This is NOT a post about grammar — or punctuation. It’s a post about complaints. Mine. Now maybe I have simply become a whiny old lady who complains about everything. Or maybe I am just whining so you don’t have to!
In any case, because of a reader request, next week I will be writing about quotation marks and their mysteries. And I would like to thank the people who wrote to me with blog post suggestions: Some said to repeat some old posts for newbie (or forgetful) readers. Okay. Some offered to write guest posts. Okay. And some offered suggestions for blog topics. Okay. Thank you all!
Now back to Amazon. There are really two Amazons: First, there is the Amazon that we (most of us) buy things from. For us writers, there is also the Amazon that publishes our books and pays us. I will deal with each separately.
Amazon, until a few months ago, had a publishing arm called CreateSpace, which published (and offered other services such as book design) print books. Kindle has always taken care of the e-books. CreateSpace had great customer service. Enter your phone number, and they would immediately call you, 24/7. Bye, bye, CreateSpace. Why? Who knows? I believe the reason given was better customer service (HA!). So we all had to migrate our books over to Kindle — before they had debugged everything. Customer service? Not 24/7. You have to wait until 6 a.m., and then they close around 5 p.m.
Then, there is this thing called AMS, Amazon Marketing Services. That is how one advertises books on Amazon. There used to be two kinds of ads: Display ads showed the book cover when someone was reading on a Kindle. I think the minimum cost for one of those ads was $100, and I don’t think they were effective. They are now being canceled. Then there are the “sponsored ads.” What the author does is choose keywords someone may use to find his or her book. Or any keywords that might apply to someone interested in a book like yours. So for me, grammar, grammar book, grammar workbook, commas, punctuation, etc., might be good keywords. But they say to have hundreds of keywords to improve your sales: titles and author names of competitor books, for example. For each ad (one book per ad), you pick the dates you want the ad to run and the maximum amount you want to spend each day. Then, you give each keyword a monetary bid amount. The more competition for that keyword, the higher your bid has to be for your book to be shown when someone types in that keyword. Well, this is all fine, but they just changed the reporting system. You used to be easily able to see how many times each keyword was shown, and how many people clicked on your book when they saw it. This would tell you which keywords were not working or which keywords might need a higher bid. And it was easy to press a button and pause a keyword, which meant it was out of the ad campaign until you pressed a button to put it back in. Well, with the new program, you need four or five clicks and the knowledge to figure out what to click before you can see how your specific keywords are doing. A definite minus for us writers. Then, they have come up with a recommended bid amount that is generally higher than you would give a keyword. I think AMS is likely becoming very popular, and Amazon is now raking in the dough from it. More people using it, higher bids necessary. Want help? You can e-mail. Or, you pick your issue from a drop-down menu and then you apparently can put in your phone number for that immediate call. But no matter which issue you choose, you get a message that phone help isn’t available for that issue. Why hire more help? Bezos must not have enough money.
I haven’t as much to say about the buying end of Amazon. It is pretty good. It is very good. However, they have raised the price of Amazon Prime — and sometimes it takes longer than the promised two days, which is why you got Prime in the first place. And if it is late — I am not talking about items that you know beforehand take longer to get, but the ones that just don’t arrive in time — you get nothing for waiting.
Now, in defense of Amazon, I love Amazon! I buy all kinds of things from Amazon. More important, if it were not for Amazon selling my books, I would be living in a cardboard box on the side of the river. So I am very grateful to Amazon (they pay on time too) for getting my books out there.
More complaints? Oh, little ones.
I was in the grocery store the other day. One of the big ones I rarely go to, but I needed a few things the other stores I go to (Target and Trader Joe’s) don’t have. There were a few lines open with very long lines. There was no express line. There were, however, two Self-Service lines that were completely empty because NO ONE WANTS TO USE THEM!!!!! Doesn’t the store get it? Their clientele doesn’t want to use the self serve. I waited; the woman in back of me put her stuff down and left. I mentioned this to the checkout clerk and surprisingly he said, “I know. I have talked to my boss about it, but they don’t do anything.”
But before you even go into the store, you have to park your car. Some years ago, cars got smaller. Then, in response to the glut of smaller cars, many of the parking lots repainted the spaces and made them small. Now, everyone and his or her mother has an SUV or a pickup truck. The spaces are still, however, the same size. Annoying.
I promise this is my last complaint: Target. I am in Target a lot. It started many years ago, when I would go twice a month for toiletries, cleaning things, food — most everything. Then, it seems I started going weekly. Now, I am sure I am there multiple times a week. I have spent untold thousands of dollars at Target. And ever since a new Target was built in my city, things have changed at all the Targets. At first they told me there was a distribution issue at my Target. But it is everywhere: Why are the shelves bare? Why do they never have, week after week, something I am looking for? Oh, they still carry it, but the shelf is empty. I have also had to return things there. The protein bars I buy there apparently are fragile in hot weather. I have had to return them for the chocolate covering being all white and disgusting. Last time, they simply tasted really bad, and I feared I had given myself food poisoning from them. And I just had to return a mascara that was so old and sticky, I couldn’t get the brush back into the container once I took it out. Thankfully, they are very good about taking returns!
I think I am now done complaining. Next week: quotation marks
And thank you to the Rotary Club in San Rafael I spoke to this past week. Great audience for my “Fun with Words” talk!
ri says
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to obtain latest updates, therefore where can i do it please help
out.
Arlene Miller says
If you are interested in subscribing to the weekly blog posts, go to the home page and click on Subscribe: http://www.TheGrammarDiva.com
Steve Vasta says
Whatever store had the self-service checkouts may not realize _why_ people don’t want to use them.
Early versions of the machines only took credit and debit cards — no cash — or, if they did take cash, they were limited in the amount of change they could make.
I was reluctant at first to use the self-serve lines at CVS, which has them in all its stores now. Once I realized that (a) they take cash if you want to use it, and (b) they make any kind of change, and precisely, I had no hesitation.
The store’s management may want to look into this. (Of course, the managers probably aren’t reading either your blog or its comments!)
Arlene Miller says
Thanks for the comment. I am one of those people who refuse to use the self-checkout, including the one at the library. I assume many people don’t use them for the same reason I don’t: we don’t like change. The clientele at the grocery store was older. My daughter doesn’t hesitate to use the self-checkout the way I do. First, I don’t want to try to figure it out. Second, the prices are not low, so why should I do the work because the store is too cheap to hire people? Third, I like to interact with people, not machines. Same with the library. I want to interact with humans. I live alone and work alone. Also at the library, certain books won’t work with self-checkout, so why waste the time?
Scott says
Amusing rant! Perspective: call to mind all the people around the world who would love to have our comfortable, little Amazon frustrations in life. War zones to oppressive governments. It’s a privilege to be able to focus on things like grammatical shortfalls, Amazon and Target annoyances. (Should that last comma be a semicolon?) 😆
Arlene Miller says
Your comma is correct, and thank you for the perspective! You are correct. I guess it is the Maslow hierarchy of complaints! If you have nothing important to rant about, you rant about lesser things. 🙂 I could complain about more significant things — but not in this public forum!
Scott says
I really appreciate your grammar blog and it was thoroughly enjoyable to read your off point rant! You’re human! And that’s a good thing.
Arlene Miller says
Thank you! I promise I will not rant again for a while!
Steve Vasta says
I’d have added the ever-popular (or not) “Oxford comma,” but that’s just me (or I).
Arlene Miller says
The Oxford comma is always popular with me! I guess it is “that’s just I,” but t sounds ridiculous!
Babs says
First-world problems. Life is rough.
Arlene Miller says
True! As the above comment suggests! I am lucky that is what I am complaining about….
Earl Wood says
Always enjoy your column. I share your concerns re: Amazon and the big retail stores. We have the same problem in my area. I am already on your mailing list another server. Having problems currently with that server so am using my Yahoo account for the comments. Keep up the Good Work!
Arlene Miller says
Thank you! Glad you enjoy!
Thonie M Hevron says
Ditto to what Laura said! Very entertaining!
Arlene Miller says
Thanks, Thonie!
JimS says
Parking space size is often the result of zoning and attempts to adjust our behavior. Often electric charging stations are also in prime parking spots. Another example is certain vehicles permitted car pool lane use. Space size is supposed to encourage behavior.
When Yardbirds was built on Bicentennial, there were a large number of handicap spaces and small vehicle spaces. At that time, the primary patrons of the business were contractors; drivers of large vehicles and usually not handicapped individuals. It was miserable.
There are many examples like this. Air Gas on Piner has only one parking space because they have mandated handicap parking. Again, there may well be handicapped welders out there but I have yet to see the space legitimately use d there. The entrances into many parking lots is too small for averaged sized vehicles as well.
Arlene Miller says
Thank you for the comment and additional information. I remember when they redrew the spaces in parking lots to make them smaller for the “subcompact cars.” And of course we need handicapped spaces, but they are often completely empty — for example in the Kohl’s parking lot in Petaluma. Regarding design encouraging behavior, it doesn’t always work. They built 101 with two lanes, trying to encourage use of carpooling and public transportation (except there wasn’t any). Well, what we got was massive traffic from Sonoma to Marin county. They are widening, and when they finish, it still won’t be wide enough.
Brenda Bellinger says
Great post Arlene! I especially appreciate your info on the publishing/marketing side of Amazon.
Arlene Miller says
Thank you so much!
Donna Autrey says
I too enjoyed the rant, and it was done with perfect grammer. I would rant about the imperfect grammer in the news paper!
Arlene Miller says
Thank you so much, Donna! Glad you enjoyed it 🙂
Laura McHale Holland says
Good on you, Arlene. Sometimes a gal just has to get a few things off her chest. You pulled it off in an entertaining way.
Arlene Miller says
Thank you, Laura! Yes, I feel much better now 🙂