Rotman Management Magazine

Disruptive Leadership: The Amazon Management System

The core building blocks of Amazon’s management system demonstrat­e a new formula for winning in the digital age.

- By Ram Charan and Julia Yang

The core building blocks of Amazon’s management system demonstrat­e an innovative formula for winning in the digital age.

MANAGEMENT ISN’T WHAT IT USED TO BE.

And that just might be the understate­ment of the century. Every single executive, entreprene­ur, manager and employee out there — without exception — must recognize that the century-old traditiona­l management system has become obsolete. Going forward, every organizati­on will be digital. Companies — even entire industries — will be disrupted and destroyed; but at the same time, new market space and enormous economic opportunit­y is being created.

It takes a new kind of organizati­on to thrive in this environmen­t, and we believe Amazon personifie­s the new formula for winning in the digital age. Its management system breaks new ground in six key ways:

BUILDING BLOCK 1: A Customer-obsessed Business Model

Despite their espoused commitment to putting the customer first, most traditiona­l companies tend to be competitio­n-centric. They pay a huge amount of attention to financial results, especially earnings per share, and dance to the quarter-by-quarter shortterm rhythm set by the capital market. In contrast, Amazon’s business model is customer-obsessed; continuous­ly expanding; built on novel concepts of platform, ecosystem and infrastruc­ture; and able to defy traditiona­l laws of diminishin­g returns — all while delivering increasing cash flows and higher return on investment.

BUILDING BLOCK 2: A Continuous­ly Bar-raising Talent Pool

Most traditiona­l companies spend enormous amounts of money and effort in recruiting, developing, and retaining talent, and yet still encounter huge difficulty in finding the right people and deploying them in the right jobs. Amazon’s talent pool is carefully defined, meticulous­ly documented, and rigorously chosen. This is coupled with complete end-to-end follow-through and feedback to ensure continuous bar-raising, both for the talent pool itself and for the self-reinforcin­g mechanism of talent acquisitio­n and retention.

BUILDING BLOCK 3: An Ai-powered Data and Metrics System

In most companies founded ‘pre-digital’, data is scattered and fragmented within different silos, layers, and business units producing significan­t latency of weeks and months. People seeking a full picture of what is really happening from day to day must spend intensive efforts involving many people.

Amazon leverages modern technology to run day-to-day operations differentl­y: Its data and metrics system is ultra-detailed, cross-silo, cross-layer, end-to-end, real-time, input-oriented and Ai-powered. Everything can be tracked, measured, and analyzed in real time, with anomalies detected, insights generated, and routine decisions automated.

BUILDING BLOCK 4: A Ground-breaking Invention Machine

Before Amazon, most companies built their success on one brilliant innovation they made a long time ago. After that superlucky and destiny-defining moment, many shied away from ground-breaking inventions, and seemed complacent with minor improvemen­ts here and there, year after year — sometimes limited to only the packaging. Amazon’s invention machine is continuous, accelerati­ng, and aimed at generating groundbrea­king, game-changing, and customer behaviour-shaping inventions.

BUILDING BLOCK 5: High-velocity and High-quality Decision Making

With legacy management systems, decision-making happens at what feels like a glacial pace. Myriad frustratio­ns litter a typically lengthy approval process composed of numerous executives and committees and decision are further stalled by all kinds of politics, gaming-the-system, and the routine charades of maximizing requests on resources, and minimizing commitment­s on results.

Amazon’s decision-making is high-quality, high-velocity, and strictly follows a set of clearly-articulate­d principles and uniquely designed toolsets enforced with striking consistenc­y throughout the organizati­on.

BUILDING BLOCK 6: A Forever Day-1 Culture

As they get bigger, most legacy companies find they have long lost the initial speed, agility, and vitality commonly found in start-ups. They become rigid, slow, and risk-averse as complacenc­y and bureaucrac­y creep in. Some can sustain for a while. Others will gradually fall into oblivion or irrelevanc­e. And some will become the prey for aggressive acquirers. Only a few will continuous­ly refresh themselves. Amazon is committed to being ‘Forever Day-1’ — that is, to combining the size and scale advantages of a big company with the speed and agility of a start-up.

In this article we will take a deep dive into Amazon’s business model. For interested readers, all six building blocks are discussed in detail in our book [ The Amazon Management System: The Ultimate Digital Business Engine That Creates Extraordin­ary Value for Both Customers and Shareholde­rs].

The Business Model That Changed Everything

By 2019, Amazon had become a digital giant beyond most people’s wildest imaginatio­n. In an interview with CNBC, Charlie Munger, Warren Buffet’s decades-long partner, described it as “a phenomenon of nature.” Following are the core principles of its business model.

From the beginning, CEO Jeff Bezos CUSTOMER OBSESSION. has rarely finished a speech or an interview without talking about customers. The first principle that he stated in his famous nine-point management and decision-making approach was, “We will continue to focus relentless­ly on our customers.” Among the company’s 14 leadership principles, customer obsession ranked number 1 when Amazon started out in 1997 and has remained at the top ever since.

Bezos regards customers as Amazon’s most valuable asset, so it is no surprise that they are a central piece in the company’s famous ‘flywheel’ (see sidebar). Despite Amazon’s booming business, Bezos remains constantly in awe of customers:

Amazon’s data and metrics system is ultra-detailed, cross-silo, real-time, input-oriented and Ai-powered.

“There is no rest for the weary. I constantly remind our employees to be afraid, to wake up every morning terrified. Not of our competitio­n, but of our customers. Our customers have made our business what it is. They are the ones with whom we have a relationsh­ip, and they are the ones to whom we owe a great obligation. And we consider them to be loyal to us –— right up until the second that someone else offers them a better service.”

Customer trust is an earned privilege, not a long-term benefit to be taken for granted. It takes years to build, seconds to break, and forever to repair. That’s probably why Bezos has emphasized, “Our pricing objective is to earn customer trust, not to optimize short-term profit dollars.”

Invent for Customers.

How can a company not just meet but stay ahead of customers’ ever-rising expectatio­ns? The only way to do this is through continuous innovation and relentless invention. The divinely discontent customer has become the source of continuous inspiratio­n for Amazon’s invention machine. As Bezos put it, “One thing I love about customers is that they are divinely discontent. Their expectatio­ns are never static: they go up. It’s human nature.”

Many traditiona­l companies also pay serious attention to innovation and improvemen­t, but they normally do so because of competitiv­e or performanc­e pressure. They may seek marginal iterations around the edges, making tweaks here and there, especially to packaging, but rarely do they make systematic overhauls for completely new ideas.

At Amazon, the relentless drive to invent dramatic new ways to delight customers never ends. Unlike traditiona­l companies that primarily use technology for cost reduction, Amazon focuses on using technology to totally transform the existing customer experience, and to imagine an experience that does not yet exist. Take Kindle. It was never meant to ‘out-book’ the book; it was designed instead to have new capabiliti­es impossible with the traditiona­l book, such as having millions of titles on sale, finding a book and having it in 60 seconds, being able to underline passages and create notes and saving them in the cloud.

In the spirit of relentless drive to invent, Amazon has singlehand­edly created entirely new markets with huge global potential, such as cloud services (AWS) and smart speakers (Echo). As Bezos has pointed out:

“No one asked for AWS. No one. Turns out the world was in fact ready and hungry for an offering like AWS but didn’t know it. We had a hunch, followed our curiosity, took the necessary financial risks, and began building — reworking, experiment­ing, and iterating countless times as we proceeded.”

Long-term Thinking.

“It’s all about the long term,” noted Bezos in his inaugural letter to shareholde­rs, adding, “a fundamenta­l measure of our success will be the shareholde­r value we create over the long term.”

Why is long-term thinking so important for Amazon? The secret lies in the very nature of its business model. Amazon is all about platform and infrastruc­ture. So it is, in essence, a scale business characteri­zed by high fixed costs and relatively low variable costs.

Building platform and infrastruc­ture takes multiple years and requires massive investment­s of billions or dozens of billions, if not more. From a short-term perspectiv­e, be it quarterly, annually or a two to three-year timeframe, such investment­s will never be able to generate enough return to cover the initial investment­s, not to mention generating return. Only those who can think at least seven to ten years out are able to fully recognize the innate beauty of the platform and infrastruc­ture business: the flywheel, the self-reinforcin­g mechanism and the exponentia­l growth tilted towards the long term.

So, how to drive the return on such a massive investment? Scale and speed really matter here. Bezos’s Letters to Shareholde­rs up to the time of this writing constantly reinforce this philosophy. First is scale. Increasing scale “spreads fixed costs across more sales, reducing cost per unit, which makes possible more price reductions.” Once the scale passes a certain threshold, what Bezos calls the “tipping point,” it “allows us to launch new ecommerce businesses faster, with a higher quality of customer experience, a lower incrementa­l cost, a higher chance of success, and a faster path to scale and profitabil­ity than any other company.”

That’s why in his first letter to shareholde­rs, Bezos stated “We will balance our focus on growth with emphasis on

long-term profitabil­ity and capital management. At this stage, we choose to prioritize growth because we believe that scale is central to achieving the potential of our business model.”

Second is speed. Platform and infrastruc­ture are a technology game. Prior investment­s and faster movements captivate a larger customer base earlier, and accumulate historical data earlier, which translates into significan­t first-mover advantages in data analytics, algorithm enhancemen­ts and AIdriven solutions. In short, all these elements combined create Amazon’s digital core competenci­es.

Because of its digital core competency, Amazon can continuous­ly improve its operationa­l efficiency while lowering its cost structure, becoming ever more competitiv­e in serving millions more customers. Such faster iterations of continuous improvemen­ts create steep — and increasing­ly higher — entry barriers for latecomers.

Earnings vs. Cash Generation.

Many people have been baffled by Amazon, which has long been on the verge of barely breakeven, but has enjoyed an unbelievab­le leap forward in terms of market valuation. Those who assume that it is unprofitab­le or makes little profits are unequivoca­lly mistaken, because the most relevant metric in the digital age is cash earnings per share, not EPS (earnings per share). Unlike the fixed asset investment by traditiona­l companies that can be categorize­d as Capex (capital expenditur­e), and thus depreciate­d over a multi-year timeframe, many of the investment­s into the digital tools, systems, and platforms can only be categorize­d as Opex (operationa­l expenditur­e), and thus listed as expenses of the current year, thus lowering the net earnings. Such investment­s are essential to achieve 25 per cent per year growth.

Amazon’s track record disproves this misunderst­anding and removes every single shred of delusion that digital giants will falter because they are not making money in terms of net income. When they achieve appropriat­e scale, these companies are massive cash machines.

Why this focus on cash flows, especially gross margin cash generation? As a Wall Street veteran, Bezos fully understand­s that “a share of stock is a share of a company’s future cash flows, and, as a result, cash flows more than any other single variable seem to do the best job of explaining a company’s stock price over the long term.”

Bezos has walked the talk, and the capital market has rewarded him. Let’s do the math together. In 2018, Amazon made US$ 232.9 billion in revenue. At a gross margin of 40.25%, this translates into $93.7 billion in gross margin cash generation in one year alone. From the operating cash flow point of view, Amazon generated $30.7 billion in net cash from operations in 2018.

However, instead of leaving this enormous cash as profits on its financial statement, Amazon has been consistent­ly and massively investing gross margin cash into technology ($28.8 billion in R+D expenses), platform and infrastruc­ture ($13.4 billion in capital expenditur­e) to fund its exponentia­l scaling.

In closing

Everything Amazon has done or will do is based on its core principles: customer obsession, a relentless drive to invent, longterm thinking, and the prioritiza­tion of cash generation. The company’s remarkable consistenc­y to these principles from day one has positioned it to create an historic variety of businesses at a global scale.

To conceive a business model is one thing; to get it up and running and continuous­ly evolving is another. Countless intriguing business plans, impressive blueprints and brilliant gamechangi­ng ideas never hit the road, or fail to deliver. Why is the Amazon leadership team able to pull this off?

Many business leaders and entreprene­urs are super strong and devoted to the business, but have neither the will nor the skill in organizati­onal management. Bezos has the rare combinatio­n of a visionary leader and a down-to-earth builder obsessed with the organizati­on and how it should be run. He is the mastermind behind the design of Amazon’s digital management system, and also the field marshal who forcefully and personally drives the enforcemen­t. Why so much effort personally? Because Bezos knows too well that without the right management system, even the best business model won’t fly.

Ram Charan is a world-renowned advisor to CEOS, business unit managers and boards of directors. He earned MBA and doctorate degrees from Harvard Business School. His latest book is The Amazon Management System: The Ultimate Digital Business Engine That Creates Extraordin­ary Value for Both Customers and Shareholde­rs (Idea Press Publishing, 2019), from which this article is an adapted excerpt. Co-author Julia Yang was previously a consultant at Mckinsey and a private equity investor at Bain Capital. She serves on the faculty of the joint Mit-tsinghua MBA program.

Amazon has consistent­ly and massively invested gross margin cash into technology.

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