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Amazon Becomes a Cyber-Landlord
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Amazon.com's introduction this week of its zShops
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initiative--which effectively makes Amazon a landlord for thousands of other
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Internet businesses who will pay Amazon to be listed on its site and give the
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company a commission on all sales--was a perhaps predictable evolution of the
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Amazon business model. But that doesn't make it any less potentially
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important.
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I say the evolution was predictable because Amazon has
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always been upfront about the fact that it didn't want to be just an online
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retailer. Monetizing its 12 million customers--turning them into real
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revenue--was always going to be more effective if you gave them a huge variety
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of goods and services to buy. The real question, though, was (and is) whether
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Amazon could extend its brand name and the loyalty of its customers to a
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panoply of products, many of which it wasn't necessarily going to provide
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itself.
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What Amazon has recognized from the beginning is that
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its most valuable asset was not its warehouses or even its Web site but rather
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the "stickiness" of its customers and the information about their buying habits
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that it was able to collect. Amazon has so far used that information in limited
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ways--occasionally I'll get an e-mail suggesting I might want to buy a new CD
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that's like other CDs I've bought in the past--but the more products it sells,
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the more information it will collect and the more the information that will
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become relevant.
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At this point, of course, we don't really know how
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successful zShops will be. (There were lots of items for sale on zShops' first
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day of operation, but it didn't seem like the 500,000 Amazon had promised.) But
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as an idea, it's an excellent leveraging of Amazon's brand name, because it
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promises the possibility of sizable returns while requiring almost no
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investment on the company's part.
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Some skeptics have suggested that zShops is analogous
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to Wal-Mart renting out its parking lot to a bunch of outside vendors. Let's
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say, for the sake of argument, that it is. If Wal-Mart could rent its parking
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lot, get a cut of all sales that take place there, and still not disturb its
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regular business, why wouldn't it? And if it had an easily searchable catalogue
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of all the goods for sale and could direct its customers to items in which they
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might be interested, the business would be all the more attractive.
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One reason why Wall Street likes zShops so much is that
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it is a very high-margin business, which means that the profit Amazon reaps on
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every transaction will be very high (since its costs will be very low). And
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high-margin businesses are generally very good things. But it's important not
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to get too obsessed with margins, because if you do you miss the real strength
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of the Amazon--or for that matter the Wal-Mart--business model.
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Wal-Mart, after all, has minuscule profit margins, at
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least when compared with a company like Microsoft or Yahoo. But it earns
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tremendous profits, and does so while using capital very efficiently, because
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it turns over its inventory so often. As long as you're selling goods quickly,
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you can make very little on each good and still make a huge amount at the end
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of the day. This is what Amazon has been able to do in books and what it wants
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to do in its other businesses. zShops is a slightly different model, because
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Amazon will make more on each good, but they'll sell less quickly. In other
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words, it's a good business for Amazon to be in, and it's a logical extension
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of its online power. But don't look for Amazon to give up its core business
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just for the joys of landlordship.
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