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A Look Inside Newegg
Posted by
ScuttleMonkey
on Wed Feb 15, 2006 12:32 AM
from the where-the-metal-meets-the-meat dept.
from the where-the-metal-meets-the-meat dept.
An anonymous reader writes "AnandTech has an interesting look inside Newegg's 180,000 square foot facility. Effectively, they followed the path of an order after it was soon placed online. AnandTech was able to get a tour of their facilities before, but this is the first time they allowed them to publish any photos."
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SWEET! (Score:5, Funny)
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Find the lowest prices or Buy it from Amazon for $638.98
Best investment ever.
hmmm (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Should I feel guilty (Score:5, Funny)
Wouldn't that be a "frost pist" then, not a "frist post"? ;-)
Parent
Looks fishy to me. (Score:3, Insightful)
Does this not scream advertisement to anybody else? While it is somewhat cool to see what happens once orders placed, this stinks of a "sponsored article"
Seriously "A pallet is a wooden or plastic platform that can be picked up using a forklift; palletized cargo is cargo placed on a pallet, which is how Newegg's inventory is shipped to them." is considered a story?
"Recently AnandTech got a chance to tour some of Microsoft's offices. Established in 1981, many AnandTech readers will be familiar with Microsoft for offering innovative products, pushing the envelope in the software industry, and their advantage over Linux products in terms of TCO."
Get a life, dude (Score:5, Insightful)
When Firefly premiered, I submitted a gushing story to Slashdot. (I had seen a bootleg of the pilot, and had been blow away by it; the actual series was rather less exciting.) There must have been 20 posts by people who were convinced that I was a sock puppet in the employ of Fox. None of them bothered to check my post history.
Sock puppets do exist. I've even been fooled by them. But in a consumer culture where people where company logos as a "personal statement", you shouldn't be suprised to see a little uncritical praise now and then.
Parent
Re:Looks fishy to me. (Score:2, Insightful)
A: Stubbornly used an old billing address after I had revised it.
B: Sent me an email saying my order would be deleted in 3 days if I didn't contact them by phone or email to correct the billing address.
C: Ignored my repeated attempts to contact (15+ phone calls to a busy customer service line, and 2 emails sent the day I recieved the notice) until they-
D: Cancelled my order, at which
Re:Looks fishy to me. (Score:3, Insightful)
If you don't, shit like that happens when people do their jobs correctly at places like NewEgg.
Re:Looks fishy to me. (Score:3, Funny)
YES! Somebody else has done this! Words on a screen cannot express the relief I feel.
Re:Looks fishy to me. (Score:2)
A lot of Slashdot readers may never have been close enough to a warehouse to know this kind of thing, sadly.
The pick and pack process for Newegg really isn't that interesting though. You'll find the same kind of setup in a lot of warehouses. Small warehouses wont have an automated
Re:Looks fishy to me. (Score:5, Funny)
No, that is considered a "sentence". People called "writers" put together groups of related sentences to form "paragraphs", and groups of related "paragraphs" are what is considered a story.
Parent
Re:Looks fishy to me. (Score:5, Funny)
Now, now- don't be so quick to judge.
I found the statement, 'the automated box maker makes a lot of boxes' to be quite insightful.
Parent
New Egg not one of my faves (Score:5, Interesting)
If I'm buying for work, I've got a list of approved vendors from the bean counters- *eye roll* and New Egg isn't nearly stuffy enough and hasn't bought any of the bean counters lunch often enough to make it on their list (just my best guess at how vendors are selected).
It's nice that they have wicked cool facility, but if you really want to see some supply chain stuff in action, visit Wal-mart. Now you can order any thing off the Walmart web site and have it delivered free to your local Walmart. Show me how those orders are processed, and as much as I hate Walmart, you'll definitely have my attention.
2 cents,
Queen B
Re:New Egg not one of my faves (Score:5, Insightful)
Lots of people bitch about service, but when push comes to shove they'll forego service to save a few bucks and service oriented businesses will lose out to discounters. I see Newegg as a great compromise of good service at the best prices possible, and give them almost all of my hardware business as a result.
I think you'd find that looking up the resellerratings.com listing for most companies selling stuff at the very cheapest prices, they don't compare to newegg.
All that said, this article looks like a cheesy, paid-for fluff piece.
Parent
Web site organization and categorization is great (Score:4, Insightful)
But since its inception, what seperated Newegg from every other low-cost web retailer was the organization of their site. If you want to browse products, it's so freakin' easy pick a category/subcategory and narrow the choices down based on features you are looking for. I can't believe other sites haven't gotten this right yet (Mwave is okay).
For example, Buy.com has great prices for some items, especially when a heavy item qualifies for free shipping. But try browsing Buy.com's selection of 1GB DDR2 memory kits (2x512MB) or their selection of motherboards with socket 939, microATX form factor, nForce4 chipset, and 4 dimm slots. At Newegg, it's a snap.
The first time I browsed Newegg, the categorization of their inventory was as impressive to me as Yahoo's.
Parent
Re:New Egg not one of my faves (Score:2, Informative)
Re:New Egg not one of my faves (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:New Egg not one of my faves (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:New Egg not one of my faves (Score:3, Informative)
Re:New Egg not one of my faves (Score:3, Insightful)
The IQ level must be real low to have NewEgg fanbois... it's a freaking shop! and he did nothing but tell his anecdotal experience.
Re:New Egg not one of my faves (Score:5, Informative)
In practice, however (at least at the store I worked at), the on-hand counts were always off due to managers screwing up, shrinkage, warehouse mishaps, etc. The result was that some items were almost always out of stock, and others were piled to the ceiling in the back room because the system kept ordering more when we obviously didn't need any more. To complicate matters, you have holidays and seasonal items to account for, and some departments are somewhat independant of the rest of the store (shoes and jewelry come to mind).
And that's just at the store level. I can't imagine what kind of magic lurks at the distribution centers.
Parent
Re:New Egg not one of my faves (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:New Egg not one of my faves (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't doubt this is true, and I would just like to add, this figure shocked me, check this out:
Nice... but let's see their corporate office (Score:4, Funny)
As someone who works next door to Buy.com's corporate office (they're in 85, we're in 65, effectively next door) - I'd rather see their corporate office than the warehouse. Come on, how many Ferraris are in the parking lot?
Interesting (Score:2, Interesting)
Newegg is awesome (Score:3, Funny)
I've ordered about 15 things over the past month and they have ALL came in in exactly 1 day at minimum shipping cost ($0-$4).. Like if I ordered something today, id have it tomorrow. And their prices are really good.. I think Satan must be involved but if Satan can get me good deals and fast shipping then HAIL SATAN!
Re:Newegg is awesome (Score:2, Funny)
PS, I'm a real person and I love Newegg
for serious
Re:Newegg is awesome (Score:2)
I started using them because I ordered a laptop hard drive for work from them on a friday night. It shipped on that SUNDAY and we got it monday. Good stuff
Re:Newegg is awesome (Score:3, Interesting)
Do you also check that box on your tax form that says "donate $3 to the presidential campaign fund"? The suggestion is that it somehow affects your taxes, but of course it doesn't. You just pay an extra $3.
Coincidentally, that's pretty much all that checkbox is at Newegg either. They may as well label it "Check here to pay $3 more for your order." Try not checking it some time
Re:Newegg is awesome (Score:3, Informative)
NewEgg with Old York inside (Score:3, Informative)
Or maybe it's just me having bad experience with UPS and FedEx delivery.
Return policy (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Return policy (Score:3, Interesting)
As for returns, just call them up and bitch, you'll get the return shipping credited to your account. Most motherboards have a note on them saying they're warranted through the manufacturer only, but I've still had them accept returns on two defective boards and even immed
Re:Return policy (Score:4, Informative)
Internet companies like newegg are especailly vulnerable to this, as online orders are relatively anonymous, in that there's no way to verify the technical ability or knowhow of any given customer. I work for a brick and morter shop, and it's usually pretty easy to pick out the customers who know what they're doing, and those acting on advice from a friend or co-worker, with no real insight of what they need done. But online, anything flies.
Most of the time, if it's a retail/shrinkwrapped item, and it's returned without breaking any seals or plastic wrap, you can convince the company to waive the fee, because no testing or repackaging needs to be done.
Parent
Re:Return policy (Score:3, Interesting)
So I email newegg on the behalf of my parents and tell them that I want to exchange for another model. They never reply.
Good article (Score:2, Insightful)
2001 (Score:2, Redundant)
Positive Experiences All Around (Score:3, Insightful)
I've had great experiences with their customer service, I'm impressed by their prices overall. My only complaint is that shipping is sometimes a bit steep considering I'm less than 75 miles from their warehouse and I also have to pay California sales tax. Overall though, I still give them my business after 2 years. Not a bad deal.
What ever happened to 2AM, $3 overnight shipping?? (Score:5, Interesting)
The first time I took advantage of this crazy fast, crazy cheap shipping was when I bought my Newton PDA in 1994. I remember placing my order around 11 PM and paying with the Newton the next morning just after breakfast. I think I ordered it from MicroWarehouse/MacWarehouse. This was many years before the dot-com boom, so I'm still a little baffled at how so many companies were able to update print 200+ page catalogs every month and still offer such awesome shipping.
As far as I can tell, this all ended around the time of the dot com bubble burst. What I don't really understand is why. Or why they didn't just up the shipping charge to $6 or downgrade to overnight instead of overnight-priority shipping. 4 PM the next day isn't a whole lot worse than 10 AM the next day.
I miss those days. Now it seems like NewEgg's 1 - 2 day order turnaround + freeish FedEx 3-day shpping is the best I can find in the same price ballpark. I can usually order from NewEgg on a Monday morning, opt for the Free to $5 shipping, and have the item by Thursday afternoon. Good but still nothing like the 8 hour delivery I experienced for most of the 1990s. Now with online ordering, better tracking/sorting, and greater package delivery competition you would think that $3 - $7 overnight shipping would still be a possibility. Or at the very least, give me back the 2AM cutoff again instead of this 5PM sillyness.
Re:What ever happened to 2AM, $3 overnight shippin (Score:3, Insightful)
They are still there [pcconnection.com] and still taking orders until 2AM for next-day shipment. At least most of the ones I remember.
What's changed is the shipping prices have gone up. With sites like Pricewatch etc., it is harder to subsidize the shipping cost by burying it in the cost of the product. Pricing is just too competitive these days. If anything, it's the opposite now, lots of places appear charge inflated shipping to subsidize the costs of the goods.
Back when you bought your Newton, these catalog places wer
Re:What ever happened to 2AM, $3 overnight shippin (Score:4, Interesting)
I hate when they won't just leave the package. I can understand if they'd like to get something in writing saying that they're not liable for the package once it is out of their hands, but let me fax them some standard form, which they can keep on file. No one in my house is ever home during business hours, and my wife's job doesn't allow personal packages to be sent to her work address, and my job has such over active security (everything has to be hand checked, and put through a metal detector/xray by security), that there are packages I wouldn't and can't have come to work.
Around here, UPS never just drops the package --except when it is an amazon super-saver (although fedex will most of the time), I will actually not shop at online stores who's shippers have given me the "will try again X# of times" slip --I'm simply not going to be home.
Parent
What's with the jar of pickles? (Score:3, Funny)
[anandtech.com]http://images.anandtech.com/reviews/IT/InsideNewe
Several warehousing problems. (Score:3, Interesting)
Product in the rack storage area above head height should be wrapped. I believe this is an OSHA requirement. Even if not, packaging can be damaged if it falls to the floor. And while the packaging is no doubt designed for impact resistance, no one wants the can of beans with the dent in it, nor the dented scratched up box, reagrdless of what's inside.
Garage bay doors should not be open unless they are blocked with security gates. This keeps people from falling off the dock as well as lowers the point of breach. The box recycler is also another point of interest. I wonder how many pieces of memeory end up in the crusher.
And while this may be an advertising ploy, no doubt someone at newegg will see this thread. Hopefully they improve upon their environment.
Newegg quietly triples shipping charges (Score:5, Informative)
Article CLEARLY a Promotion (Score:4, Informative)
Re:international (Score:2, Informative)
Fuck 'em indeed.
Re:Newegg will not do business with our school... (Score:3, Interesting)
I worked for a university, and I was was tasked with purchasing lots of tools when it was decided we needed to upgrade. I bought up over $350,000 dollars of welders and supplies, metal working equipment, machine tools (including a good sized 3 axis CNC mill, a small 5 ax
Here's how it (doesn't) work (Score:4, Informative)
As an end user, you've usually got four purchasing options:
1) Petty cash. For very tiny things. Pointless to this discussion, and still involves lots of careful receipt-handling rules.
2) School-issued credit cards. Only people way up the food chain get to use these. Purchasing agents in the school's procurement office get to use them, and sometimes people who work in travel offices, or that coordinate events, etc., do, or deans and whatnot. Generally there are very tight rules about how these can be used, and that's usually never for things like a shiny new computer monitor or the like.
3) Small, "casual" Purchase Orders. Usually these are limited to a few hundred dollars or so. The end user has to request the use of them, but then gets handed something more or less like a blank ticket that has a spending limit on it. Many vendors won't take these because they're not already assigned, by the school's procurement office, to the vendor... which means the there may be bumps in the road getting it actually paid.
4) Serious POs. These are the ones that come out of the procurement office after the purchasing agent has shopped around to make sure the end user is making a rational request, after some bids (either over the phone, or more formally on paper) have been reviewed, and so on. If you're wondering why these take so long, it's because when a state school (which is really the state government) decides to buy something, there are a jillion rules at play. Has the vendor been filing state taxes correctly? Has the vendor been keeping up with state regulations on hiring quotas, manadatory cardboard recycling, health insurance regs, etc? Yes: purchasing agents spending bigger-ticket amounts of tax money have to check ALL of that crap. And you can only imagine what happens if some of the funds involved happen in to include some federal support for the school's program(s). Suddenly the vendor has to pass all sorts of federal tests, as well. All of that has to be established before the PO is cut to the vendor. And if there's some comparison shopping to be done (this is usually required by law), the purchasing agent may have to actually advertise that the school's about to spend $50,000 on some capital item, and allow a certain amount of time to pass so that all potential vendors can respond with a proposal.
Now: suppose you're a vendor. Think of the time you've got to invest in presenting a friendly face to that process. Then, imagine that the school's policy is to review all shipments before even beginning to start the process of paying the bill to the vendor... but the purchasing agent can't certify that the shipment even GOT to the school, with the right stuff in the box, in good shape, until the end user (and/or his supervisor, dean, etc) signs off on the circulating paperwork. Never mind if the product has some OSHA issues, or HAZMAT considerations to slow all of that down. Finally, the end user's receipt paperwork gets back to the purchasing agent, who then sends the paperwork to the school's accounting people, who have to match it up with the filed invoice from the vendor, and then they schedule a payment for some number of days in the future... thus giving them time to check whether the vendor is or is not on some shit-list about some other transaction having gone well or poorly, thus holding up the payment.
You get the idea. The life cycle on these things is horrific, and vendors have to really want to do that business, and be willing to float the money, usually for months, before getting paid. If even ONE aspect of the end user's paperwork isn't just right, the vendor often does NOT get paid. Now, combine all of that with an industry like selling motherboards at very low margins... and remember that the company (like Newegg) has to honor (or even beat) their advertised
Parent
mod parent up (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Returned DOA hard drive no problems (Score:3, Interesting)
Compare to Fry's, Best Buy, Good Guys.
I will not shop at TigerDirect since the whole Mac OS X "Tiger" "I'm-an-attent
Re:Newegg Hates Canadians! (Score:3, Funny)