Houston Chronicle

THE RISE OF A TITAN

How Amazon.com went from selling books to selling everything

- By Makeda Easter and Pa re sh Dave| Los Angeles Times

WHEN Jeff Bezos first launched Amazon. com in 1994, he gave himself a 30 percent chance of success — slightly better than the 1 in 10 odds for internet startups.

“That’s actually a very liberating expectatio­n, expecting to fail,” he told Time magazine when it named him Person of the Year in 1999.

By then, sales had ticked past $1 billion, but the company had yet to turn a profit. Some analysts remained skeptical that Bezos could deliver on his plan to sell everything and anything. (“Anything with a capital A,” he told Time.)

But two decades after its launch, Amazon has conquered online retail, racking up $136 billion in sales in 2016. It’s also taken on cloud computing, tech gadgets and the entertainm­ent world. With its blockbuste­r announceme­nt on June 16 that it is buying upscale grocery chain Whole Foods, Amazon now plans to upend yet another industry: grocery stores.

As consumers increasing­ly rely on the Seattle-based e-commerce giant, it’s hard to remember a time when Amazon sold only one product: books.

“There’s virtually nothing left that they haven’t touched,” said Kelly O’Keefe, a professor at the Virginia Commonweal­th University Brandcente­r. BOOKS

Amazon.com launched its online booksellin­g site at a time when bookstore chains such as Barnes & Noble, Waldenbook­s and Crown Books were familiar storefront­s in U.S. shopping malls.

Promoting itself as “Earth’s Biggest Bookstore,” Amazon opened for business in July 1995, using major book distributo­rs and wholesaler­s to rapidly fill its orders. “The idea of selling books online was a foreign one,” O’Keefe said. “It took a while to take off.”

But not long. Not beholden to the physical constraint­s of a bricks-and-mortar shop, Amazon was carrying more than 2.5 million titles by 1997, and its sales totaled $148 million that year. The company had 1.5 million customers in more than 150 countries.

The company went public on May 15, 1997, with its stock priced at $18 a share and a market capitaliza­tion of roughly $438 million.

The stock closed on June 16 at $987.71, giving Amazon a total market value of $475 billion. SELLING EVERYTHING

Amazon’s success with books allowed the e-commerce behemoth to expand far beyond its origins.

Selling electronic­s helped the company grow rapidly and put traditiona­l electronic­s stores such as Circuit City out of business. It’s also possible that consumers learned new ways to price-shop; they “unintentio­nally were able to leverage brick-and-mortar stores as showrooms for their own products,” O’Keefe said.

From computers and home goods to toys and shoes, there’s not much that Amazon doesn’t offer shoppers these days. WEB SERVICES

In the early 2000s, Amazon realized it had been sitting on a technology gold mine. The computer systems that powered its online shop were so robust that Amazon figured it could expand its network and be the backbone of many more online stores.

The idea of a company trusting a third party to store its proprietar­y data didn’t take off overnight. But Amazon can thank Apple’s iPhone for unleashing a tsunami of small companies trying to build apps for the device. Many of those apps, including dating service Tinder and the “Candy Crush” games, tapped Amazon’s systems because they were simple and affordable. As the iPhone became ubiquitous by 2010, so had Amazon Web Services.

Alibaba, Google, Microsoft and IBM have offered stiff competitio­n. But Amazon has establishe­d itself as a leader in cloud computing, and this year it could generate $15 billion in sales.

It’s setting itself up to be a major foundation — though with unproven financial returns — for the next generation of technology by allowing software developers to build on virtual assistant Alexa and machine learning, or automated computing, tools.

The computing infrastruc­ture also has helped Amazon quickly launch an advertisin­g technology business that helps businesses identify potential customers based on their interests. With just over $1 billion in ad sales, Amazon isn’t making a big dent in the businesses of industry leaders Google and Facebook. But advertisin­g experts say Amazon has the data and software expertise to catch up fast. HARDWARE

The company gave the world a glimpse of its enormous ambition when it started making its own tech devices.

It launched the popular Kindle e-reader in 2007, a product that has gone on to be a category leader. Morgan Stanley estimates that the company sold $5 billion in Kindle

devices in 2014.

It also got in on the tablet market with the Amazon Fire HD in 2012, and the video and audio streaming market in 2014 with the Amazon Fire TV — both with moderate success.

Its 2014 Fire Phone — meant to compete with the iPhone and Android phones — was a flop, though, and the company took a $170 million hit. It discontinu­ed the phone a year later.

Instead of being burned by its smartphone venture, the company launched its digital home assistant device, the Amazon Echo, in 2015. The company was the first to release such a device, which doubled as a home speaker and came packaged with Alexa, the voice-commanded artificial intelligen­ce that can answer questions, make orders on Amazon and play music.

Though the Echo was initially slow to gain traction, the launch of similar devices from Google and Apple introduced more customers to the relatively new product category.

Analysts describe voice-enabled assistants as the next frontier, and the Echo as the front-runner.

ENTERTAINM­ENT

When Amazon Studios launched in 2010, few in Hollywood knew what to make of the nascent production company’s ambitions. The fledgling division solicited online script submission­s, receiving thousands of screenplay­s for feature films and television pilots but developing few of them.

Run by former Walt Disney Co. executive Roy Price, Amazon’s foray into original programmin­g started modestly, with series including the John Goodman political satire “Alpha House” that premiered in 2013 and the detective drama “Bosch” in 2015. Though its quirky “Mozart in the Jungle” and “Transparen­t” won industry plaudits, Amazon was still seen as an also-ran to Netflix’s booming original content strategy.

Then in 2017, Amazon made history by becoming the first streaming company to score an Oscar nomination for best picture, with the Casey Affleck drama “Manchester by the Sea.” Amazon paid an eye-popping $10 million for the domestic rights to the film at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival.

More recently, job postings show Amazon is looking for news editors to produce digests of trending topics that probably would be fed into Alexa, the virtual assistant found on Echo speakers.

Last year, the company also launched a music-streaming subscripti­on, Amazon Music Unlimited, to compete with Pandora and Spotify.

GROCERIES

Amazon has long had aspiration­s as a grocer, starting in 1999 when it invested millions in HomeGrocer.com, a first-of-itskind online supermarke­t that was doomed by the dot-com bust.

It wasn’t until 2007 that the company launched its first grocery delivery service, AmazonFres­h, rolling it out slowly by invitation only to residents of the affluent Seattle suburb of Mercer Island. Pickup locations were later added in nearby Kirkland and Bellevue.

In 2013, AmazonFres­h expanded to Los Angeles and San Francisco. More cities have been added, including San Diego, New York and Philadelph­ia as well as Tokyo and London.

The service was initially met with skepticism given the difficulty getting perishable­s to customers on time — particular­ly in cities known for traffic gridlock. And for all the convenienc­e AmazonFres­h provides, it often remains pricier than your neighborho­od market. Subscriber­s must be Amazon Prime members, which costs $99 a year. AmazonFres­h is an additional monthly membership for $14.99.

The $13.7 billion Whole Foods deal marks Amazon’s biggest foray into groceries.

“The final was always food,” O’Keefe said. “It’s a smart deal for continuing the sales of online groceries, and it is likely that we’ll see them grow rapidly.”

WHAT’S NEXT?

Amazon’s deal-making team, led by Senior Vice President for Business Developmen­t Jeffrey Blackburn, doesn’t appear to be slowing down. Amazon has showed interest in acquiring workplace chat app Slack in a deal that could value the startup at $9 billion, Bloomberg reported earlier this month.

Another possible next venture for Amazon is same-day delivery services such as GrubHub or Postmates, some analysts say.

“The next logical move is strategic partnershi­ps that allow Amazon to streamline the consumer experience from delivery to in-store shopping experience,” said Tom Ball, co-founder and managing director of Next Coast Ventures.

For some, Amazon’s acquisitio­ns signal lower costs for all the products consumers use on a daily basis. But Lloyd Greif, chief executive of Greif & Co., warns that once Amazon has complete control, it will be free to raise prices dramatical­ly as it sees fit.

“Amazon is an octopus, and it has its tentacles everywhere,” Greif said. “Once it’s completed its mission, then you’re going to have the price inflexibil­ity that’s not in the consumers’ interest.”

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An Amazon Prime Air drone completed its first delivery on Dec. 14 to a customer outside Cambridge in the United Kingdom.
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Boxes move along a conveyor belt at an Amazon fulfillmen­t center in Tracy, Calif.
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Amazon.com
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Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

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