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- When it comes to a copy of Harper Lee’s ‘To Kill a
Mockingbird’ or a rare Tarantino DVD, Amazon has long been the internet’s go to
guy, but even with blood, sweat and tears, it hasn’t had the success and
conversion rate that Tony Hsieh’s Zappos has demonstrated. Tony reveals his
success in an exclusive interview for MeettheBoss.com on how he has built
Zappos from a $1million company to the $847 million empire that Amazon has just
reached into its pockets for, in an unprecedented purchase.
During the interview recorded earlier this year Hsieh
divulges innovations he has made to Zappos to grow the business from nearly no
sales in 1999 to over $1Billion in gross merchandise sales in 2008. Hseih
states ‘The number one driver of that growth has been through repeat customers
and word of mouth.’ He also shares his secrets to improving company culture
through recruitment and to his Marketing Strategies, ‘Most of the money that we
would of spent on paid advertising we put into the customer experience … Any
costs that we put into investing in the customer experience ends up driving
that repeat customer behavior and word of mouth, so
we think of it as an in direct marketing cost’. And he clearly was on the right
track as Amazon digs deep to increase market share.
With $23 billion in annual sales generated by footwear
and apparel online, Amazon appears to have made the move with money in mind.
According to Forrester, this sector tops the hyper competitive PC market, ($16
billion) and consumer electronics ($11 billion). This has always been an area
where Amazon has been lacking, but today’s purchase of Zappos is perhaps the
most obvious admission of its failure to dominate this lucrative sector. In
this respect, the deal makes sense. "They've been trying to do it for years
with very little success," said Sucharita Mulpuru, a Forrester Research
analyst.
Whilst Amazon has stated that they aren’t
‘disappointed’ with the performance of Endless.com (their presence in this
market), this move is clearly an indicator of the company’s desire to become a
more prominent player in certain areas of online retailing.
The move has, however, prompted some critics to
question Amazon’s motives. Is it purely a case of profit and turnover that has
led Amazon to tap into a sector in which they weren’t “King of the Hill”? Or,
as some are speculating, is it perhaps a pre-emptive manoeuvre to prevent one
of the most celebrated online retailers from expanding their repertoire into
segments that Amazon has traditionally dominated?
After all, Amazon themselves started as an online
bookshop before rapidly expanding into sector after sector. As a shopping
option Amazon is engrained into our lives as the de facto choice for online
purchasing, a podium place they simply cannot afford to share.
Both companies have shown a resilience and
sustainability even in the most challenging of times, which is good reason for
such attention from not only Silicon Valley, but the financial and retail
titans.
For more information
or to see the exclusive video go to MeettheBoss News Centre
http://www.meettheboss.com/amazon-buys-zappos.html
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