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After a difficult week for the company, it's a surprise that Amazon is happy to open its doors to the eyes of the world.
But having come in for heavy criticism for its 'lightning sale' promotion, the online retailer is bouncing back as it prepares for the Christmas rush.
The internet site - initially a bookseller but now a shopping portal for everything from kitchenware to children's toys - pulled open the back of its warehouse - or 'Fulfilment Centre' - in Swansea to reveal the heavy packing operation already under way.
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While its product range has diversified repeatedly, Amazon dominates the UK market for music and video sales.
A 2009 survey for Verdict Research named the online giant as the UK's favourite music and video retailer and its third favourite retailer overall, behind John Lewis and Ikea.
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While the scale of the Swansea warehouse shows that Amazon is gearing up for another successful Christmas, its reputation took a beating this week after it launched a 'Black Friday' week of cut-price online sales.
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But thousands of customers were left furious after the bargain deals appeared to sell out in a matter of seconds earlier this week.
Users swamped the website’s online forums to complain the deals they were chasing had disappeared faster than the click of a mouse.
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Another complained: ‘Total load of rubbish. Couldn’t have clicked on the CD any quicker at 9am and gone instantly, definitely less than ten of each, wouldn’t bother even trying!’
Amazon insisted it had warned customers that the deals would run for a limited time only.
It said: ‘Offers will take the form of “Lightning Deals” with a limited quantity of an item being offered at a discount for a short period of time.
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‘Once that quantity has been reached or the time limit elapses, the “Lightning Deal” will end.’
Founded in 1995, Amazon has versions of its websites for the U.S., Britain, Japan, China, Germany, France and Canada, among others, and has over a dozen 'Fulfilment Centres' in the British Isles alone.
source: dailymail
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