Borders Wants To Run Its Own Store, Amazon Wants To Enable You To
from the but-it's-not-really-about-the-bookstore dept
Borders announced that it would be ending its alliance with Amazon.com and would run its own online bookstore starting early next year. Prior to 2001, Borders ran its own online presence, but since it could not turn a profit, they sought a partnership with Amazon. Now, the landscape has changed. Traditional brick-and-mortar retailers no longer see their online divisions as separate renegade entities. Online stores now play an important part of a larger, multi-channel strategy, and customers benefit from such services as in-store pickup at the physical store counterparts. Borders is doubling down on its new online focus, as it also announced that it would be closing of almost half of its Waldenbooks stores over the next two years. Though the loss of Borders could cost Amazon some revenue, Amazon isn't really losing sleep over it. Amazon hasn't really done much to address the changing needs of its multi-channel retail partners. Perhaps the ugly divorce that they went through with Toys 'R Us left them with a bitter taste when dealing with big brick-and-mortar retailers. Instead, Amazon is betting on "me"-centric web 2.0 user-generated e-commerce by building out Amazon Web Services, which means that anyone can add Amazon's capabilities to whatever they're doing. When Borders launches next year, they will probably have their sights on Amazon, and they may actually build themselves a fine online bookstore. However, the game has changed. Selling the most books, is not about being the best bookstore anymore. It's more about enabling consumers with the tools to do anything they want, which would then, in turn, sell the most books.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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What?
"However, the game has changed. Selling the most books, is not about being the best bookstore anymore. It's more about enabling consumers with the tools to do anything they want, which would then, in turn, sell the most books."
Sounds like BS to me.
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Re: What?
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Yay!
1. Borders has realized that it is in the business of selling books, and even if the pie shrinks a bit without Amazon's help, their piece is larger. Plus, Borders gets better firsthand intelligence on what customer demand is really like. (Which helps keep inventories lean, prevents under ordering key titles, e.g. 300)
2. Amazon has realized that it is really paypal, but better, because it's customers are loyal. Seriously - they provide frameworks for sellers, they provide an interested customer base, and they take a cut of each transaction, without ever having to play the "we're fighting money laundering so we froze your account" game. The books are incidental - they sell the service of online retailing, not books.
3. This is great for book buyers like me, if they do it right. I can already check inventory and select books online to pick them up locally instead of paying for shipping, and often instead of waiting a week. If they streamline the UI so I can keep wishlists, or hold things in my shopping cart, so much the better.
Eliminating Waldenbooks outlets makes sense - they are so physically tiny that keeping books stored for anticipated customer demand doesn't make sense. If they have placed their superstores correctly, they should be very close to their wholesaler's warehousing/distribution centers, leading to very short turn arounds for orders.
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Store vs. Platform
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Border's is in the business of selling books?
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Re: Border's is in the business of selling books?
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Amazon is the bomb!
Furthermore, I want to sell a very small number of my own works. No way I can publish in print, but I can leverage the e-book concept. Amazon will provide the business framework I need.
They are way ahead of everyone else in the key aspect of doing business, which is meeting the customer's wants.
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Yes, dear BlogReader, Borders is indeed in the bus
Sure, both companies give away a pleasant environment filled with books and the scent of coffee. It makes it that much easier to sell books, partly because it is a more pleasant environment for their employees, almost all of whom are nuts for their product. But neither sell the atmosphere (unlike theaters) they sell books they buy on a returnable basis from wholesaler-distributors.
There are some differences between the two; I don't believe that B&N allows you to check their inventory online. I don't recall B&N having search kiosks sprinkled throughout the store. Borders has done these things incrementally, and has been learning from them. It seems logical enough that they'd be able to meet all of your needs: recommendations, relevant inventory, easy searching. That stuff isn't rocket science costing "hundreds of millions of dollars". That is computer science. Which nowadays can be banged out in a weekend by a single programmer using Ruby on Rails.*
Remember, inventory management, search, and recommendation aren't hard to do. They are hard to do excellently, but hey, it looks like they've been practicing, eh? They have to be able to do these things anyway, just to run their business. And they have years of actual customer searches to pull from their in store kiosks.
*granted, a good result means spending 60-100k/year for five years in salaries and equipment costs, but really, that's peanuts for these guys.
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Long Tail Economics
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Expected book sales?
Getting my book (a dating manual) into stores like Borders, Chapters/Indigo, etc. would be a lot harder, but would it be worth it?
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