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Businesses

Amazon Slips To 4th in Global Shopping App Installs Amid Rise of International Brands (geekwire.com) 20

Amazon's leading position in U.S. e-commerce is well-documented, but the latest global rankings for app installs show the potential for newer brands to upend the online shopping juggernaut. From a report: The tech giant ranked fourth globally in shopping app installations for 2021, according to new data from Apptopia. Amazon topped the worldwide ranking last year, as measured by the real-time competitive intelligence platform. Three e-commerce companies leapfrogged Amazon in the global rankings: Shopee, based in Singapore, which serves Southeast Asia and Latin America; Shein, based in China, a leader in "fast fashion;" and Meesho, based in India, which specializes in social e-commerce for categories including fashion and home products. Amazon is still first in Apptopia's U.S. rankings for shopping app installs in 2021. Responding to regulators in the U.S. and elsewhere, Amazon executives have repeatedly made the case that the company's small share of the global retail market, including online and offline sales, falls short of the market power that would warrant aggressive antitrust action. However, as of a few months ago, Amazon was expected to account for more than 40% of U.S. e-commerce sales in 2021, according to eMarketer.
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Amazon Slips To 4th in Global Shopping App Installs Amid Rise of International Brands

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  • by zuckie13 ( 1334005 ) on Thursday December 30, 2021 @10:29AM (#62127943)

    Is this new downloads, includes version updates,etc.?
    Did not obviously see that info in the linked article, or the source it references.

    • Is this new downloads, includes version updates,etc.? Did not obviously see that info in the linked article, or the source it references.

      The number of application installations is increasing, as the number of smartphone users increases. Same in Vietnam. And here is an example https://bit.ly/3n5g9Wv [bit.ly]

  • It’s a shit shopping app.

    Duh people don’t want to use it. I hate using Amazon mobile website and their app is even worse.

    That’s not even talking about the dick at the head of Amazon people are starting to dislike in droves.

    • It’s a shit shopping app.

      Duh people don’t want to use it. I hate using Amazon mobile website and their app is even worse.

      That’s not even talking about the dick at the head of Amazon people are starting to dislike in droves.

      Either that, or.... America really is only a tiny percentage of the world's population.

      Did you even bother to look at what the other apps were? They have words like "Asia", "India", "South America" in them.

      Probably confusing...

    • by fyngyrz ( 762201 )

      It’s a shit shopping app.

      It is. They have pretty much the worst search on the web (Pinterest is also in the running, though); results are filled with complete irrelevancies, and often don't turn up items with the exact keywords you enter at all.

      In addition, Amazon Prime no longer means you get quick shipping; shipping times are extended way out, and there are rarely (if ever) options to get something from them in a hurry. Which really sucks when you're ordering items like hospital bed sheets, CPAP mas

  • Poor proxy (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Comboman ( 895500 ) on Thursday December 30, 2021 @11:35AM (#62128079)

    App installs is a poor proxy for the popularity of a shopping site. Lots of people already have the Amazon app installed and don't need to reinstall it. Lots more people just use the website. Lots of people get tricked into installing a shopping app and then never use it. I know this is a radical concept but maybe use total sales to track how popular a shopping site is?

    • It's bizarre that somebody saw a point in writing this article, or that it would up on ./

      Here is an actual article that lists revenue and market caps:

      https://axiomq.com/blog/8-larg... [axiomq.com]

      I thought the big Chinese sites had outstripped amazon. Not so.

  • by Comboman ( 895500 ) on Thursday December 30, 2021 @11:41AM (#62128093)

    Responding to regulators in the U.S. and elsewhere, Amazon executives have repeatedly made the case that the company's small share of the global retail market, including online and offline sales, falls short of the market power that would warrant aggressive antitrust action.

    That's not how anti-trust works. U.S. regulators regulate the U.S. market, not the global market. AT&T had little presence outside the U.S. when it was broken up by anti-trust.

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