While I love my home country, the US has certain advantages. Like a generally better selection of e-commerce establishments. Oh and there's cellular data rates, but that's another story.
Sunny knows what I'm talking about. I've seen her discuss this same thing. It's not that we don't have quite a few online stores in Canada, or certainly merchants who ship to Canada -- but it's no wonder I became such a huge fan of eBay.
First of all, there's no big department store, a la Amazon.com. Sure, there's Sears.ca and Canadian Tire, but they're nowhere near the same league. Amazon.ca only has books/media stuff, and Amazon.com doesn't ship most of their other stuff to Canada. Our closest thing to a NewEgg is NCIX and a few other smaller shops, but nothing huge that has amazing deals across the board and geek-friendly reviews/search engines/etc.
Or what about a huge music store, like Musician's Friend, or Zzounds? Art supplies? Pet supplies? Furnishings? You can usually find stuff if you look hard enough, but there certainly aren't dozens of big warehouses clamouring for your business.
Case in point: Suzann had told me about this online shoe store, Zappos. You can order a whole bunch of shoes, huge selection of styles and size variations, ship them all to you with free shipping, then keep the ones you want and send the others back with free return shipping. There is so nothing like this in Canada. Not that I'm a big shoe whore, but I found another site that had the same shipping concept and got three pairs of potential shoes for Meagan's wedding. Plus 30% off (yay for googling for coupon codes).
Almost all the stores actually in Canada are smaller specialty stores that end up costing a lot more. Or maybe I should feel good about supporting small retailers... but the cheapass in me beats that part down sometimes :)
Also, I'm spoiled here in that there are allll these other little states that have the nice convenience of not charging tax when you order from them. Hell, I can even avoid it in California sometimes, since Provantage is actually shipping our NAS stuff from California to Ohio and back to avoid us paying tax! I suppose I wouldn't complain about this if I had lived in Manitoba or something, but almost everything ships from Ontario (Toronto's the centre of the world in Canada, dontchaknow) so you're getting dinged with 14% tax.
And why does buying within Canada matter so much? I'm glad you asked. The evils of paying duties. It's not so much the duties themselves, it's the bloody hassle and the couriers. The tax I can deal with, but couriers (*cough*dieUPSdie*cough*) charge an additional brokerage fee for filling out the paperwork for you. So you're constantly having to check on shipping methods, asking people to mark something as a gift, checking on policies.. agh.
I ordered an earring holder once without paying much attention and ended up paying $54 in duties/brokerage stuff for a $25 item.
Bottom line... Canadian e-commerce is constantly a good five years behind the times and I'm always in awe here of how fast/easy/cheap it is to get stuff online.
Although we do have Grocery Gateway :) I had barely set foot in a grocery store for five years, man!
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Eeeee, the doorbell just rang... UPS time! It's NASday!
Shopping?
While online shopping may be better in the US of A, I do everything I can to promote small "Mom & Pop" businesses, which are inevitably not online... We all should do what we can to support small businesses, regardless of whether or not they are capable of running a website or not (if they are, then all the power to them!)... Screw the corporations!
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