Amazon's Prime Day sale started off rocky last year, with the world's biggest online retailer offering customers a crashing website and app. The company aims to do better this year with a supersized fifth annual Prime Day, coming next month.
The sale will start onJuly 15 just after midnight Pacific Time and run for 48 hours, the longest Prime Day sale ever, up from 36 hours the year before, Amazon officially announced Monday.
"We worked super hard throughout the year to ensure that we're prepared for this year," Cem Sibay, vice president of Prime, said in an interview, after acknowledging some customers' frustrations with how the sale began in 2018.
There will be more than 1 million deals available worldwide, which is the same number Amazon offered last year. The company had routinely amped up this figure as a way of showing the growth of Prime Day. Sibay explained that customers' feedback hasn't been that there aren't enough deals, but rather they wanted more and better ways to find them, while also seeing new deals as often as possible.
Prime Day started in 2015 as a quirky 20th birthday party Amazon threw for its most loyal customers. It's turned into a wildly successful sales day for Amazon, showing both the company's huge influence and 100 million-strong Amazon Prime customer base. In recent years, Prime Day has broken Amazon's one-day sales record, though that record is then broken later each year byCyber Monday, which isn't a Prime-exclusive sale. (The third biggest sales day each year is usually Black Friday.)
The company has since used Prime Day as another perk -- along with unlimited two-day shipping and Prime Video -- as a way of convincing shoppers to renew their annual $119 memberships and enticing new customers to join the program.