Amazon Has Already Become Something of a Corporate Boogeyman -- and Now It Could Be Bringing Its Industry Disruption To Advertising (nbcnews.com)
When Jeff Bezos arrives as expected at the Sun Valley conference -- the year's most exclusive meeting of media industry leaders -- he'll know much more about his fellow media moguls than they know about him. And that has them worried, especially as Amazon's advertising business picks up. From a report: Amazon's growing advertising business is poised to challenge the stranglehold Google and Facebook have on the internet's ad dollars, thanks to its growing dominance in e-commerce and growing presence in the media world. Google knows what consumers are interested in, and Facebook knows who you are. But Amazon has what many in the advertising industry regard as the most important piece of the puzzle: what people buy. And the e-commerce giant is starting to capitalize on that data in a big way. "It is definitely growing as a media company, but it is surging in terms of ad revenue," said Advertising Age editor Brian Braiker. "The scary part for marketers is that [data] is all walled off, and if you want the special sauce you have to play by Amazon's rules." Amazon still makes the bulk of its money through the sales of goods and its widely used cloud computing business, Amazon Web Services, but its advertising business is growing. In the first three months of 2018, Amazon reported revenue for its "other" segment, which is largely advertising, rose 139 percent, to $2 billion.
I don't think the advertising world could get any worse than it already is, so if Amazon starts driving them out of business then I'm all for it.
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They did pretty well with webhosting, they did pretty well with ebook readers, they're the only real rival to Google Play on Android, they're the only real rival to Netflix (unless you count Hulu). Alexa may be selling less than Google Home but its market share is still much greater.
Amazon does a lot of me-too stuff, like Microsoft. It doesn't always work out, but they've had plenty of successes. The trouble is, they also emulate the worst aspects of the companies that they copy - they spy on you just as much as Google does, and they're just as controlling as Apple. So Amazon winds up being worse than either.