The answer: Amazon wants to buy its own grocery service.
background
-
Amazon buys Whole Foods = Apple’s iPhone beats Palm
- Don’t confuse Goals, strategies and tactics. Apple’s strategy:
- It’s not about making phones, it’s about making PCS
- It’s not about adding functionality to the phone, it’s about condensing the functionality of a traditional phone into an app
- Not to replicate what the operators do, but to leverage their connections with their customers
- IPhone is the most successful product of all time = Amazon is the most dominant company of all time
- Don’t confuse Goals, strategies and tactics. Apple’s strategy:
-
Amazon’s goals
- At first,
Amazon.com
Its goal is to become a premier retailer of information-based products and services, starting with books. - Then Amazon announced that “our vision is to be the most customer-focused company on earth, enabling everyone to find everything they want to buy on our online site.”
- Amazon’s goal is to get a piece of all economic activity.
- At first,
-
Amazon’s strategy
- For the enterprise: AWS. Assume that all business transactions will soon be done using the Internet
- For customers: Prime. Assume that high costs and diverse choices are unsustainable. With Prime customers, there are no alternatives.
- However,
- Groceries are the largest retail category
- The grocery industry is best positioned to constantly remind consumers that there are alternatives to Amazon
- However,
-
Amazon’s game plan: Grocery service
Why didn’t Amazon come up with the right tactics?
books | General cargo |
---|---|
High stock units = good selection | Low stock units (30K-50K) |
standardized | The good and the bad are mixed |
Does not decay | Easy to corrupt, |
Amazon fresh’s cost disadvantage
- Once the scale is insufficient, the cost of spoilage is high
- And the size depends on the specifics of each city
Why buying Whole Foods, and not others, solves the business scale problem?
Business infrastructure model + two basic points: 1) high fixed costs and 2) high returns
- Deconstructing infrastructure into Minimum Saleable Units (MSUs)
- These businesses are themselves the first and best customers for the smallest units available
- Resell the smallest available unit
The three-tier architecture of AWS
service | Basic components | S3, EC2, RDS, SNS… |
---|---|---|
platform | AWS | High fixed costs + returns to scale |
infrastructure | Modular module | Data centers, servers, storage, switches, bandwidth |
- MSUs belong to S3, EC2, RDS, SNS, etc
- The first and best customer is
amazon.com
- Resell MSUs to non-Amazon developers
Amazon.com’s three-tier architecture
service | The parcel | The FDA, Amazon Pay,… |
---|---|---|
platform | Logistics center | High fixed costs + returns to scale |
infrastructure | Modular supplier | Manufacturers, third party suppliers, etc |
- MSUs belongs to FDA, Amazon Pay, etc
- The first and best customer is Amazon first Party e-commerce
- Resell the MSUs to a third party vendor
The insight here is that there is no first and best supplier of Amazon’s existing groceries.
The perfect customer
By putting Whole Foods on the map, we see Amazon buying not just a retailer, but a customer of its own business.
Amazon.com’s three-tier architecture + customers
The customer | All categories of food, express, restaurant | |
---|---|---|
service | General cargo | Meat, fruits, vegetables, dry food, etc |
platform | Logistics center | High fixed costs + returns to scale |
infrastructure | Modular supplier | Store brands, name brands, local suppliers, regional suppliers, etc |
Today, Amazon Grocery can serve Amazon Fresh and Whole Foods, and in the future, the basic platform can serve restaurants and other places that need food.
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