth it at the price (let's say, a used paperback book for $5.99), and I don't mind paying $3.99 or whatever for shipping (repeat,
shipping). But if I'm buying 5 copies from the same seller, who has multiple copies available, I'm not paying $20 for shipping on one package in addition to the $30 in books, which is what has happened to me before when I change the quantity of the order (that's the part where I say "no thanks" and just do without or find another seller because it's no longer a good deal). This has only occurred with some 3rd party sellers for me, not all. Shipping should be shipping, not part of the cost of the item itself.