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Mighty Amazon

theodp writes "Fortune reports that the patent-pending practice of selling partners' used and new goods next to Amazon's own was CEO Jeff Bezos' response to the emerging threat of eBay. Seeing an opportunity to overtake the online auctioneer as well as a way to slow the need to add warehouse capacity, Bezos 'bet big and put hundreds of his best people on it.' While Bezos' decision caused a lot of discomfort at the time, including the Authors Guild protest and the subsequent e-mail campaign in Amazon's defense, today almost 20% of the e-tailer's unit volume is sold through others, yielding revenue that is almost pure profit."

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  1. Nearly classical economics by Walter+Wart · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A lot of people don't like Amazon's practice of patenting everything under the sun. I don't like their practice of patenting everything under the sun. Ultimately it is destructive to the long term development of the industry in the same way that the new NDA-driven brand of industry/university research is to science. But these articles give some idea of the why.

    Bezos wants to make money and survive. And it's darned hard to run something like Amazon like a business. Now this should be obvious. But it brings back memories of my days as an economist (oh, the shame! the shame!)

    They, like ebay, are working in as close to a frictionless economy as we are likely to get. If any facet of their business can be done more cheaply by someone else, they're screwed. We're even seeing one of the previously fictional economist's assumptions becoming true. The market setting prices immediately through the auction mechanism.

    How does a firm survive in nearly classical economic conditions? It reduces costs at every point and provide barriers to entry to new firms, and damn the effect on every other part of the information industry. You also see it in the way that they provide "like goods" ("People who shopped for this also shopped for this") and pricing that varies from person to person for the same item based on their best guess as to what that person is willing to pay right now.

    This is particularly true when they are competing with ebay which really doesn't have any pricing mechanism except for the pure market-driven auction one.

    An interesting view on nearly classical economics

    --
    The man who never alters his opinion is like the stagnant water and breeds Reptiles of the Mind -- William Blake
    1. Re:Nearly classical economics by KrispyKringle · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Granting a limited monopoly in the form of a patent is arguably bad enough for innovation when patents are granted for actual technological advances, say, the cotton gin (or, probably more accurately, there is a very careful balance between encouraging innovation and hindering it). Granting a limited patent for a true invention makes some sense; if it were immediately clear how the cotton gin functioned, no one would gain anything by investing the money to invent it when others could simply rip off the designs for less investment afterwards.

      However, granting monopolies for business practices makes far less sense. Business plans typically do not involve huge R&D expendetures the way actual technological advances do. Instead, business plans are "gee whiz" ideas to run a business more efficiently, an end result which is ultimately more profitable for the business to implement regardless of having a monopoly on the practice or not.

      If Amazon were not granted a patent for "One-Click," would they not use it? Of course not; the idea took very little investment to develop and makes their business far more profitable, regardless of its use by competitors. Patents are not necessary to inspire innovation when it comes to business practices; the necessary motive is the increased efficiency and profitability. Further, issuing a profit for a new business practice means that there can be no direct competition between Amazon and anyone else, since no one else can use Amazon's same sales methods. Therefore, there is no driving incentive for Amazon to increase their product value or profitability, and, indeed, fewer, not greater, incentive to innovate (the same problem which arises with more traditional trade monopolies).

      It's difficult to show any likly benefit in innovation from business practice monopolies, but the cost is clear.

  2. What a joke. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I rarely order from Amazon these days since most of their popular paperbacks are now selling at list price. I used to buy in bulk and save a lot of money. Now there's no point unless the book's not on the shelf at my local bookstore. Which brings me to my current order.

    I placed an order for four books last week. None were in stock at the local bookstore and I figured I'd just order from Amazon and have them delivered to my door. I picked the free delivery option which groups the books into as few shipments as possible. During the checkout procedure I was advised that I would be receiving two shipments. One with the three books that were currently in stock, a second with the book that is being released at the end of the month. Seemed perfect. Until I got my order confirmation email.

    "Delivery estimate: February 18, 2004 - February 25, 2004"

    Wha???? That's over 9 months from now. Do they have to grow the trees to make the paper? I figured it was a glitch and waited for my shipment notification. Didn't get anything. A few days later, my order status still hadn't changed so I inquired. I got four responses.

    Response 1, CSR A: Sorry about that. Technical glitch. It's been fixed and your order has been upgraded to 2-day delivery at no charge.

    Response 2, CSR B: "I've checked into your order and see that the shipping instruction to "group my items into as few shipments as possible" was selected during the order process. This option can extend the estimated ship date for your order beyond the individual item availability estimates which are listed on our web site." ... "...[Book 3] is now back-ordered, and our supplier has not been able to let us know exactly when they expect to have more in stock."

    Response 3, CSR A: Whoops. CSR B is right.

    Response 4, CSR C: Looks like someone else already took care of this.

    Odd. All three of the books that were supposed to be in the first shipment still show up as "ships in 24 hours" both in my order status page and the product description pages. I'll wait and see what happens.

    Monday rolls around. I check the order status again. Oh, Goody! Two of the books have shipped. Funny. They shipped Sunday. That's a neat trick. And one of the books that was shipped is supposed to be out of stock. And one of the books that didn't ship is still listed as in stock and is supposed to be shipped today. Oh, well. At least something's on its way. Well, it will be this evening when the Sunday shipment is picked up.

    Tuesday morning. Track the first package. Odd. It's still at "Billing Information Received". This is the UPS phrase for "They've told us they have a package but we don't have it in our hands yet." I check my amazon order status. Says the same thing but now I see that the other book that was supposed to ship monday has been bumped back. It's not going out until sometime between the 15th and the 20th.

    So I placed the order a week ago and nothing's gone out. Half of my order is supposedly sitting on the loading dock. A quarter of the order is eluding the pickers.

    Way to go, Amazon! From now on, I'm ordering my books through the mom-and-pop downtown. If I'm going to pay list price, I may as well support a local business even if I do have to get off my ass to go pick up the items.