Every company claims it is
customer centric, but have you ever seen a CEO keep an empty chair at management
meetings to represent the customer?
Welcome to Amazon, and the cult
of Jeff Bezos.
“The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos
and the Age of Amazon” by Brad Stone is an extremely well researched, almost
biographical account of Amazon.com, and its founder Jeff Bezos. Aided by dozens
of interviews (including some with Bezos himself) with former and current
employees, suppliers, competitors, friends and relatives, family members, teachers
and almost anyone who came in contact with him, the author has built an
in-depth profile of Amazon and its legendary founder Jeff Bezos. The author
traces the journey of Amazon right from the birth of the idea in the mid-1990s
and takes the reader, often in excruciating detail till where it stood when the
book was published in 2013.
The origin
Bezos is Amazon. Amazon is Bezos.
Customer First
How did Amazon manage to grow at
such a breakneck speed? How did Amazon succeed where others didn’t? Bezos
realized that e-Commerce had the potential to understand its customers in a way
brick & mortar merchants can never do. “We
are genuinely customer centric, genuinely long term oriented and genuinely like
to invent”, Bezos is quoted in the book as saying, building Amazon on the
edifice of a few clearly defined and religiously followed founding principles –
customer obsession, frugality, bias for action, ownership, a high bar for
talent and innovation. Among this, extreme customer centricity comes out
repeatedly as the single most defining character that distinguishes Amazon from
others. “There are two kinds of retailers – those who work to figure out how to
charge more, and those who try to figure out how to charge less. We are in the
second category. Period.”
Tech, not Retail
Bezos visualizes Amazon as a
technology company, not a retailer. A key element of Amazon’s success has been
Bezos’ constant focus on innovation. Negative reviews, referral fees, platform
services, the Amazon Marketplace – Amazon claims many a firsts to its credit,
though it was not the only or even the first online bookstore to start
operations. Complex algorithms studying customer behavior, calculating cheapest
& fastest shipping routes, crawling the web to keep a tab on competitor
prices – all have played a crucial role in Amazon’s success. Yet, Bezos
struggled to present Amazon as a technology company pioneering e-Commerce until
much later when businesses like the Cloud and Kindle came along. With Cloud,
Bezos dreamt of ‘a student in a dorm room
having at his disposal the same infrastructure as the largest companies in the
world’. And true to it, it facilitated the creation of thousands of
internet startups, pulling out the tech sector from a post dot.com depression
in the early 2000s.
A must read
As I write this review in early
2018, Jeff Bezos has already surpassed the likes of Bill Gates and Warren
Buffet to become the richest man in the world. And while the others may well be
past their prime, the Amazon story has only just begun.