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Amazon into Apparels
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continued from:Why Apparels?
There are quite a few important reasons for this seemingly
inconsistent move of Amazon. The growing competition in the book sector seems to
be one of the big reasons, because Amazon was incurring huge losses and
desperately wanted to substantiate their losses by diversifying themselves into
a profitable business. The growing competition from other publishers is becoming
more day-by-day, as many of the publishers like John Wiley, McGraw Hill, Andrew
Tucker, Steve Martini etc., have their very own websites from where the
customers can order the book they want, instead of going and buying it from
Amazon.
"When a company shows profit, investors start breathing faith on that
organization again, and there is no better time than that to expand" according
to Gaurav Chadha, a solution architect at NIIT and the co-author of the book
eLearning. That's what exactly Amazon did. After years of struggle, they showed
profits in the third-quarter of 2002, and the investors started forgetting in
them.
The other reason according to Professor Rajeev K Tyagi,
Graduate School of Management, University of California is that "the
company has sunk its fixed cost of establishing an excellent
ordering/delivering and tracking system. Expansion into any
positive-margin product which can share the same ordering/distribution
infrastructure, and which meets the above condition about consumer,
purchases decision is a profitable strategy." And apparel is one of the
biggest upcoming retail categories on the Internet with sales continuously
going up years. In fact, it is the third most popular online sales
category at present and is growing strong, according to Shop.org, the
online arm of the national retail federation.
The market segments in which Amazon is competing are rapidly evolving and
intensely competitive, and they have many competitors in the online retail
industry. The nature of the Internet as an electronic marketplace
facilitates competitive entry and comparison-shopping and renders it
inherently more competitive than conventional retailing formats. This
increased competition may reduce their sales and operating profits. This
fear would also have contributed to their idea of diversifying into
apparel sector.
Amazon's customer loyalty and its faith in customers
definitely contributed at a psychological level to its entry into the apparel
and accessory store. Besides books, apparel is one of the few products in the
world that have brand orientation, according to Gaurav Chadha. Brand is a
promise that guarantees quality, value or any other perception factor that
translates into customer-satisfaction. Brands give a sense of security/guarantee
to the customers. Brand is perhaps the biggest force behind online buying and
selling, and Amazon's apparel and accessory store has plenty of them on its
portfolio. This definitely will bring the customers to buy online from them. And
because brands are easier to sell online, so the loyalty factor would also had
played its own role in the idea of diversifying into apparels.
Pros and Cons
How is Amazon going to benefit from selling apparels when compared to selling
books and CDs? What are the factors that are associated with Amazon, which will
attract customers to visit and buy apparels from their store?
"The first major factor for Amazon will be its brand name and the peoples trust
in Amazon's product," says Gaurav Chadha. Generally people tend to buy from
someone they know, or from someone they had bought earlier, or from someone they
had heard of before.
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