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Amazon's Research Report
Amazon's Research Report
Amazon's Research Report
In e-commerce, through the online environment, consumers can access various opinions
and evaluations on products, and in this process, consumers can obtain information about
products through online search before purchasing products. Other consumers' opinions and
evaluation data on the products they want to purchase have an important influence on whether
consumers purchase the products. When consumers get information about products, they accept
opinions by trusting information from consumers who are similar to consumers themselves,
rather than information provided by companies that sell products. Evaluation data on products
created by consumers have a positive effect on the company's performance even from the point
of view of the company selling the product. Therefore, it can be considered that it is very
important for the company to analyze the consumer's evaluation data on products.
If you analyze the data of consumers who have purchased the product, you will be able
to adjust the production of the appropriate product to suit your needs. In the case of a product
with good response from consumers, the production of the product will increase, and in the case
of products with poor response, the amount of production will be reduced, and consequently, the
company will be able to reduce the waste paid for the production of products. In addition, by
analyzing consumer opinions and reflecting consumer feedback on the product, it can contribute
to improving product quality.
Star ratings for the product and comments made by the consumer can be used to analyze
the consumer's preferences for the product. As a representative example, in the case of Amazon,
by looking at reviews written by consumers about the product, it is possible to leave a star rating
and review of the product itself. However, in a modern society, since many products are
increased each day and a lot of evaluation data is generated for each product, it can be expensive
for companies to sell products to grasp the propensity of consumers for each product.
Data used in this research is collected by interviews and discussions with industry
professionals, comprising consulting companies, technology vendors, delivery companies from
third parties, partner businesses, and academic sources. Due to their close relationships with the
case study companies, some companies which provide data for this thesis do not wish to be
called. No interviews are being conducted with representatives of Wal-Mart and Amazon.com.
We approached Wal-Mart and Amazon.com, but refused to be questioned for this research.
Productivity
Amazon.com was integrated in 1994, web operations started in 1995, and an initial public
offering was completed in 1997. It has risen steadily since its inception, and is currently the
biggest online seller in perfect-play. The following chart shows sales growth of $2.72bn in 2000
to $6.92bn in 2004.
During this period, Amazon also experienced an improvement in net income, with net
income going from negative $1.41 billion in 2001 to $588 million in 2004. Net profit for 2004 is
distorted with a one-time deferred tax gain of $233 million due to prior net profits.
The rapid growth of Amazon.com has contributed to increased number of employees.
Amazon hired over 9000 staff as of Q4 2004. This represents an increase of 15 percent over the
7,800 employees at the end of 2003.
The Annual Report of Amazon.com states that its long-term objective is to optimize the
free cash flow. Free cash flow is an important cash supplied by continuing operations minus
buying capital assets including human and technical assets. Free cash flow can be enhanced by
higher operating profits and the management of working capital and capital expenditure. By
turning inventories quickly, Amazon can improve the free cash flow. The variable cost per unit is
a further target metric for Amazon.com. Most of the physical and technological structures of
Amazon.com constitutes a fixed expense to the company. The business believes there's room for
change in the variable costs relating to customer support and order fulfillment to achieve higher
volume profitability. Turnover ratio is also an important metric for Amazon.com, defined as the
cost of sales divided by average inventories. In 2004 the turnover rate for the inventory was 16.
The inventory turnover fluctuates due to product brand extension and foreign expansion, as
shown by a sizeable of 18 in 2003, 19 in 2002 and 16 in 2001.
Fore-casting
Collaborative planning, forecasting and replenishment (CPFR) is another manufacturer
and retailer collaboration Program. Crum and Palmatier (2004) discuss the issue of demand
collaboration between suppliers and retailers, and why collaboration acceptance is sluggish,
despite the high potential benefits. They emphasize the fact that information about demand
should be the priority of that uncertainty. When partners have experience of demand in the
supply chain, they know what to expect from the sale and delivery of the requested commodity.
This in turn reduces the bullwhip effect causing a high demand variability in the supply chain for
partners downstream.
Forrester study explain the dynamics of consumers and suppliers that could help promote
or hinder the growth of online sales for different categories of products in the figure below
(Johnson, 2002).
The Impact of Consumer and Supplier Dynamics on Sales in Selected Online Product
Categories.
Revenues have increased exponentially since internet retailing was introduced, and are
projected to rise at double-digit levels in the next few years. Forrester notes that online retail
sales grew at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 97 per cent from 1997 to 2002. The
increase in sales from $2.4 billion in 1997 to $72.1 billion in 2002 reflects this growth.
Forrester data includes purchases related to travel and food in internet retailing data,
where the US Department of Commerce does not. The US Department of Commerce data from
2000-2003 indicates an overall growth rate of 23-27 per cent more optimistic.
Books $ $ $ $ $ $ 27
2.6 3.5 4.3 4.7 5.4 6.0 %
Computer $ $ $ $ $ $ 37
hardware/softwar 7.9 10.4 11.7 12.6 13.2 13.7 %
e
Consume $ $ $ $ $ $ 19
r electronics 3.4 4.3 5.8 7.3 8.9 10.3 %
Flowers/c $ $ $ $ $ 10
ards/gifts 1.0 1.4 2.1 $3.0 4.1 5.3 %
Market segments include clothing, baby care products, journals, camera and photography,
cell phones and service, computers and accessories, consumer electronics, DVDs and videos,
gourmet food, health and personal care, home and garden, jewellery, kitchenware, magazine
subscriptions, music, office products, software, sports and outdoor tools and hardware, and toys.
Amazon.com leverages a supply chain network comprising from within controlled retail outlets
and inventory levels and several third-party partners to offer their extremely wide range of
products.
Books
Beauty
Office products
Consumer electronics
Software
DVDs
Jewelry/luxury goods
Many revenue come from Information outsourcing fees and marketing deals. Media
accounted for 74 per cent of overall revenue as of 2004. Electronics and other general
merchandise and other revenues represent 24% and 2% respectively. Electronics and other
general goods and other sales are growing at greater speeds unlike mainstream press, both
globally and in North America, as shown in the figure below.
Amazon’s sales growth %
North America International
2003 2004 2003 2004
Media 14% 14% 61% 41%
Amazon.com launched A9.com in 2004, as a web search tool to expand its service
offering. The site leverages the content expertise that Amazon.com has achieved to provide
further details of search results including images. This tool will not be discussed in detail in this
research, but is noted as a service offering that Amazon.com provides.
The internet retailer pure-play business model uses a website as a virtual store from
which consumers can sell their goods. By typical retail definitions this model constitutes a single
sales channel. In this distribution channel, though, there are many variants that should be
discussed to understand the business model and selling channels of Amazon.com more
thoroughly. The models of Amazon.com and Syndicated Stores use the technology and inventory
of Amazon.com, and represent a model in which the company is the seller. The Marketplace,
Merchants@, and Merchant.com programs use Amazon.com technology, third-party inventory,
and sometimes Amazon.com satisfaction and portray models where Amazon.com serves as an e-
commerce middleman or full-service provider. In 2004, 74% of the units sold came from the
channels of Amazon.com and Syndicated Stores, and 26% of the units sold came from third-
party companies.
Marketing activity has increased significantly, both in the amount of new products and
services launched and in the promotional activities. There are various related display issues (see
Armstrong et al (1987) for a sketch) that incorporate model shopper reaction for complete
organization deals, part of the industry as a whole, which vital activities , for example, value
estimation. There has also been a solid increase in enthusiasm for predictive models of human
conduct.
Amazon.com serves the targeted customers noted in the internet retail sector overview.
Amazon.com is indeed a business-to - consumer (B2C) platform that delivers items directly to
individual consumers shopping from an online store. The target client is a well-informed shopper
with internet access, with choice, affordability and cost values.
The channels of Amazon.com sales discussed in Chapter Four will be discussed here as
the different working models that Amazon.com uses to serve clients. Amazon.com offers three
distinct models, each having a different supply chain. Each will be described below as an
operating model, while emphasizing the differences in the supply chain. The three models are
seller Amazon.com, intermediary Amazon.com and full-service e - commerce supplier
Amazon.com.
Amazon.com as Seller
Amazon.com 's base sales channel is the front-end web store which serves as the core of
their business. In this model, customers go to the Amazon.com website, browse for products, and
place orders. Amazon.com is responsible for all front-end customer relations and back-end
logistics. Once an order has been placed, Amazon.com decides which internal distribution center
or drop shipper should be in charge of shipping the order to the client. Amazon.com is then in
charge of coordinating order fulfilment. Amazon.com purchases, packs and delivers the order as
the items are delivered from its own distribution centres. If items are imported from a drop
shipper, such as a book dealer, the dealer bundles and ships the item to the consumer in an
Amazon.com box (Maltz et al., 2004). The model demands that Amazon.com retain or purchase
inventory for immediate sale. Amazon.com maintains the customer relationship in this model,
provides the infrastructure, maintains or purchases the inventory, and conducts the logistics for
each order.
Another part of Amazon.com as a seller model includes the Syndicated Stores program,
which allows third-party companies to sell Amazon.com products through their websites. In this
model, Amazon.com does not own the initial customer relationship, but does provide the
technology, inventory, and logistics to deliver the order to the customer, and thus owns the
customer service relationship. Amazon.com pays a percentage of each sale made to the
syndicated store that provided a link to Amazon.com on its website. Examples of syndicated
stores include Borders, CDNow, HMV, Virgin, WaldenBooks, and Waterstones (Szkutak, 2004).
Initiated in 2000, the Amazon Marketplace and Merchants@ programs allow third-party
companies to list their products on Amazon.com's website. Marketplace serves individual sellers
and smaller companies. Merchants@ services larger businesses that wish to sell their products on
Amazon.com. This model represents Amazon.com as a virtual trading company, connecting
buyers and sellers that would otherwise would not have the ability to benefit from one another.
Amazon.com manages the front-end customer relationship, provides the technology, but
typically not the inventory, fulfillment and delivery services in these arrangements. In some
cases, larger merchants utilize Amazon.com for fulfillment services. Amazon.com had over
850,000 seller accounts that received an order in the last 12 months (Szkutak, 2005).
Amazon.com is recognized for its innovative site design and unique customer experience.
Recently, Amazon.com has begun to leverage its technology platform to provide the technical
infrastructure, site design, and web storefront experience for companies on their websites. This
model allows retailers to maintain their brand and website customer ownership, while utilizing
Amazon.com's fulfillment network. An example of this is the website that Amazon.com designed
and operates for Target, Inc. In the bottom right hand corner of Target.com, there is a logo that
notes the site is "Powered by Amazon.com". Target maintains control over merchandising
decisions, and Target maintains ownership of Target inventory that is stored in Amazon.com's
distribution centers. Therefore, Amazon.com does not own the customer relationship or the
inventory, but does provide the technical and operations infrastructure to execute the order
fulfillment process. Amazon.com is responsible for sourcing the order from the appropriate
distribution centers and delivering the order to customers. Third-party sales are increasing as a
percentage of overall unit sales at Amazon.com. The trend is shown in the figure below. Note
that third party sales have increased from 17% of unit sales in 2002 to 26% of unit sales in 2004.
There are several business and supply chain benefits and concerns associated with the
increasing prevalence of third-party sales on Amazon.com. Business benefits are a higher margin
for each unit sold and the ability to offer nearly unlimited selection of products through a
network of sellers without carrying extensive inventory. The third-party seller network creates a
supply chain where information replaces inventory for Amazon.com. Therefore, Amazon.com
creates a supply chain where sellers can offer their products to buyers at no fulfillment cost to
Amazon.com. As a result, the revenue that is generated from these transactions carries a much
higher margin than revenue that requires Amazon.com to physically process an order. Also, the
network of sellers allows Amazon.com to offer the selection that they use to compete with
physical and online retailers without having to carry inventory of all of the items available for
sale on its website. This keeps inventory costs in control and is one factor that allows
Amazon.com to have higher than average inventory turns for the retail industry.
The second-tier in the inventory model is composed of wholesaler and partner DCs. This
tier includes drop shippers such as Ingram Book Distributors, Baker and Taylor, and other book
distributors. Also CD distributors and other partners that are utilized to fulfill Amazon.com
orders are also seen at this level. If Amazon.com is unable to fulfill the item from its DC,
Amazon.com's IT systems can look into partner inventories to determine which party to assign
the order. This prevents the Amazon.com customer from experiencing a stock-out for an item
that Amazon.com carries but currently does not have in its own stock. It also allows
Amazon.com to offer items that it does not sell directly through its inventory.
Publishers, manufacturers, vendors, and third-party sellers comprise the third-tier in the
Amazon.com multi-tier inventory model. These parties further enable Amazon.com to offer the
nearly unlimited selection that they offer. Additionally, products sourced from these entities
enable Amazon.com to avoid distributor markups, reduce their dependency on distributors, and
improve margins.
Replenishment Processes
Distribution Process
The distribution process is initiated by a customer ordering from the Amazon.com
website or an affiliate website. Amazon.com's IT systems determine which Amazon.com
distribution center to ship the item from or whether to ship the item from a drop shipper. The
order sourcing decision is determined by product availability and the desire to minimize
transportation costs in fulfillment costs. Drop shippers package items in Amazon.com packaging
and deliver it directly to customers. Amazon.com distribution centers can ship items directly to
customers or through transportation hubs. Orders are delivered to transportation hubs by
Amazon.com contracted LTL or TL carriers. Upon arrival in the hub, packages are sorted and
routed to small parcel carriers such as UPS or the US Postal Service for "last-mile" delivery.
Inventory locations
There are supply chain benefits to an internet retailing model without retail stores. In
order to ensure product availability, physical retailers have to carry inventory in each store
location as well as in distribution centers. By consolidating inventory at distribution centers and
other inventory locations operated by partners and wholesalers, Amazon.com is able to carry a
much wider selection of inventory while maintaining a competitive advantage over retailers in
inventory turnover.
Amazon.com operates eight leased distribution centers throughout the United States.
These eight facilities account for a total of 4,465,000 square feet (Amazon.com 2004 10-
KForm). These facilities are large with a square footage generally falling in the range of
500,000to 600,000 square feet per facility. Location decisions are made based on proximity to
customer concentrated areas and tax implications. Note that Amazon.com has three facilities in
Nevada and Delaware, which both have no state income tax. Amazon.com has also taken
advantage of unique opportunities to grow its distribution network, such as the abandonment of a
large facility in Kentucky by another retailer that gave Amazon.com the opportunity to lease at a
favorable rate. Amazon.com's eight distribution center locations are listed below:
Campbellsville, KY
Fernley, NV
Lexington, KY
Reno, NV
Chambersburg, PA
Grand Forks, ND
Coffeyville, KS
New Castle, DE
Amazon.com's initial model relied heavily on a small number of partners. An HBS case
notes that in Amazon.com's original supply chain model, 60% of Amazon.com's orders were
sourced from Ingram Book Distributors and the other 40% were sourced from other distributors
and publishers (Leschly, Roberts, & Sahlman 2003). Amazon.com's original distribution center
in Seattle, WA only stocked bestsellers (Spector, 2002). Amazon.com began expanding its
distribution network in preparation for the 1999 holiday season, opening five new distribution
centers, in addition to the two existing facilities in Seattle and Delaware. The reasons for internal
distribution were to reduce the dependency on book distributors, more proactively manage
logistics execution and customer service, and improve margins (Digital4Sight, 2000).
CONCLUSIONS
This research has introduced and evaluated Amazon.com's operating models, supply
chain designs, replenishment and distribution processes, and ongoing supply chain improvement
initiatives. Amazon.com inherently has different supply chains to support their different business
models supporting mass merchandising and internet retailing. Although their processes may be
distinct, Amazon.com has supply chains that clearly support their business strategies and
operating models. This discusses how Amazon.com leverage their supply chains to support and
reinforce their competitive strategies.
This research has introduced the Amazon.com’s relative positions in mass merchandising
and internet retailing. Amazon’s company financial leadership positions, product variety, and
different operating models are uncovered through exploring the financial data, products and
services, and sales channels. This information is provided to provide industry and company
context to understand how Wal-Mart and Amazon.com compete in their industry segments in
preparation for the detailed supply chain information that is evaluated.
This has provided an overview of the retail industry as a whole, and an analysis of the
mass merchandising and internet retail segments of the industry. Current financials, industry
drivers, trends, and supply chain challenges are discussed to provide a foundation for
understanding each of the case study companies, and their relative positions in
their retail segments, which has been discussed