My commentary on AmazonFail
Apr. 13th, 2009 09:34 pmI don't like to think of this as belated. I like to be one of those people who lets thoughts stew and not to write things from a position of kneejerkiness.
I think I'm ready to make a statement on this, since there's response from Amazon out there. As infuriating as this was, having been in positions of having to address a problem that was going to take more work to solve than it did to create, I was totally willing to wait and see how Amazon responded, how transparent they were in their explanation of the problem, and so on, before making a decision as to whether I would continue to shop with them.
I should say-- I very rarely purchase from Amazon as it is. I like to buy my books in person. I mainly purchase books from Amazon.co.uk when something isn't in print on this side of the pond, or I purchase gifts to be delivered directly to the giftee.
Right now, assuming nothing changes, I have decided that I will not be shopping with them anymore.
Why?
Because Amazon's approach in responding to the problem is completely unacceptable.
I am the kind of person who likes to trust people. I take what people say at face value and assume they are not lying. So I am operating on the assumption that the issue is exactly what Amazon claims it was-- a mistake.
But when you make mistakes, you apologize-- to your authors, whose sales may have been hurt and who spent what might have been a holiday weekend for them frantically wondering what they had done wrong to have their rank stripped. And to your customers, who might have been trying to find a particular book and ended up frustrated or confused. To everyone who spent the weekend angry and upset and feeling disenfranchised over a mistake. Those people deserve an apology.
They do not deserve a statement-- a statement, mind, that has not been posted publicly on Amazon's own site, or blog, or even in their press releases, which seem gleefully oblivious to the fact that there is a problem at all in spite of the fact that every major news source has written on the subject by now-- that basically boils down to saying "oh, we made a mistake, and by the way, it wasn't JUST the gay books that were bahleeted."
The way it's worded sounds almost accusatory. It makes it sound as if they are saying that those of us who were upset over the exclusion of gay and lesbian books and books about disabled sexuality should STFU because other people got excluded, too. And you know? No. It just means that those other people who might have escaped notice have a right to be upset as well. You do not, intentionally or unintentionally, disenfranchise a group of people who have been systematically disenfranchised their entire lives and then tell them that they're overreacted because other people got disenfranchised, too.
No. This is totally the wrong response. This does not restore my confidence in Amazon.
If they want to do this right, they will have a public apology. They will realize that this is more important than the release of Kindle 2.0 and they will replace that graphic with an apology. A real apology where they actually apologize. They will have a press release in their press releases, and a blog post in their blog. They will fucking man up and own up that they did something wrong that hurt people.
This is the kind of response I expect from the Olde Tyme Maw and Paw Dairy when they accidentally don't sell milk from their gay cows one weekend, not from one of the biggest internet companies in the world, who should understand what this kind of customer response means.
Let me also just say that I don't think an official statement has been released at all in any kind of press release sense-- all the newspapers are quoting the same exact letter Amazon sent to my email address after I complained this weekend upon hearing about this issue. And the more in-depth explanations I've seen ("It was a French dude, lol!") are all coming from FORMER Amazon employees, not current ones. Dude, Amazon. Is that how you're playing this? Getting a guy who's no longer with you to dish so you don't have to respond in an official capacity?
Not fucking cool.
At this point, Amazon would have to do something amazing, like send a free GLBT-friendly book to every user with an account for me to consider purchasing with them again. I'm glad some more Kindle-competitors are coming onto the market, because that's the only thing they sell that I'd really miss.
ETA: For those of you who didn't write to Amazon and who are wondering what the letter says,
( It was totally that French dude. )
I think I'm ready to make a statement on this, since there's response from Amazon out there. As infuriating as this was, having been in positions of having to address a problem that was going to take more work to solve than it did to create, I was totally willing to wait and see how Amazon responded, how transparent they were in their explanation of the problem, and so on, before making a decision as to whether I would continue to shop with them.
I should say-- I very rarely purchase from Amazon as it is. I like to buy my books in person. I mainly purchase books from Amazon.co.uk when something isn't in print on this side of the pond, or I purchase gifts to be delivered directly to the giftee.
Right now, assuming nothing changes, I have decided that I will not be shopping with them anymore.
Why?
Because Amazon's approach in responding to the problem is completely unacceptable.
I am the kind of person who likes to trust people. I take what people say at face value and assume they are not lying. So I am operating on the assumption that the issue is exactly what Amazon claims it was-- a mistake.
But when you make mistakes, you apologize-- to your authors, whose sales may have been hurt and who spent what might have been a holiday weekend for them frantically wondering what they had done wrong to have their rank stripped. And to your customers, who might have been trying to find a particular book and ended up frustrated or confused. To everyone who spent the weekend angry and upset and feeling disenfranchised over a mistake. Those people deserve an apology.
They do not deserve a statement-- a statement, mind, that has not been posted publicly on Amazon's own site, or blog, or even in their press releases, which seem gleefully oblivious to the fact that there is a problem at all in spite of the fact that every major news source has written on the subject by now-- that basically boils down to saying "oh, we made a mistake, and by the way, it wasn't JUST the gay books that were bahleeted."
The way it's worded sounds almost accusatory. It makes it sound as if they are saying that those of us who were upset over the exclusion of gay and lesbian books and books about disabled sexuality should STFU because other people got excluded, too. And you know? No. It just means that those other people who might have escaped notice have a right to be upset as well. You do not, intentionally or unintentionally, disenfranchise a group of people who have been systematically disenfranchised their entire lives and then tell them that they're overreacted because other people got disenfranchised, too.
No. This is totally the wrong response. This does not restore my confidence in Amazon.
If they want to do this right, they will have a public apology. They will realize that this is more important than the release of Kindle 2.0 and they will replace that graphic with an apology. A real apology where they actually apologize. They will have a press release in their press releases, and a blog post in their blog. They will fucking man up and own up that they did something wrong that hurt people.
This is the kind of response I expect from the Olde Tyme Maw and Paw Dairy when they accidentally don't sell milk from their gay cows one weekend, not from one of the biggest internet companies in the world, who should understand what this kind of customer response means.
Let me also just say that I don't think an official statement has been released at all in any kind of press release sense-- all the newspapers are quoting the same exact letter Amazon sent to my email address after I complained this weekend upon hearing about this issue. And the more in-depth explanations I've seen ("It was a French dude, lol!") are all coming from FORMER Amazon employees, not current ones. Dude, Amazon. Is that how you're playing this? Getting a guy who's no longer with you to dish so you don't have to respond in an official capacity?
Not fucking cool.
At this point, Amazon would have to do something amazing, like send a free GLBT-friendly book to every user with an account for me to consider purchasing with them again. I'm glad some more Kindle-competitors are coming onto the market, because that's the only thing they sell that I'd really miss.
ETA: For those of you who didn't write to Amazon and who are wondering what the letter says,
( It was totally that French dude. )