There's No 'Drop' In Comparison Shopping Online
My mum would love the whole idea of comparison online shopping.
She had shopping till you drop down to a fine art. I grew up in
the country and shopping where there was more than one shop was
a pretty rare experience. On those rare times she shopped, we
dropped. I dreaded it.
A shopping expedition to the city happened maybe two or three
times a year. The day began with a three-hour journey timed to
hit the shops before opening time so that a full day could be
had doing what had to be done. There were different categories
of shopping that had to be accomplished in the day.
At one level there was the grocery shopping; usually a mad rush
at the end of the day filling the boot of the car with long-life
bulk stuff for the storeroom. Much of the goods had to share the
back seat with us three kids. But the other categories were the
killers. To my mum, shopping meant going into one shop and
looking at stuff, trying on the clothes for fit and look,
checking out the brands, picking it up and touching it, but not
buying there just in case the shop down the street had better
stuff at a better price. So we'd all have to dutifully march to
that next shop. She didn't buy there either because she still
had another shop to look in, just to compare their stuff.
Ironically, it seems that any purchases that were finally made
were at the first shop, so we all traipsed back to the first
shop after we've been to the others. She is the ultimate
comparison shopper.
It didn't necessarily stop there either. Sometimes the item she
looked at in the first shop was gone by the time she got back,
so we were then forced to follow the trail again and be happy
with the lesser selection. This was the practice with clothes
shopping, home wares shopping or entertainment shopping. The
other category was personal services such as hairdressing.
Usually this was a waiting game, where we waited on a street
corner for what seemed like hours on end for my mum to show up
with new hair some time considerably later than what was
originally promised.
None of this is my idea of shopping. My idea of shopping is to decide
what you want go to one place, suck the sales guy's brains out
and then beat him down with a very large stick until you got the
best price. And if you choose to ignore all marketing messages
around that particular product category for, say two weeks or so
after, then buyer's remorse doesn't even get a look in.
Of course comparison
shopping online takes all of the pain away for any shopper
like my mum. Just about everything you can ever imagine that's
on sale anywhere can be looked at, compared and priced with a
single mouse click or two. Okay, so you can't try the clothes
on. But you can at least see where your fashion taste might lie
before you start trekking from one end of Collins Street to the
other and back again. You can see who's going to offer you the
kind of service you might like. And because any good online
shopping mall rates independent shopper's feedback on the
products and vendors they feature, you can get a good sense of
who's not up to par. And no one drops from exertion.
And for shoppers like me, you don't even have to get physical.
In fact you don't even need to set eyes on the sales guy, you
can be anonymous and still get the business done. It's
beautiful. I can see the TV ads already...let your mouse do the
clicking.