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eBayeBay .vs. AmazonAmazon
Analysis of two “first-movers” that
lasted, in the E-commerce space
Student: Bryan Copeland
Student ID: 053171c
Submitted to: Wakayama-sensei
eBayeBay
SummarySummary
 Founded by Pierre Omidyar in 1995
 His wife needed a better way to lookup and trade
collectibles; decided to put his computer science skills to
use, never thought it would lead to a multi-billion dollar E-
Commerce company
 Auction-based online sales of products (and sometimes
services) where users try to outbid one another by placing a
higher maximum amount; Dutch and Reverse-auction style
also recently available in some regions
 Transaction fees for listing (regardless of whether item sells
or not) and additional fees for Premium Auction features (i.e.
extra photos, BuyItNow, Feature It!, etc) or Premium Seller
memberships
HistoryHistory
Date Event Stock ($)
1995 Founded by Pierre Omidyar
1997 Menl Park, Calif (VC) 22% stock acquisition
1998 CEO Meg Whitman (July); IPO 1.871
1999 Alliance with AOL 25.016
2000-2006 Global expansion to over 2 dozen countries 12.708
Feb 2002 Withdrew from Japanese market & Hong Kong
(where Yahoo! Auctions/Shopping had head start)
20.833
Jul 2002 Acquired PayPal 15.13
2005 Acquired Skype 49.500
Products & ServicesProducts & Services
• eBay started out selling Collectibles and Antiques
• Has since grown to include incredibly diverse categories of items:
• Collectibles
• Antiques
• Art
• Coins
• Toys & Dolls
• Memorabilia
• Motor Vehicles
• Cars
• Boats
• Parts
• Electronics
• Cameras
• Cell phones & PDAs
• Computers
• Entertainment
• Movies, Music & Games
• DVD
• CD
• VHS
•Event Tickets
• Books
• Clothing
• Jewelry
• Shoes
• Accessories
• Home Improvement
• Décor
• Crafts
• Gardening
eBay: Target SegmentseBay: Target Segments
 Primary target markets are Online Auction & Shopping communities.
 eBay has business strategies to target specific segments of each.
 Key segment is “Antiques & Collectibles”.
(It was the lack of a good community-based pet collectibles company that
inspired Pierre Omidyar to develop eBay. Collectibles still among highest
in gross merchandise sales, boasts by far the most veteran sellers.)
 Motor lovers: Using credibility of leading car collector Kruse Inc., eBay
expanded its categorical offerings with eBay Motors. eBay Motors became
one of its most successful target segments with $2,500M Global Gross
Merchandise Sales in 2002.
 Art lovers: eBay also had a somewhat failed strategic partnership
targeting Art Collectors directly.
eBay (profit sites)eBay (profit sites)
 Internet value network consists of three major groups and they are users,
communication service provider and suppliers. Each subgroup of these three
segments are called profit sites. Here we will focus on eBay’s profit sites and its
implications .
 Market maker: A market maker acts as a neutral intermediary that provides a place
to trade and also sets the rules for the market .Thus, eBay is acting as a electronic
auction market and brings buyers and sellers together to execute transactions
through a win-win strategy. And in this way, eBay is developing new markets.
 Brokers and agents: to complete transactions, buyers and sellers depend on some
facilitating organizations like, citigroup or charles Schwab to complete transactions.complete transactions.
These groups are parts of eBay’s profit sites when eBay gets commission from theseThese groups are parts of eBay’s profit sites when eBay gets commission from these
organizations for each transaction.organizations for each transaction.
eBay is a market maker
Acts as an intermediary
Charges commission
Buyers sellers
Business ProcessBusiness Process
Seller Account
Creation
Listing an Item
Reserve Dutch Buy-it Now Regular(Auction Type)
Bids Placed
Completing
a Sale
After-sales
Service
Typically covered by Seller,
using eBay’s features.
No bids
Final Value Fee = 5% of the first $25
+ 2.5% of remaining amount up to $1,000
+ 1.25% of any portion of sale over $1,000
-eBay sends Outbid Notice if needed.
-Seller’s feedback rating dictates
bidder confidence.
Industry Competitors:
Intense segment
of Rivalry
•Newspaper cite on the web
• every Internet directory
•Every music & video retailer
•Every personal homepage
Suppliers Buyers
New Entrants
Substitutes
Porter’s Five-Force Framework
Bargaining
Power of
Buyers
Threat of
Substitutes
Bargaining
Power of
Suppliers
Low
•Fixed rate
•mediation
•Large number of customer for
longer period of time
High threats of new entrants
Auction Universe
Yahoo! Excite Classified
2000
Few substitutes and
Low threats because of
strong CRM
Since suppliers are
large, so threat is low.
Online AuctionOnline Auction
Industry analysisIndustry analysis
Threat of
New Entrants
eBay’s Business ModeleBay’s Business Model
Seller Buyer
Internet property sales format
Network externality social communication
Mediation (forums, buyer/seller ratings)
Universality Regional sites
Information asymmetry Trust and safety
Virtual capacity large variety
Low cost Innovative
(Bid-based auctioning systems)
Exchange
Transaction
Community platform
For global person
to person trade
More
Profit
Decreased
Costs
Win-win
situation
Leads Repeat
Transaction
Regional sites vs.Regional sites vs.
Network ExternalityNetwork Externality
 eBay created > 24 regional trading sites within countries in order to
facilitate the process of buying and selling items of local interest.
 This regional focus and network externality are very much consistent
because the larger the network size, the more opportunity for buyers and
sellers to have a better match of their needs.
 Localization and Internationalization of eBay’s services should also help
make the site more accessible in a specific region, for speakers of the
native language; thus offering the opportunity to gain new members at a
faster rate
 The only possible downside could be fragmentation and isolation of the
individual networks, so each new regional site must “feel” like part of the
main eBay network and family
eBay APIeBay API
 Buyers:
 Get the current list of eBay categories
 View information about items listed on eBay
 Display eBay listings on other sites
 Leave feedback about other users at the
conclusion of a commerce transaction
 Sellers:
 Submit items for listing on eBay
 Get high bidder information for items you are
selling
 Retrieve lists of items a particular user is
currently selling through eBay
 Retrieve lists of items a particular user has
bid on
Internet PropertiesInternet Properties
Coordination Commerce Community Content Communication
Mediation / / / / /
Universality / / / / /
Network Externality / /
Distribution Channel / / /
Time Moderator / / / /
Info. Asymmetry Shrinker / / /
Infinite Virtual Capacity / /
Low Cost Standard / / / /
Creative Destroyer / /
Transaction-Cost Reducer / / / / /
Key DriversKey Drivers
1. Network externality
The company believes that this critical mass of buyers, sellers, and items listed for sale created
a cycle that helped eBay continue to grow its user base. and one thing is very true for this model is its large
number of customers stay for longer period of time to complete transactions.
2. Mediation
In addition to providing a venue for selling items, eBay provides buyers and sellers a place to socialize, to
discuss topics of common interest, and to provide feedback on one another
3. Universality
On the Internet, amateurs and collectors from around the world, rather than locations within a reasonable
driving distance, could bid on items. And eBay is applying that latitude by connecting both parties.
4. Time moderation:
the property of time moderation assists eBay a lot by tailoring time according to customer’s needs.
sometimes it enlarges time period of auction according to needs of a buyer
5. Distribution channel and replacement effect:
eBay uses the traditional distribution channel without any sort of disintermediation and it is called the
replacement effect, that means, serving the same customers using the existing distribution channel.
6.Information asymmetry shrinking:
eBay reduces all sorts of information asymmetry by allowing sellers to provide all related information to buyers
to pave the way for successful transaction. So buyers are no more deprived by short of data .
Success Story:Success Story:
Commission JunctionCommission Junction
 Partnered with eBay in 2001 as the exclusive Affiliate Network for
eBay’s affiliate program1
 Allows partners to revenue-share by creating links to Auctions,
Seller sites and/or eBay pages (such as category listings, etc)
 eBay in charge of payouts for specific actions (i.e. 9 cent click-
throughs .vs. $13 active user signups .vs. 5% purchases)
 Commission Junction gains an even smaller ratio per eBay payout
to one of its affiliates, but, which adds up over time
 Network externalities for both companies
1 - http://www.cj.com/news/press_releases0102/press_010418.html
2 - http://www.cj.com/news/press_releases0304/press_030918.html
AmazonAmazon
SummarySummary
 Online retailer of millions of products (books, toys, Cookware etc..)
 Founded in 1995 by Jeff Bezos, in a computer science and electrical
engineering graduate from Princeton University.
 Vision
To build the world’s most customer–centric company
To establish a place where customers could buy anything
 Located in Seattle
Close to the largest book wholesalers in Roseburg, Oregon
The sales tax rate of small state is cheaper than big state
 Sites in 6 countries (US, Canada, UK, France, Germany, Japan); ship to >
200 countries
 Percentage of sales responsible majority of revenue
 Financial Status (Year of 2006)
Net Sales:$8,49billion
Net Income:$359million
Achieve a surplus since the 4th
quarter of 2002
HistoryHistory
1 - http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/7.03/change.html
Date Event Stock ($)
1994-1995 Founded then Launched by Jeff Bezos
May 15, 1997 IPO 3.917
Sep 23, 1997 Collaborative Filter recommendations launched 9.250
Oct 28, 1997 Millionth customer personally receives order
from Bezos's hands
9.896
Nov 18, 1997 First holiday-gift center opened 8.833
Mar 2, 1998 Amazon.com Kids launched 12.708
Jun 11, 1998 Music sales launched 20.833
Nov 17, 1998 Video sales launched 49.500
Dec 21, 1998 Acquired IMDB, world’s biggest movie database 54.135
1999-2003 Global growth in key international markets 67.85 (mean)
2003-2007 Merchant strategy; major corporate partners 72.29 (6-6-07)
Industry
Competitors:
Intensity of
Rivalry
Suppliers Buyers
New Entrants
Substitutes
Threat of
New Entrants
Bargaining
Power of
Buyers
Threat of
Substitutes
Bargaining
Power of
Suppliers
Network Externality –
(no customer base)
Low Cost Standard +
Universality +
Distribution Channel +
Transaction Cost Reducer +
Mediation –
(no social platform)
Network Externality +
(many customers )
Mediation +
(reviews/community platform)
Distribution Channel -
(replacement)
Info Asymmetry Shrinker +
Low cost +
Transaction Cost Reducer –
(wholesale/retail)
Universality –
(regional focus)
Distribution Channel +
Distribution Channel –
(No control over channel)
Info Asymmetry Shrinker +
(reduces asymmetry, so no
manipulation over data)
Universality +
(existing suppliers)
Network Externality +
(large customer base)
Mediation +, –
(no social platform for sellers; great
platform for buyers)
Universality –
Online RetailOnline Retail
Industry analysisIndustry analysis
Evolution: From Retailer toEvolution: From Retailer to
Retail PlatformRetail Platform
Sales FormatSales Format
B S
-Communication
(Reviews)
-Low Cost
-Large Variety
-Distribution
-Trust & Safety
(seller ratings)
Sales Format
Transaction
Product from
Catalogue
User
choice
Locate
Sellers
Store 1
Store 2
Store n
“Merchant”
Storefronts
Amazon Web ServicesAmazon Web Services
(AWS)(AWS)
 Amazon E-Commerce Service
 Search catalog, retrieve product information,
images and customer reviews
 Retrieve wish list, wedding registry…
 Search seller and offer
 Alexa Web Information Service
 Retrieve information such as page rank,
related sites given a target URL
 Amazon Simple Queue Service
 A distributed resource manager to store web
services results
5 Benefits of AWS5 Benefits of AWS
1. Pay-per use model
2. Instant scalability
3. Reliable/Redundant/Secure
4. Most services accessed via simple
REST/SOAP API
5. Superior Technical Support
(Experience & Commitment)
S3 in a NutshellS3 in a Nutshell
Client
Idea:
Put/Get objects into buckets
based on unique keys.
Main Features:
• Public/Private access.
• Support for large objects.
Amazon S3
Bucket 1 Bucket N
…
Put object Get object
Value Configuration Diagram : _________
Strong CRM
‘1-Click Shopping’
Convenience
Low Costs
Diversification
Partnering
Network
Externality
Brand Image
Product Review
Information
Customer Base
Fixed Merchants
Product
Recommendations
Cross-selling
Distributed
Web Services
Money-back
Guarantee
Email Marketing
Loyalty &
Advocacy
Merchant Advantage:
Automatic Re-Ordering, etc
Associates
Program
Association
Repeat
Purchases
Positioning: Online Shopping
Order Fulfillment
(Buyer)
(Seller)
Business ProcessBusiness Process
 The Amazon Business Process
is built around three main
operation:
Browsing: User looks for books
available at Amazon (searched,
recommended, or browsed by category)
Manage Account: check content of
user shopping cart, stock of
sellers, add and remove
products
Shop: First browse to find
product(s), place in the
shopping basket, then
complete a purchase
(payment/delivery) Process Model for Amazon.com
Browse Manage
Account
Shop=
Browse+Manage Account
Internet PropertiesInternet Properties
Coordination Commerce Community Content Communication
Mediation / / / / /
Universality / / / / /
Network Externality / / /
Distribution Channel / / /
Time Moderator / / / /
Info. Asymmetry Shrinker / / / /
Infinite Virtual Capacity / / / /
Low Cost Standard / / / /
Creative Destroyer / / /
Transaction-Cost Reducer / / / / /
First-Mover SuccessFirst-Mover Success
 First to move booking retailing online (1994 – Jeff Bezos)
 Brand recognized worldwide, most visited site in USA (2000)
 Simple Business Model:
 Expensive inventory brick and mortar warehousing not required – Require
WEB to interface with customers and take their orders
 Continuous Rapid innovation
 “one-click”, search facilities, collaborative filtering, affiliate programs (250,000
partners in 2000), order tracking mechanisms
 Established strong brand presence – created psychological switching costs in
consumers (collaborate filtering, privacy policies, builds trust)
 Pillars (quality of service, value for money, trust worthiness)
 WEB site easy to use, easy to find, and fast
Key DriversKey Drivers
1. Low cost platform for transaction:
The Internet is certainly a lower cost platform for any transaction, communication or negotiation than
any other electronic media. Amazon is using this platform successfully to bring buyers and sellers
together for transactions, and doing so not by charging an upfront listing or transaction fee, but by
charging a percentage of each sales, which in the long-run could be a much larger pie and better
approach for Amazon on volume; on the short-term to merchants it appears to be a win-win situation
as well as cumulative listing fees can even become prohibitively expensive in some cases.
2.Transaction cost reducer:
The Internet is reducing costs of commercial transactions dramatically by matching the right buyers to
the right suppliers, for the right product at the right time. Just-in-time (JIT) theory which dominated the
late 80s and early 90s, is taken to the extereme in Amzon’s business model. In this model, sellers can
learn about buyers’ financial standing, review history and other characteristics of a good customer.
Likewise buyers can learn about suppliers’ reputations, product features, and prices.
3. Infinite virtual capacity:
Internet infrastructure gives customers the feeling that it has infinite virtual capacity to serve them.
Amazon is taking advantage of their distributed infrastructure through AWS and by bringing a large
no. of sellers with large no. of products for transaction. Buyers are confident that just about anything
they want must be available on Amazon, and most importantly, the quality and authenticity will be
more reliable than eBay.
4.Creative destroyer:
The Internet is transforming the traditional retailing distribution structure; business is now conducted
by Amazon to remove the middleman of the brick-and-mortar storefront, playing a role as a creative
destroyer. Amazon is paving the way for the digital storefront, which is much more affordable and
accessible (does not require large amounts of capital to startup). In this way, it is both a creator and a
destroyer, but certainly in terms of the traditonal system it is a creative destroyer.
Success Story : Toys-R-UsSuccess Story : Toys-R-Us
 1999 Christmas on-line orders flushed into
newly establishe ToysRus.com
 Announced a joint-venture with Amazon for
online sales in 2000
 Used AWS and Amazon site itself for Web
operations, order fulfillment, & customer
service
 Toys-R-us controls buying and managing
inventory
Success Story (cont…)Success Story (cont…)
 65 million and growing number of visitors
every year
 Number one site in its category
 Explosive growth in sales reaching $300
million
 Posted profit for the fourth quarter of 2002
Side-by-SideSide-by-Side
 Technology
 Superior revenue-sharing
plan with Affiliate program
 Strategy
 Enables big and small
sellers/affiliates to earn at
roughly the same rate
 Business
 B2C loser
 C2C winner
 B2B draw
 Transaction fee structure
 Technology
 Superior technology through
AWS, EC2, S3 & catalogue
 Strategy
 Tends to prefer big-name
brands and retailers with
strong distribution chains
 Business
 B2C winner
 C2C loser
 B2B draw
 Percentage of sales structure
ConclusionConclusion
 Based on my analysis eBay should
not put additional resources
towards B2C market, due to
saturated market and competitors’
near stranglehold on market share
 Should instead surprise
competitors like Amazon with a
strong B2B initiative or campaign
(i.e. introducing a new comparison
shopping service for wholesalers)
 Reinforcing their C2C presence
through continued rewards to their
loyal seller/buyer base to maintain
dominance there would also be a
wise strategy, after-all in C2C
eventually incentives are needed as
parties can communicate offline
 Amazon should invest whatever
resources necessary to maintain hold
of B2C market by continuing to
compete on price, convenience &
reliability of vendors and continue to
bring in new brand-name retailers
 Should reward smaller users as the
longtail works for network membership
as well (strength in #’s, not just big
enterprise retailers, because if they leave,
sales/catalogue can shrink overnight)
 Better position than eBay right now for
long-term B2B strategy with AWS,
should try new programs(i.e. seller-
exchanges, etc)

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E bay.vs.amazon

  • 1. eBayeBay .vs. AmazonAmazon Analysis of two “first-movers” that lasted, in the E-commerce space Student: Bryan Copeland Student ID: 053171c Submitted to: Wakayama-sensei
  • 3. SummarySummary  Founded by Pierre Omidyar in 1995  His wife needed a better way to lookup and trade collectibles; decided to put his computer science skills to use, never thought it would lead to a multi-billion dollar E- Commerce company  Auction-based online sales of products (and sometimes services) where users try to outbid one another by placing a higher maximum amount; Dutch and Reverse-auction style also recently available in some regions  Transaction fees for listing (regardless of whether item sells or not) and additional fees for Premium Auction features (i.e. extra photos, BuyItNow, Feature It!, etc) or Premium Seller memberships
  • 4. HistoryHistory Date Event Stock ($) 1995 Founded by Pierre Omidyar 1997 Menl Park, Calif (VC) 22% stock acquisition 1998 CEO Meg Whitman (July); IPO 1.871 1999 Alliance with AOL 25.016 2000-2006 Global expansion to over 2 dozen countries 12.708 Feb 2002 Withdrew from Japanese market & Hong Kong (where Yahoo! Auctions/Shopping had head start) 20.833 Jul 2002 Acquired PayPal 15.13 2005 Acquired Skype 49.500
  • 5. Products & ServicesProducts & Services • eBay started out selling Collectibles and Antiques • Has since grown to include incredibly diverse categories of items: • Collectibles • Antiques • Art • Coins • Toys & Dolls • Memorabilia • Motor Vehicles • Cars • Boats • Parts • Electronics • Cameras • Cell phones & PDAs • Computers • Entertainment • Movies, Music & Games • DVD • CD • VHS •Event Tickets • Books • Clothing • Jewelry • Shoes • Accessories • Home Improvement • Décor • Crafts • Gardening
  • 6. eBay: Target SegmentseBay: Target Segments  Primary target markets are Online Auction & Shopping communities.  eBay has business strategies to target specific segments of each.  Key segment is “Antiques & Collectibles”. (It was the lack of a good community-based pet collectibles company that inspired Pierre Omidyar to develop eBay. Collectibles still among highest in gross merchandise sales, boasts by far the most veteran sellers.)  Motor lovers: Using credibility of leading car collector Kruse Inc., eBay expanded its categorical offerings with eBay Motors. eBay Motors became one of its most successful target segments with $2,500M Global Gross Merchandise Sales in 2002.  Art lovers: eBay also had a somewhat failed strategic partnership targeting Art Collectors directly.
  • 7. eBay (profit sites)eBay (profit sites)  Internet value network consists of three major groups and they are users, communication service provider and suppliers. Each subgroup of these three segments are called profit sites. Here we will focus on eBay’s profit sites and its implications .  Market maker: A market maker acts as a neutral intermediary that provides a place to trade and also sets the rules for the market .Thus, eBay is acting as a electronic auction market and brings buyers and sellers together to execute transactions through a win-win strategy. And in this way, eBay is developing new markets.  Brokers and agents: to complete transactions, buyers and sellers depend on some facilitating organizations like, citigroup or charles Schwab to complete transactions.complete transactions. These groups are parts of eBay’s profit sites when eBay gets commission from theseThese groups are parts of eBay’s profit sites when eBay gets commission from these organizations for each transaction.organizations for each transaction. eBay is a market maker Acts as an intermediary Charges commission Buyers sellers
  • 8. Business ProcessBusiness Process Seller Account Creation Listing an Item Reserve Dutch Buy-it Now Regular(Auction Type) Bids Placed Completing a Sale After-sales Service Typically covered by Seller, using eBay’s features. No bids Final Value Fee = 5% of the first $25 + 2.5% of remaining amount up to $1,000 + 1.25% of any portion of sale over $1,000 -eBay sends Outbid Notice if needed. -Seller’s feedback rating dictates bidder confidence.
  • 9. Industry Competitors: Intense segment of Rivalry •Newspaper cite on the web • every Internet directory •Every music & video retailer •Every personal homepage Suppliers Buyers New Entrants Substitutes Porter’s Five-Force Framework Bargaining Power of Buyers Threat of Substitutes Bargaining Power of Suppliers Low •Fixed rate •mediation •Large number of customer for longer period of time High threats of new entrants Auction Universe Yahoo! Excite Classified 2000 Few substitutes and Low threats because of strong CRM Since suppliers are large, so threat is low. Online AuctionOnline Auction Industry analysisIndustry analysis Threat of New Entrants
  • 10. eBay’s Business ModeleBay’s Business Model Seller Buyer Internet property sales format Network externality social communication Mediation (forums, buyer/seller ratings) Universality Regional sites Information asymmetry Trust and safety Virtual capacity large variety Low cost Innovative (Bid-based auctioning systems) Exchange Transaction Community platform For global person to person trade More Profit Decreased Costs Win-win situation Leads Repeat Transaction
  • 11. Regional sites vs.Regional sites vs. Network ExternalityNetwork Externality  eBay created > 24 regional trading sites within countries in order to facilitate the process of buying and selling items of local interest.  This regional focus and network externality are very much consistent because the larger the network size, the more opportunity for buyers and sellers to have a better match of their needs.  Localization and Internationalization of eBay’s services should also help make the site more accessible in a specific region, for speakers of the native language; thus offering the opportunity to gain new members at a faster rate  The only possible downside could be fragmentation and isolation of the individual networks, so each new regional site must “feel” like part of the main eBay network and family
  • 12. eBay APIeBay API  Buyers:  Get the current list of eBay categories  View information about items listed on eBay  Display eBay listings on other sites  Leave feedback about other users at the conclusion of a commerce transaction  Sellers:  Submit items for listing on eBay  Get high bidder information for items you are selling  Retrieve lists of items a particular user is currently selling through eBay  Retrieve lists of items a particular user has bid on
  • 13. Internet PropertiesInternet Properties Coordination Commerce Community Content Communication Mediation / / / / / Universality / / / / / Network Externality / / Distribution Channel / / / Time Moderator / / / / Info. Asymmetry Shrinker / / / Infinite Virtual Capacity / / Low Cost Standard / / / / Creative Destroyer / / Transaction-Cost Reducer / / / / /
  • 14. Key DriversKey Drivers 1. Network externality The company believes that this critical mass of buyers, sellers, and items listed for sale created a cycle that helped eBay continue to grow its user base. and one thing is very true for this model is its large number of customers stay for longer period of time to complete transactions. 2. Mediation In addition to providing a venue for selling items, eBay provides buyers and sellers a place to socialize, to discuss topics of common interest, and to provide feedback on one another 3. Universality On the Internet, amateurs and collectors from around the world, rather than locations within a reasonable driving distance, could bid on items. And eBay is applying that latitude by connecting both parties. 4. Time moderation: the property of time moderation assists eBay a lot by tailoring time according to customer’s needs. sometimes it enlarges time period of auction according to needs of a buyer 5. Distribution channel and replacement effect: eBay uses the traditional distribution channel without any sort of disintermediation and it is called the replacement effect, that means, serving the same customers using the existing distribution channel. 6.Information asymmetry shrinking: eBay reduces all sorts of information asymmetry by allowing sellers to provide all related information to buyers to pave the way for successful transaction. So buyers are no more deprived by short of data .
  • 15. Success Story:Success Story: Commission JunctionCommission Junction  Partnered with eBay in 2001 as the exclusive Affiliate Network for eBay’s affiliate program1  Allows partners to revenue-share by creating links to Auctions, Seller sites and/or eBay pages (such as category listings, etc)  eBay in charge of payouts for specific actions (i.e. 9 cent click- throughs .vs. $13 active user signups .vs. 5% purchases)  Commission Junction gains an even smaller ratio per eBay payout to one of its affiliates, but, which adds up over time  Network externalities for both companies 1 - http://www.cj.com/news/press_releases0102/press_010418.html 2 - http://www.cj.com/news/press_releases0304/press_030918.html
  • 17. SummarySummary  Online retailer of millions of products (books, toys, Cookware etc..)  Founded in 1995 by Jeff Bezos, in a computer science and electrical engineering graduate from Princeton University.  Vision To build the world’s most customer–centric company To establish a place where customers could buy anything  Located in Seattle Close to the largest book wholesalers in Roseburg, Oregon The sales tax rate of small state is cheaper than big state  Sites in 6 countries (US, Canada, UK, France, Germany, Japan); ship to > 200 countries  Percentage of sales responsible majority of revenue  Financial Status (Year of 2006) Net Sales:$8,49billion Net Income:$359million Achieve a surplus since the 4th quarter of 2002
  • 18. HistoryHistory 1 - http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/7.03/change.html Date Event Stock ($) 1994-1995 Founded then Launched by Jeff Bezos May 15, 1997 IPO 3.917 Sep 23, 1997 Collaborative Filter recommendations launched 9.250 Oct 28, 1997 Millionth customer personally receives order from Bezos's hands 9.896 Nov 18, 1997 First holiday-gift center opened 8.833 Mar 2, 1998 Amazon.com Kids launched 12.708 Jun 11, 1998 Music sales launched 20.833 Nov 17, 1998 Video sales launched 49.500 Dec 21, 1998 Acquired IMDB, world’s biggest movie database 54.135 1999-2003 Global growth in key international markets 67.85 (mean) 2003-2007 Merchant strategy; major corporate partners 72.29 (6-6-07)
  • 19. Industry Competitors: Intensity of Rivalry Suppliers Buyers New Entrants Substitutes Threat of New Entrants Bargaining Power of Buyers Threat of Substitutes Bargaining Power of Suppliers Network Externality – (no customer base) Low Cost Standard + Universality + Distribution Channel + Transaction Cost Reducer + Mediation – (no social platform) Network Externality + (many customers ) Mediation + (reviews/community platform) Distribution Channel - (replacement) Info Asymmetry Shrinker + Low cost + Transaction Cost Reducer – (wholesale/retail) Universality – (regional focus) Distribution Channel + Distribution Channel – (No control over channel) Info Asymmetry Shrinker + (reduces asymmetry, so no manipulation over data) Universality + (existing suppliers) Network Externality + (large customer base) Mediation +, – (no social platform for sellers; great platform for buyers) Universality – Online RetailOnline Retail Industry analysisIndustry analysis
  • 20. Evolution: From Retailer toEvolution: From Retailer to Retail PlatformRetail Platform
  • 21. Sales FormatSales Format B S -Communication (Reviews) -Low Cost -Large Variety -Distribution -Trust & Safety (seller ratings) Sales Format Transaction Product from Catalogue User choice Locate Sellers Store 1 Store 2 Store n “Merchant” Storefronts
  • 22. Amazon Web ServicesAmazon Web Services (AWS)(AWS)  Amazon E-Commerce Service  Search catalog, retrieve product information, images and customer reviews  Retrieve wish list, wedding registry…  Search seller and offer  Alexa Web Information Service  Retrieve information such as page rank, related sites given a target URL  Amazon Simple Queue Service  A distributed resource manager to store web services results
  • 23. 5 Benefits of AWS5 Benefits of AWS 1. Pay-per use model 2. Instant scalability 3. Reliable/Redundant/Secure 4. Most services accessed via simple REST/SOAP API 5. Superior Technical Support (Experience & Commitment)
  • 24. S3 in a NutshellS3 in a Nutshell Client Idea: Put/Get objects into buckets based on unique keys. Main Features: • Public/Private access. • Support for large objects. Amazon S3 Bucket 1 Bucket N … Put object Get object
  • 25. Value Configuration Diagram : _________ Strong CRM ‘1-Click Shopping’ Convenience Low Costs Diversification Partnering Network Externality Brand Image Product Review Information Customer Base Fixed Merchants Product Recommendations Cross-selling Distributed Web Services Money-back Guarantee Email Marketing Loyalty & Advocacy Merchant Advantage: Automatic Re-Ordering, etc Associates Program Association Repeat Purchases Positioning: Online Shopping Order Fulfillment (Buyer) (Seller)
  • 26. Business ProcessBusiness Process  The Amazon Business Process is built around three main operation: Browsing: User looks for books available at Amazon (searched, recommended, or browsed by category) Manage Account: check content of user shopping cart, stock of sellers, add and remove products Shop: First browse to find product(s), place in the shopping basket, then complete a purchase (payment/delivery) Process Model for Amazon.com Browse Manage Account Shop= Browse+Manage Account
  • 27. Internet PropertiesInternet Properties Coordination Commerce Community Content Communication Mediation / / / / / Universality / / / / / Network Externality / / / Distribution Channel / / / Time Moderator / / / / Info. Asymmetry Shrinker / / / / Infinite Virtual Capacity / / / / Low Cost Standard / / / / Creative Destroyer / / / Transaction-Cost Reducer / / / / /
  • 28. First-Mover SuccessFirst-Mover Success  First to move booking retailing online (1994 – Jeff Bezos)  Brand recognized worldwide, most visited site in USA (2000)  Simple Business Model:  Expensive inventory brick and mortar warehousing not required – Require WEB to interface with customers and take their orders  Continuous Rapid innovation  “one-click”, search facilities, collaborative filtering, affiliate programs (250,000 partners in 2000), order tracking mechanisms  Established strong brand presence – created psychological switching costs in consumers (collaborate filtering, privacy policies, builds trust)  Pillars (quality of service, value for money, trust worthiness)  WEB site easy to use, easy to find, and fast
  • 29. Key DriversKey Drivers 1. Low cost platform for transaction: The Internet is certainly a lower cost platform for any transaction, communication or negotiation than any other electronic media. Amazon is using this platform successfully to bring buyers and sellers together for transactions, and doing so not by charging an upfront listing or transaction fee, but by charging a percentage of each sales, which in the long-run could be a much larger pie and better approach for Amazon on volume; on the short-term to merchants it appears to be a win-win situation as well as cumulative listing fees can even become prohibitively expensive in some cases. 2.Transaction cost reducer: The Internet is reducing costs of commercial transactions dramatically by matching the right buyers to the right suppliers, for the right product at the right time. Just-in-time (JIT) theory which dominated the late 80s and early 90s, is taken to the extereme in Amzon’s business model. In this model, sellers can learn about buyers’ financial standing, review history and other characteristics of a good customer. Likewise buyers can learn about suppliers’ reputations, product features, and prices. 3. Infinite virtual capacity: Internet infrastructure gives customers the feeling that it has infinite virtual capacity to serve them. Amazon is taking advantage of their distributed infrastructure through AWS and by bringing a large no. of sellers with large no. of products for transaction. Buyers are confident that just about anything they want must be available on Amazon, and most importantly, the quality and authenticity will be more reliable than eBay. 4.Creative destroyer: The Internet is transforming the traditional retailing distribution structure; business is now conducted by Amazon to remove the middleman of the brick-and-mortar storefront, playing a role as a creative destroyer. Amazon is paving the way for the digital storefront, which is much more affordable and accessible (does not require large amounts of capital to startup). In this way, it is both a creator and a destroyer, but certainly in terms of the traditonal system it is a creative destroyer.
  • 30. Success Story : Toys-R-UsSuccess Story : Toys-R-Us  1999 Christmas on-line orders flushed into newly establishe ToysRus.com  Announced a joint-venture with Amazon for online sales in 2000  Used AWS and Amazon site itself for Web operations, order fulfillment, & customer service  Toys-R-us controls buying and managing inventory
  • 31. Success Story (cont…)Success Story (cont…)  65 million and growing number of visitors every year  Number one site in its category  Explosive growth in sales reaching $300 million  Posted profit for the fourth quarter of 2002
  • 32. Side-by-SideSide-by-Side  Technology  Superior revenue-sharing plan with Affiliate program  Strategy  Enables big and small sellers/affiliates to earn at roughly the same rate  Business  B2C loser  C2C winner  B2B draw  Transaction fee structure  Technology  Superior technology through AWS, EC2, S3 & catalogue  Strategy  Tends to prefer big-name brands and retailers with strong distribution chains  Business  B2C winner  C2C loser  B2B draw  Percentage of sales structure
  • 33. ConclusionConclusion  Based on my analysis eBay should not put additional resources towards B2C market, due to saturated market and competitors’ near stranglehold on market share  Should instead surprise competitors like Amazon with a strong B2B initiative or campaign (i.e. introducing a new comparison shopping service for wholesalers)  Reinforcing their C2C presence through continued rewards to their loyal seller/buyer base to maintain dominance there would also be a wise strategy, after-all in C2C eventually incentives are needed as parties can communicate offline  Amazon should invest whatever resources necessary to maintain hold of B2C market by continuing to compete on price, convenience & reliability of vendors and continue to bring in new brand-name retailers  Should reward smaller users as the longtail works for network membership as well (strength in #’s, not just big enterprise retailers, because if they leave, sales/catalogue can shrink overnight)  Better position than eBay right now for long-term B2B strategy with AWS, should try new programs(i.e. seller- exchanges, etc)