You can customise it with six different clock faces and and six different icon colour schemes.
Amazon has positioned the Echo Spot as more of a bed-side alarm Alexa device and I think the stripped back approach suits it for this reason.
Setting Up Alexa Routines
The scaling back goes further too - there's no camera on this Echo Spot.
Most might think that's a step back but for privacy, especially when you're likely to place the Echo Spot in your bedroom, is a move in the right direction.
But it also means the gadget doesn't support video streaming either, so you can't do video calls with your Ring doorbell (though you can still speak to the person).
Nor can you play videos on Netflix, Prime Video or YouTube and the rest.
This again is another omission for the better, catering to those who primarily want a voice-based experience with some simple, visual, glance-able cues for things like the time and weather.
There are three physical buttons on the top - two for volume control and another to switch the mic off.
Echo Spot: more highlights
The Echo Spot is Bluetooth-enabled so you use it to connect to another more powerful speaker if you want.
It’s built for the nightstand, with a gradual lighting display that makes it easy to set and view alarms, see the time, weather, or song titles at a glance.
The Echo Spot is available in three colours: black, white and blue.
It features a touch screen, not that you can do a great deal with it - buttons to skip tracks or adjusting settings like brightness.
You can physically tap the top to snooze alarms too.
As for the sound, I'm quite impressed given the Echo Spot's small size.
The speaker can blast pretty loud without distorting the quality.
There are settings to adjust the base, mid range and treble in the Alexa app.