Amazon is subsidising its devices, but we should be thankful for thinkers like Jeff Bezos â" they move the world forward
Jeff Bezos isnât easily satisfied. Heâs the 26th richest person on the planet, and heâs been a (self-made) billionaire for nearly two decades. And yet the 48 year old founder of Amazon.com continues to push his company, and himself, into new territory.
When Amazon launched the Kindle e-reader in late 2007, the e-books market was tiny â" a mere rounding error on global book sales. Barely five years later Amazon now sells far more e-books than physical books, and the entire e-book market is flourishing.
But Bezos and the gang arenât content with just electronic books and black-and-white e-readers. Theyâve watched Apple scoop up obscene profits in the tablet computing market with its market-making iPad, and they want a slice of that action. And so, late in 2011, the Kindle Fire was born.
Its first year has been encouraging, if unspectacular. It shot to the top of Amazonâs best seller list and has stayed there ever since, but its effect on Amazonâs financial results has been difficult to gauge. Amazon, as a rule, doesnât release specific sales numbers for its devices so itâs hard to tell exactly how many Kindle Fires are floating around in the market, or how much money itâs making from them. Itâs clearly not a huge amount â" Amazonâs profits have barely budged in the last year.
But, following the launch of the new versions of the Kindle Fire on September 6, two things are now very clear. Firstly, Bezos sees Apple as his biggest competitor. Second, heâs playing the long game.
During the Apple-style launch of the new Kindle devices â" which are bigger, brighter, more powerful and cheaper than their predecessors â" Bezos was at pains to contrast Amazonâs approach to the market with Appleâs.

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos holds up a Kindle Paperwhite during Amazonâs Kindle Fire event in Santa Monica
âWe want to make money when people use our devices, not when they buy our devices.â he said during the press event. âThat is better alignment. If someone buys one of our devices and puts it in a desk drawer and doesnât use it, we donât deserve to make money.â Although Bezos never made the mistake of mentioning his rival, itâs crystal clear who he was talking about.
This strategy is bold and risky, but may also be genius. Amazon is essentially subsidising its devices, selling them at close to or even below cost, and betting that people will use the built-in services to buy its digital products which have expanded from e-books to movies to games.
This is essentially the mirror image of Appleâs approach. Although its iTunes and App Store marketplaces have both been runaway successes, the revenue they generate is dwarfed by Appleâs real business â" devices. The late Steve Jobs and his cohorts realised that an ecosystem of content and services was necessary to sustain demand for its devices. So Apple uses digital products to sell physical ones while Amazon is hoping to do the opposite.
The really risky thing about Bezosâs strategy is not his venture into high-end devices. His success with the original Kindle has proved Amazon has the stuff to get that equation right, and the first version of the Fire proved that thereâs appetite for alternatives to the iPad. The real risk is that his shareholders get impatient, watching Apple mint cash on device sales while Amazon ekes out a break-even.
This is the long game after all. Amazon doesnât care if you only upgrade your device every five or six years â" as long as you have one. âWe donât need you to be on the upgrade treadmill,â explains Bezos. âWe are happy that people are still using Kindle 1s that are five years old. Thatâs good for us.â Apple, on the other hand, need to tempt you to buy a new device every two years â" three at most â" to keep feeding its profit machine.
Whether or not Bezosâs strategy pays off, you have to admire the guy. Most of us would be on our own island, sipping cocktails by now. But we should probably be grateful for people like him â" they move the world forward.
Source: Mail & Guardian
Amazon paperwhite e-reader unveiled
Amazon unwraps larger Kindle Fires
Galaxy Note 10.1 launches in SA
Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 tablet unveiled
Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this column are those of the author and do not represent those of MyBroadband.
No comments:
Post a Comment