Amazon sells books, music, and many other items over the Internet and is one of the pioneers of online consumer sales. Amazon, based in Seattle, Washington, started by filling all orders using books purchased from a distributor in response to customer orders. As it grew, the company added warehouses, allowing it to react more quickly to customer orders. In 2009, Amazon had about 20 warehouses in the United States and another 30 in the rest of the world. It uses the U.S. Postal Service and other package carriers such as UPS and FedEx to send products to customers. Outbound shipping-related costs at Amazon in 2009 were almost $2 billion.   With the Kindle, Amazon has worked hard to increase sales of digital books. As of 2009, Amazon offered more than 460,000 books in digital form. The company has also added a significant amount of audio and video content for sale in digital form.    Amazon has continued to expand the set of products that it sells online. Besides books and music, Amazon has added many product categories such as toys, apparel, electronics, jewelry, and shoes. In 2009, one of its largest acquisitions was Zappos, a leader in online shoe sales. This acquisition added a lot of product variety. According to the Amazon annual report, this required creating 121,000 product descriptions and uploading more than 2.2 million images to the Web site! In 2010, another interesting acquisition by Amazon was diapers.com. Unlike Zappos, this acquisition added little variety but considerable shipping volumes. Several questions arise concerning how Amazon is structured and the product categories it continues to add: Why is Amazon building more warehouses as it grows? What advantages and disadvantage by selling books via the Internet provide over a traditional bookstore for both Amazon and their customers? What advantage can bricks-and-mortar players derive from setting up an online channel as a second option?

Principles Of Marketing
17th Edition
ISBN:9780134492513
Author:Kotler, Philip, Armstrong, Gary (gary M.)
Publisher:Kotler, Philip, Armstrong, Gary (gary M.)
Chapter1: Marketing: Creating Customer Value And Engagement
Section: Chapter Questions
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QUESTION 1: CASE STUDY ON AMAZON: ONLINE SALES

Amazon sells books, music, and many other items over the Internet and is one of the pioneers of online consumer sales. Amazon, based in Seattle, Washington, started by filling all orders using books purchased from a distributor in response to customer orders. As it grew, the company added warehouses, allowing it to react more quickly to customer orders. In 2009, Amazon had about 20 warehouses in the United States and another 30 in the rest of the world. It uses the U.S. Postal Service and other package carriers such as UPS and FedEx to send products to customers. Outbound shipping-related costs at Amazon in 2009 were almost $2 billion.

 

With the Kindle, Amazon has worked hard to increase sales of digital books. As of 2009, Amazon offered more than 460,000 books in digital form. The company has also added a significant amount of audio and video content for sale in digital form. 

 

Amazon has continued to expand the set of products that it sells online. Besides books and music, Amazon has added many product categories such as toys, apparel, electronics, jewelry, and shoes. In 2009, one of its largest acquisitions was Zappos, a leader in online shoe sales. This acquisition added a lot of product variety. According to the Amazon annual report, this required creating 121,000 product descriptions and uploading more than 2.2 million images to the Web site! In 2010, another interesting acquisition by Amazon was diapers.com. Unlike Zappos, this acquisition added little variety but considerable shipping volumes. Several questions arise concerning how Amazon is structured and the product categories it continues to add:

  1. Why is Amazon building more warehouses as it grows?
  2. What advantages and disadvantage by selling books via the Internet provide over a traditional bookstore for both Amazon and their customers?
  3. What advantage can bricks-and-mortar players derive from setting up an online channel as a second option?
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