Amazon
Amazon
Amazon
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Amazon.com’s Mission Statement
1. Lowest prices
2. Best selection
3. Utmost convenience
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Amazon.com’s Corporate Vision Statement
1. Global reach
2. Customer-centric approach
3. Widest selection of products
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Objective of Amazon focussing on Indian market.
Those two factors make the country an ideal market for an e-commerce
operator like Amazon. The high population density means shipping would
be much easier and cheaper than in the U.S., especially if the company
can master drone delivery, and the highly fragmented nature of the retail
sector makes the benefits of e-commerce even more desirable and the
competition weaker
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Assess the issues and challenges of running Amazon in India
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Amazon Statistical Data
Amazon is the most popular shopping app in the United States. It had
150.6 million mobile users accessing the Amazon app in September 2019
(Statistic, 2019).
Customers trust Amazon. 89 percent of buyers agree that they are more
likely to buy products from Amazon than other ecommerce sites
(Feedvisor, 2019).
Shoppers purchased more than 100 million products during the Amazon
Prime day in 2018 (CNBC, 2018).
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67 percent of Amazon Shoppers prefer to shop using their desktop
computer or laptop (Cpcstrategy, 2018).
Amazon has more than 2.5 million sellers currently active selling in the
marketplace (Marketplacepulse, 2019).
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Strategies of Amazon
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change in model in Amazon business strategy. It was a cyber- book
store and with the affiliates and association of the other retailer and
being a platform to the others it became a cyber-market.
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5. High Margin, Lowest Price: Amazon.com provides products
significantly cheaper than its competitors. One of the main visions of
Amazon.com is based on the long term plan. (1997 Stockholder report)
This makes easier for amazon to take risk of low profit in order to succeed
in future. An estimate shows how it is possible for amazon to become
profitable with lowest price. A product on average gets sold in 33 days
through amazon.com. On the other side it competitors like best buy took
70 day to sell the product. Amazon keeps the best-selling product to its
own stock and longer tail items to third party sellers stock. This gives an
advantage to the company.
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Why Amazon.com Inc. Is Investing Billions in India
The U.S. e-commerce leader has a unique opportunity in India, but taking
advantage of it will continue to be a drain on the bottom line in the near
term.
India is the world's second most populous country, its biggest democracy,
and its sixth-biggest economy. And now, it appears to be the next big
prize for Amazon.com
When Amazon spots a market opportunity, it goes all in after it. In the
past, the company has jumped on nascent markets in e-commerce, e-
books, video streaming, and cloud computing. Its ability to recognize
opportunities and take advantage of them is one of the biggest drivers of
its success.
Now, on a global scale, India may be the company's next big opportunity.
Amazon announced it would invest an additional $3 billion on the
subcontinent last year, and CEO Jeff Bezos has ordered his deputies to
"do what it takes" to win the Indian market, where the company faces stiff
competition from China's Alibaba and native players Snapdeal and
FlipKart.
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What makes India so special
Those two factors make the country an ideal market for an e-commerce
operator like Amazon. The high population density means shipping would
be much easier and cheaper than in the U.S., especially if the company
can master drone delivery, and the highly fragmented nature of the retail
sector makes the benefits of e-commerce even more desirable and the
competition weaker.
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What is the company doing?
Amazon has always been willing to play the long game, investing for the
long term is one of Bezos' core mantras, and he promised his first
shareholders as much. The Indian e-commerce market is still small, but
it's growing fast: Sales more than doubled from $6.3 billion in 2014 to $16
billion in 2015. If Amazon can repeat its performance in the U.S., where it
controls about one quarter of e-commerce sales, its Indian operations
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could be huge in just a few years.
The company does not break out results by country, but its investments
abroad are apparent from its financial statements. While operating income
spiked in North America and in Amazon Web Services last year, its
international operating loss widened from $699 million to $1.28 billion,
evidence of investments like those it is making in India.
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