An annoying interstitial ad forced me to post it on my
facebook page as a sign of protest. It is funny how social network makes you
feel as if you are actually powerful.
I will save a detailed note on this psychological e-phenomenon for future, but
I must say that the ad did what it was supposed to do. Discounting the fact
that I didn’t end up buying the colourful bagpacks, the ad did manage to
attract my attention. It also made me promote it (unwittingly!) to my 500+ internet buddies on facebook.
The brand that was advertising vociferously on my daily news
website was Amazon. Huh.
Amazon is everywhere these days. It has slowly and steadily, and with a lot of patience and innovation, built a strong-fundamental based business
model in India. Many were wondering for the first few months after Amazon made its way into India about Amazon's quiet game plan. The firework that one would expect from the big daddy of online retail
was far from visible.
All this while, Amazon was investing in the foundation stone of this to-be e-tailing giant of India. This has helped Amazon India to build for itself an environment and capability to roll out mind-boggling innovative ideas that has kept its customers delighted and rivals on toes so far.
All this while, Amazon was investing in the foundation stone of this to-be e-tailing giant of India. This has helped Amazon India to build for itself an environment and capability to roll out mind-boggling innovative ideas that has kept its customers delighted and rivals on toes so far.
Amazon demonstrated aptly the approach to build a business in a new
market by challenging set rivals and even beat them on their own turf. The long experience in its home country and deep pockets though adds to its advantage, none should be taken away from Amazon for
being super agile and incessantly innovative.
I wrote some time back on Amazon’s bipolar approach on
improving its delivery performance to enhance customer delight. At one end, Amazon had started experimenting parcel deliveries through drones while on other hand, in India it sealed an alliance with India Post to help it deliver parcels in far-flung areas.
Very recently, Amazon introduced a fresh gust of
innovative ideas that varies from category expansion to new services and from
vendor empanelment to channel expansion.
Back in US, Amazon turned heads last week by inking a $
300mn-three years deal with HBO to let Amazon Prime members watch old HBO shows. Within no time after giving its customer the HBO delight, it announced launch of the prima-pantry service for its prime
members. The service allowed the prime members to shop from more than 2,000 products to fill a four-cubic foot box
with up to 45 pounds of goods. The package can then be shipped at very nominal cost to the customers.
These simple innovations have not only added to the product
lines it can sell but have also created benchmark for serviceability and customer
responsiveness in this rapidly growing industry.
Here in India, Amazon has opened up a bottle of innovations which, with the gush these innovations are ejecting, seems to have been there ‘under-construction’
for some time now.
After collaborating with India post to deliver its parcels
in 19,000 pin-codes across country through its Colosseum -like network of
140,000 Post-offices, Amazon has put into action its plan to make it easy for
sellers.
Amazon, this week launched two initiatives for sellers to facilitate
an accelerated and hassle-free experience. The US-based firm launched the Self
Service Registration (SSR) and Amazon Easy Ship for sellers. Amazon SSR enables
sellers irrespective of their size, location and size of catalogue, to
self-register on the Amazon marketplace and start selling within a day without
any third party intervention, making the process quick, easy and transparent.
With Amazon Easy
Ship, the seller has to pack the shipment and confirm to Amazon that they are
ready to ship. Amazon Logistics collects the shipment and ensures that the
product is delivered to customers in 2-4 days.
Jeff Bezos is known to be the driving force of Amazon's customer first culture and a true admirer of innovation at work |
These two services have taken the e-commerce game to a
different level in India. A response from the bigger rivals(so far!) Flipkart
and Snapdeal is soon expected as the e-commerce industry matures in terms of
technology and operational set-up.
The big question is, how Amazon has been able to pop-out one
innovation after other, even faster than the TV soaps’ episode run?
The answer is fairly simple – Getting the basic rights and employing Long-term thinking in a new market.
Amazon didn’t rush to lure customers as soon as it entered
in Indian market. Instead, it took its time in getting the fundamentals right. It
built the logistics network, warehouses and built up a large selection of
products that is now bringing in customers for them.
In a recent interview, Amit Deshpande GM of Amazon India
said that its strong back-end infrastructure is helping it scale up fast. He further
added on that when they decide on areas of focus, they always work backwards
from the customer. Selection, delivery experience, logistics, payments and
website experience are areas they are super-focused on.
Amazon has been scintillating in terms of its growth, and
more importantly in its systematic business approach in terms of all modules of
a business organization – Strategy, Marketing, Supply chain, Human Resource development
and above all, Innovation.
Truely, Amazon is an innovation powerhouse!
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