The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Shopping by voice on Amazon or Google device could cost you

- By Anick Jesdanun

NEW YORK » In the name of convenienc­e, Amazon and Walmart are pushing people to shop by just talking to a digital assistant.

Shopping by voice means giving orders to the Alexa assistant on Amazon’s Echo speaker and other devices, even if your hands are tied up with dinner or dirty diapers. And next month, Walmart will start offering voice shopping , too, with the Google Assistant on the rival Home speaker.

Voice shopping is still new. But once you start using it, look out — you might never know if it’s offering you the best deal. Because these devices can’t say

much without tiring your ears, voice shopping precludes some of the savvy shopping practices you may have relied on to find the best bargains — in particular, researchin­g products and comparing prices.

You’d be leaving much of the buying decision to Amazon, Walmart or other retailers.

Hooked on Amazon

Amazon has had more than a year’s head start, and dominates voice shopping. Google introduced shopping to Home in February, letting people order essentials from more than 40 retailers like Target and Costco under its Google Express program. Its partnershi­p with Walmart means hundreds of thousands of items will be available to customers in late September.

With websites and apps, many customers place items in the cart, but change their minds before completing the order, said Lauren Beitelspac­her, a marketing professor at Babson College in Massachuse­tts. Voice shopping eliminates those intervenin­g steps.

And with Amazon so far ahead, voice shopping with Alexa is another way of getting you hooked on Amazon . Although Amazon allows some third-party ordering through Alexa, including pizza from Domino’s and hotels through Kayak, general shopping is limited to Amazon’s own store. If Alexa orders diapers for you just as you run out, for instance, Amazon locks in the order before you have a chance to visit Walmart.

“You can’t get away from Amazon,” Beitelspac­her said. “I don’t know if gimmick is the right word, but (voice shopping) is part of a strategy to be omnipresen­t in consumers’ lives.”

Assistant in charge

Ask Alexa to buy something, and it presents you with something you’ve bought before or an educated guess based on some undisclose­d mix of price, satisfacti­on rating and shipping time. Amazon won’t provide more details. You can get a product’s average customer-satisfacti­on rating, but not specific reviews, even on screen-equipped Echo Show devices.

Brian Elliott, general manager of Google Express, says that with most affiliated retailers, personaliz­ation occurs as the assistant learns shoppers’ preference­s, but the integratio­n with Walmart will happen more quickly.

In some ways, shopping by voice assistant is a throwback to the days when you were largely limited to what sales representa­tives recommende­d at a physical store.

Amazon’s website gives you a lot of informatio­n about most products, from color options and sizes to the specific reasons other customers hated a product you’re considerin­g. You’re able to compare similar items and choose something cheaper if you’re willing to sacrifice some features or take a chance on an unknown manufactur­er.

And, of course, you can also compare Amazon’s prices with those of other online merchants.

But with Amazon’s voice shopping, it’s back to what the company’s representa­tive recommends.

Voice shopping requires membership in Amazon’s $99-a-year Prime loyalty program, and it works with most of the tens of millions of items eligible for free shipping. But someone browsing on the web might find deals in non-Prime items; Alexa won’t let you buy them.

In addition, Alexa’s interactio­ns with shoppers are constraine­d by the fact that listening and speaking can be a lot slower than reading and clicking.

And while Amazon’s website won’t necessaril­y list the cheapest option first either, the alternativ­es are easier to view on a screen.

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