Heaven is where the police are British, the lovers French, the mechanics German, the chefs Italian, and it is all organized by the Swiss.
Hell is where the chefs are British, the mechanics French, the lovers Swiss, the police German, and it is all organized by the Italians.
In just the last three years, Google has gotten into mobile devices, social networking and now allegedly e-commerce, Amazon now does full-on computing devices (with Google's OS) and Microsoft has the #2 search engine. This is getting hard to keep track of. And no wonder everyone keeps expecting Facebook to come out with a phone.
This report seems like the oddest one yet. Does a shipping service even qualify as organizing the world's information and making it universally accessible and useful?
If Google ships, they know an item was sold and who bought it. They know everything. Their listings can be on a CPA basis rather than CPC for the advertisers (merchants.) The cost for shipping probably could be absorbed by the merchant in much the same way that merchants pay for advertising in the first place.
In the short term, it probably doesn't make much sense. In the long term, Google is probably more interested in cutting out the retail middle man then they are competing with Amazon.
But the core of amazon, google and facebook is: gather all the consumers and their data , and market or sell them stuff.
And the other half of the business is: build marketplaces for vendors , be it books, physical products , ads , etc.But that's relatively easy[1], once you have the consumer side.
[1]for digital products, it's easy: if you have buyers, sellers will flock to your door and infrastructure is relatively easy.
For physical products you can build your own(amazon), you can partner with providers(current google effort) and you can partner with logistics provider(ebay). So even for physical products , it's not that difficult.
Google has all the data to know the exact steps between the location of the product in inventory and the location of the doorstep of the customer. I could see them reducing cost of delivery in the following ways:
1. Using automated routing tools to allocate delivery resources in real-time. Currently, a human dispatcher can account for up to 35% of the cost of a same-day local delivery. Straight from an algorithm to a mobile phone is cheaper.
2. Using delivery contractors to collect video data to help build in the direction of an even richer google maps street view.
3. Eventually using autonomous vehicles to replace the human driver. I'm not saying this will happen any time soon, but I could see certain sections of city roads being approved for autonomous vehicle use in the next 3-5 years. Especially if google is pushing it while demonstrating safety. Paying a human driver can account for up to 60% of the cost of a same-day local delivery.
Also, there are some intangible aspects of having the relationship with a customer at their doorstep. Creates some advertising opportunities and gives nice contextual data about the customer.
Anyhow, being fairly familiar with the space I think Amazon and Google moving in this direction will really evolve online retail. More shipping options on products; more goods being shipped locally (for cheaper); more control over the delivery chain; visibility of exactly where your package is on the way to your house. That is the kind of innovation we can expect to see if google finds a way to leverage its data towards lower delivery cost.
Market disruption doesn't involve increasing efficiency, the incumbents can always increase efficiency the exact same way you did, on a massive scale. You have to somehow alter the market itself, change what the customers expect.
E-courier in the UK (http://www.ecourier.co.uk/) is one example of such a tool implemented at scale - they've demonstrated lower cost and compete successfully on lower pricing. And, guess what one of their founders just left to do? Basically created the UK version of Amazon Prime+ (http://www.shutl.co.uk/), leveraging the E-courier delivery service for efficiency..
Often the way to alter the market is to lower cost below a threshold where new utility can be provisioned to customers.
Aside from having a lot of stuff, aside from it all being at great prices, we also know that it's backed by a company with amazing, second-to-none customer service. I've had to call up Amazon just once, for some hard-to-find solderable fuses for a special client project. The first batch I ordered shipped on time but never showed up; the client needed the machine back the day after the fuses were due to arrive. I called up Amazon to see if I could arrange overnight delivery, and not only did they do that, but they didn't charge me anything for the shipping or for the second batch of fuses. They just asked me to ship back the first batch when it finally showed up, which I did, a few days later.
Google meanwhile has a pretty rough reputation when it comes to customer service. Their attitude seems to be that "customer service doesn't scale". I think Amazon pretty handily proves that wrong. I find it difficult to believe that Google is going to be the next Amazon -- they just don't "get" people.
There are a few companies that have my undying loyalty because they've gone out of their way to be great before some competition has forced them to. Amazon is one of those.
My impression of Google is that they feel the same way, but haven't figured out how to gracefully handle the errors those bugs cause, while Amazon has.
I've never needed Google or Amazon's customer service, though, so I'm basing my opinion on what I've heard from others.
I wonder if this is just google saying "get of my lawn" to amazon with regards to android.
Seriously, I just tried it now. My complaints:
- Why do I have to pick a department to sort? (I can kind of understand this, but it's annoying)
- Why isn't shipping taken into account when I sort?
- Why are used and new prices mixed when sorting?
While I understand that Amazon can't read my mind, there are certain product categories (cell phone cases, for example) where it's like panning for gold. You need to spend a non-trivial amount of time digging for a quality case for a good price.
I don't have a solution, but it certainly feels harder than it needs to be. Searching on newegg.com feels so much better, but I suppose they have the advantage of having a very narrow focus.
(guess who has owned IMDB for over 10 years?)
Unfortunately the tax problem still stands.
However, lately they've been making the news for the products they're no longer focusing on (Wave, other Labs, etc.). Could it be that with things like the UI refresh, Google+ and a shipping service (and a host of other initiatives), they're attempting to connect more with people and put out a "human touch"?
I don't think this is a widespread problem, but it might not be too far away.
Some folks grok Chrome, and that's good... but it's for more savvy/advanced users.