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A blast from the past: Why B&N was supposed to kill Amazon
Insightful Fortune piece from 1997:
http://archive.fortune.com/magazines...2065/index.htm
Quote:
The Amazon model is beguilingly attractive: Expensive inventory and bricks-and-mortar warehouses are not needed by the New Age retailer. All one needs, it would seem, is a Website to present the face that greets customers and takes their orders. Other parties handle the capital-intensive aspects of stocking inventory.
Maybe low barriers to entry are a mixed blessing, however: The big guys can just as easily join the fun. Barnes & Noble, the nation's leading bookseller, opened its own online bookshop (at www.barnesandnoble.com) three months ago and has swiftly exposed the tenuousness of Amazon's head start. It turns out that figuring out the sexy new stuff, like Web pages and online order taking, is a lot less difficult than figuring out such drudgery as how to cost-effectively finance, stock, and move the physical stuff, the books.
Anything Amazon.com can do on the Internet, so, too, can Barnes & Noble. "There was a mystique about how difficult it was to get started on the Web," says Steven Riggio, chief operating officer of Barnes & Noble, "but it's quickly fading." Hiring hot designers from Silicon Valley, B&N now offers a Web shopfront that's just as inviting and useful as Amazon's, with easy-to-use subject indexes, online author events every day, book forums, book reviews, and other features. Both Amazon and Barnes & Noble can get any book in print--eventually (so, too, can the smallest bookseller). And both have deals with heavily trafficked Websites--including Yahoo (Amazon) and the New York Times Book Review (B&N)--that send customers their way.
Once you look beyond the Website you begin to see why, in this battle at least, the odds favor the $3-billion-a-year Goliath. The one area in which B&N and Amazon are most easily distinguishable is in how speedily the two can serve their customers, and in that contest, the edge goes to the bookseller with the most books physically on hand. Amazon stocks just a limited number of bestsellers (the company won't disclose how many) but for the most part obtains books from wholesalers or publishers after receiving an order.
B&N, on the other hand, generates such volume in its real-world stores that it has become, effectively, its own giant wholesaler. It deals directly with publishers, cuts out the middlemen, and stocks its central warehouse in New Jersey with 400,000 frequently ordered titles. Consequently, observes Craig Bibb, a Paine Webber analyst, "Barnes & Noble crushes Amazon in speedy delivery."
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Bezos' reply:
Quote:
Jeff Bezos, Amazon's endearingly candid founder, agrees that Barnesandnoble.com can duplicate what Amazon has done. The question, he says, is, "Can Amazon.com establish a world-class brand name before Barnesandnoble.com buys, builds, acquires, or learns the competencies they need to be excellent online retailers?"
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Much more at the archive.
Try not to hurt yourselves laughing.
Last edited by fjtorres; 08-30-2018 at 08:04 PM.
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