As
regular readers of this letter will know, our energy at Amazon comes
from the desire to impress customers rather than the zeal to best
competitors.
We don’t take a view on which of these approaches is more likely to
maximize business success. There are pros and cons to both and many
examples of highly successful competitor-focused companies. We do work
to pay attention to competitors and be inspired by
them, but it is a fact that the customer-centric way is at this point a
defining element of our culture.
One
advantage – perhaps a somewhat subtle one – of a customer-driven focus
is that it aids a certain type of proactivity. When we’re at our best,
we don’t wait for external pressures. We are internally driven
to improve our services, adding benefits and features, before we have
to. We lower prices and increase value
for customers before we have to. We invent before we have to. These
investments are motivated by customer focus rather than by reaction to
competition. We think this approach earns more trust with customers and
drives rapid improvements in customer experience
– importantly – even in those areas where we are already the leader.
“Thank
you. Every time I see that white paper on the front page of Amazon, I
know that I’m about to get more for my money than I thought I would.
I signed up for Prime for the shipping, yet now I get movies, and TV
and books. You keep adding more, but not charging more. So thanks again
for the additions.” We now have more than 15 million items in Prime, up
15x since we launched in 2005. Prime Instant
Video selection tripled in just over a year to more than 38,000 movies
and TV episodes. The Kindle Owners’ Lending Library has also more than
tripled to over 300,000 books, including an investment of millions of
dollars to make the entire Harry
Potter series available as part of that
selection. We didn’t “have to” make these improvements in Prime. We did
so proactively. A related investment – a major, multi-year one – is
Fulfillment by Amazon. FBA gives third-party sellers
the option of warehousing their inventory alongside ours in our
fulfillment center network. It has been a game changer for our seller
customers because their items become eligible for Prime benefits, which
drives their sales, while at the same time benefitting
consumers with additional Prime selection.
We
build automated systems that look for occasions when we’ve provided a
customer experience that isn’t up to our standards, and those systems
then
proactively refund customers. One industry observer recently received
an automated email from us that said, “We noticed that you experienced
poor video playback while watching the following rental on Amazon Video
On Demand:
Casablanca. We’re sorry for the
inconvenience and have issued you a refund for the following amount:
$2.99. We hope to see you again soon.” Surprised by the proactive
refund, he ended up writing
about the experience: “Amazon ‘noticed that I experienced poor video
playback…’ And they decided to give me a refund because of that?
Wow…Talk about putting customers first.” [Here's
the original article.]
When
you pre-order something from Amazon, we guarantee you the lowest price
offered by us between your order time and the end of the day of the
release
date. “I just received notice of a $5 refund to my credit card for
pre-order price protection. . . What a great way to do business! Thank
you very much for your fair and honest dealings.” Most customers are too
busy themselves to monitor the price of an item
after they pre-order it, and our policy could be to require the
customer to contact us and ask for the refund. Doing it proactively is
more expensive for us, but it also surprises, delights, and earns trust.
We
also have authors as customers. Amazon Publishing has just announced it
will start paying authors their royalties monthly, sixty days in
arrears.
The industry standard is twice a year, and that has been the standard
for a long time. Yet when we interview authors as customers, infrequent
payment is a major dissatisfier. Imagine how you’d like it if you were
paid twice a year. There isn’t competitive
pressure to pay authors more than once every six months, but we’re
proactively doing so. By the way – though the research was taxing, I
struggled through and am happy to report that I recently saw many
Kindles in use at a
Florida beach. There are five generations of
Kindle, and I believe I saw every generation in use except for the
first. Our business approach is to sell premium hardware at roughly
breakeven prices.
We want to make money when people use our devices – not when people buy
our devices. We think this aligns us better with customers. For
example, we don’t need our customers to be on the upgrade treadmill. We
can be very happy to see people still using four-year-old
Kindles!
I
can keep going – Kindle Fire’s FreeTime, our customer service Andon
Cord, Amazon MP3’s AutoRip – but will finish up with a very clear
example of
internally driven motivation: Amazon Web Services. In 2012, AWS
announced 159 new features and services. We’ve reduced AWS prices 27
times since launching 7 years ago, added enterprise service support
enhancements, and created innovative tools to help customers
be more efficient. AWS Trusted Advisor monitors customer
configurations, compares them to known best practices, and then notifies
customers where opportunities exist to improve performance, enhance
security, or save money. Yes, we are actively telling customers
they’re paying us more than they need to. In the last 90 days,
customers have saved millions of dollars through Trusted Advisor, and
the service is only getting started. All of this progress comes in the
context of AWS being the widely recognized leader in
its area – a situation where you might worry that external motivation
could fail. On the other hand, internal motivation – the drive to get
the customer to say “Wow” – keeps the pace of innovation fast.
Our
heavy investments in Prime, AWS, Kindle, digital media, and customer
experience in general strike some as too generous, shareholder
indifferent,
or even at odds with being a for-profit company. “Amazon, as far as I
can tell, is a charitable organization being run by elements of the
investment community for the benefit of consumers,” writes one outside
observer. But I don’t think so. To me, trying to
dole out improvements in a just-in-time fashion would be too clever by
half. It would be risky in a world as fast-moving as the one we all live
in. More fundamentally, I think long-term thinking squares the circle.
Proactively delighting customers earns trust,
which earns more business from those customers, even in new business
arenas. Take a long-term view, and the interests of customers and
shareholders align.
As
I write this, our recent stock performance has been positive, but we
constantly remind ourselves of an important point – as I frequently
quote
famed investor Benjamin Graham in our employee all-hands meetings – “In
the short run, the market is a voting machine but in the long run, it
is a weighing machine.” We don’t celebrate a 10% increase in the stock
price like we celebrate excellent customer
experience. We aren’t 10% smarter when that happens and conversely
aren’t 10% dumber when the stock goes the other way. We want to be
weighed, and we’re always working to build a heavier company.
As
proud as I am of our progress and our inventions, I know that we will
make mistakes along the way – some will be self-inflicted, some will be
served
up by smart and hard-working competitors. Our passion for pioneering
will drive us to explore narrow passages, and, unavoidably, many will
turn out to be blind alleys. But – with a bit of good fortune – there
will also be a few that open up into broad avenues.
I
am incredibly lucky to be a part of this large team of outstanding
missionaries who value our customers as much as I do and who demonstrate
that
every day with their hard work. As always, I attach a copy of our
original 1997 letter. Our approach remains the same, and it’s still Day
1.
Jeffrey P. Bezos
|
Founder and Chief Executive Officer
|
Amazon.com, Inc.
|
April 2013
|
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