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Rapid Delivery: Our Experience Testing ‘Amazon Now’ in Seattle

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We tested 'Amazon Now' in Seattle — and got our delivery in 23 minutes – GeekWire

A bag of Amazon Now groceries, delivered in Seattle on Tuesday. (GeekWire Photo / Kurt Schlosser)

Amazon’s new “Amazon Now” ultra-fast delivery for household essentials and fresh groceries passed the speed test on Tuesday.

During a trial of the newly launched service, it took 23 minutes from the click of the order button on the Amazon shopping app to the drop of the items at my house. That time easily meets Amazon’s promise of 30-minutes-or-less delivery.

Amazon Now is rolling out to eligible neighborhoods in Seattle and Philadelphia. Customers using the Amazon app or website can browse a curated selection of fresh produce, meat and seafood, pantry staples, frozen foods, beverages, household supplies and more.

Customers are able to track their order status and tip their driver within the Amazon Now feature. Prime members pay discounted delivery fees starting at $3.99 per order, compared with $13.99 for non-Prime customers, with a $1.99 “small basket” fee on orders under $15.

GeekWire reported last week that Amazon was building out a new rapid-delivery hub at a former Amazon Fresh Pickup site in Seattle’s Ballard neighborhood. (That site did not fulfill the order I placed on Tuesday.) Amazon this week revealed more details about Amazon Now.

Permit filings detail how employees pick and bag items in a back-of-house stockroom, stage completed orders on front-of-house shelves, and hand them off to Amazon Flex drivers, who are expected to arrive, scan, confirm, and leave with a package within roughly two minutes. The operation is slated to run 24 hours a day, seven days a week, “much like a convenience store,” according to the filings.

Keep reading for details on how the process works.

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The shopping

Screen grabs from the Amazon app, from left: A promo for the new Amazon Now service; batteries and pizza; and the order total. (Images via Amazon)

My wife prefers to do all the shopping for our household and she does so at several different stores including Trader Joe’s, Fred Meyer, Town & Country, and Costco. Our neighborhood, Ballard, isn’t exactly a food desert, and prior to conducting my Amazon Now test, I passed a Safeway en route to stops at Walgreens and Metropolitan Market within a few blocks of my house.

But for the sake of speed and convenience and this test, I browsed the Amazon Now selection looking for a few items we could use. I chose a Red Baron frozen pizza ($4.37); 365 by Whole Foods Market multigrain bread ($2.85); a 4-pack of Duracell AA batteries ($5.47); Saltine crackers ($4.05); Sabra classic hummus ($3.95); and a 6-ounce pack of blackberries ($2.17).

The six items totaled $22.86, plus the $3.99 delivery fee, 64 cents in tax, and a $3 tip for the driver — $30.49 total.

There’s either a reason why my wife does all the shopping or groceries really are very expensive these days, because $30 feels like a lot for six items. Although, $7 of that does include delivery fee and tip — the price of on-demand convenience!

The tracking

An Amazon Now order status and delivery tracking via the Amazon app. (Images via Amazon)

I placed the order at 12:38 p.m. and the Amazon app and a confirmation email both immediately estimated that delivery time would be 1:05 p.m.

A status bar in the app showed where my items would be in the chain of events: ordered, packed, out for delivery, and delivered.

Within just a few minutes the status changed from ordered to out for delivery, and I watched as a small Amazon vehicle icon made its way west across Seattle toward my house. The delivery estimate time dropped a couple minutes to 1:02 p.m.

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When a white van showed up in front of my house in less than 10 minutes I was sure this story was going to go in a different direction about just how speedy Amazon Now is. But my neighbor was getting a bunch of stuff delivered from IKEA — no one shops in stores anymore, I guess.

For what it’s worth, transportation software company INRIX released its annual Global Traffic Scorecard this week, with details on how much time people lose sitting in traffic. INRIX says Seattle congestion is climbing again, especially in last-mile corridors that delivery fleets rely on.

“The [Amazon Now service] may end up distributing demand more evenly across the transportation network, rather than concentrating congestion via larger hubs,” Bob Pishue, transportation analyst at INRIX, told GeekWire.

The delivery

The smiling Amazon vehicle icon nearing its drop location for an Amazon Now delivery. (Image via Amazon)

I watched via the app as the Amazon vehicle icon neared my house and I stepped onto my front porch at 1 p.m. to see my driver arrive. Wearing his blue Amazon vest, the driver placed a brown paper Amazon Now bag in my hand for what amounted to a 23-minute process from start to finish.

The driver said he made his pickup from an Amazon Now-specific facility that is located near a Whole Foods location at Roosevelt Way NE and NE 64th Street — roughly 3.5 miles or 15 minutes from my house.

The driver had not heard anything about the planned Amazon Now delivery hub just down the road from my house in Ballard, at 5100 15th Ave. NW.

The groceries

Essentials! The six items GeekWire ordered in a test of Amazon Now rapid grocery delivery.

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Exploring Amazon Now: A Review of the Fast-Delivery Convenience Service

Upon receiving my order from Amazon Now, I noticed that the six items I had purchased were neatly packed, although the loaf of bread did end up a bit squished.

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The frozen pizza and hummus were still cold, while the pack of blackberries looked like any typical pack found in the fridge. The batteries, the only essential item I needed, came in a pack of four, although I would have preferred a larger quantity.

Reflections on the Experience

As someone who enjoys the traditional grocery shopping experience, I found myself questioning the need for quick deliveries of random grocery items to my doorstep, especially when not in the midst of a pandemic. Amazon Now may not be aimed at individuals like me who value the in-store shopping experience.

However, there are scenarios where the service could be beneficial, such as when feeling unwell and in need of immediate supplies without leaving the house. Similarly, if a last-minute grocery run is inconvenient, Amazon Now could be a practical solution.

During a recent trip to Met Market, I witnessed a humorous incident at the self-checkout counter, highlighting the human touch that is sometimes missing in automated services. This experience made me appreciate the role of essential workers in such settings.

Overall, while Amazon Now may not cater to everyone’s preferences, it serves a specific need for quick and convenient deliveries in certain situations.

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