They are not competitively priced, they under cut everyone. Thats not being competitive.
As a customer, this is pretty much exactly what competitive means for most products.
When choosing energy suppliers, most people and businesses choose the cheapest, because its a commodity. 8 energy suppliers have closed down this year, because there is no margin and SSE/Npower have just scrapped their planned merger.
There is no possible way a high street shop can compete with them on price and that is all some customers look at.
Depends what your selling and to who, many shops are doing well.
They can sell some of the same items i sell at less than my ex VAT cost price, other items i've looked at they can only be making 10-50p per item, but that is enough for them selling thousands a day, but not for a high street shop selling 10-20 a day. I understand they have buying power, but that is only part of it, they are happy making less profit per item and using their grey area tax arrangements.
As you don't know their buying price and margins, this is just guess work. Given that Amazon is highly profitable, they're making money somewhere.
I would like to know some ideas to attract habitual amazon shoppers apart from the obvious stay open 24/7 (or just longer hours) and have an online shop offering free next day shipping. These 2 ideas aren't really feasible for many.
No, these wont help you compete with Amazon, you can't out Amazon them. You need to think differently.
As a customer I see shops empty on weekday mornings, with bored staff doing nothing, and yet at 6pm, when I've got time to shop, the shops are closed.
If I was a retailer I wouldn't consider opening before midday and would probably not bother to open Monday to Wednesday either. (as a shop at least)
What if your competitor is buying at £6 and selling at £7.50 inc VAT instead of £29.99? How would you compete then?
Unless you're selling a commodity, when people don't only buy the cheapest.
Otherwise Mercedes, BMW, Audi and just about every other car company would be out of business, along with clothes brands, and just about every other brand.