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'We are famously unprofitable': A 36-year-old Jeff Bezos on Amazon

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 1 ก.ค. 2024
  • 'We are famously unprofitable': A 36-year-old Jeff Bezos on Amazon
    Amazon was once Jeff Bezos's "famously unprofitable company", as the former CEO said in an exclusive 2000 BBC Newsnight interview. Nearly 25 years on, the ubiquitous company has become one of a handful of companies in the world valued at over $2 trillion.
    On 8 June 2000, the BBC presenter Jeremy Vine was pictured sat behind the Newsnight desk, poring over a report on a seemingly flailing ecommerce market. Sitting across the table from him was that night's guest: 36-year-old Jeff Bezos, the CEO of Amazon.com, Inc.
    At the time of the interview on the BBC's flagship current affairs programme, Amazon had reached a pivotal point in its history. By mid-2000, the dotcom boom had created an economic bubble that began to reach its bursting point. Dozens of online businesses, including Amazon, which hovered near the gravitational centre of the dotcom bubble, were starting to feel its impact.
    While Amazon garnered $1.6bn (£1.27bn) in sales in 1999, it also suffered net losses of $720m (£567m), as Vine highlighted in his Newsnight report, and the company's share price was volatile, dropping from $113 a share in December 1999 to $52 in June 2000.
    Despite the company's early and drastic success, Amazon still felt a major shock from the dotcom crash of the early 2000s
    "People used to say Amazon is 'amazing,'" said Vine, launching into the interview. "And now they say: 'isn't it amazing that Amazon is losing so much money?'"
    "Well, we are a famously unprofitable company," Bezos responded, largely unfazed. "And that is a conscious strategy and an investment decision."
    Twenty-four years after the interview, and 30 years after Amazon's start, Vine can still remember many aspects of the interview - and Bezos. "I had some hostile questions," Vine tells the BBC today. "And he just batted them away. Never, ever broke a sweat, literally."
    "I do remember thinking: 'this guy is quite a happy soul'," says Vine. "He just had a spring in his step, and I, looking back on it - I've always thought he already knew at that point that he was going to be the richest man on Earth."
    The ecommerce fairytale
    Jeff Bezos founded the company on 5 July 1994 in a garage in Bellevue, Washington, with the site launching a year later. The worldwide web was still in its infancy (known as Web 1.0), and only a few companies had begun to see the potential of web-based businesses. Amazon started out as an online bookseller, touting the world's largest collection of ebooks at the time, as vast as the eponymous river it was named after, and doubled down on books to become a central player in the burgeoning ecommerce market.
    Amazon rode on the wave of the dotcom boom, a rapid rise in the US technology sector in the latter half of the late 1990s instigated by significant market investments that birthed a generation of new internet-based companies.
    Four years after the site's launch, Amazon became the biggest online sales platform in the world, expanding its offerings to other goods, such as electronics, toys and appliances. By the end of the millennium, Amazon had 17 million customers and its valuation skyrocketed to 50 times its IPO value. Jeff Bezos was even named the 1999 Person of the Year by Time Magazine, who labelled him the "king of cybercommerce".
    In the years since, however, the company has faced criticism over its tax and labour practices. And even in 2000, despite Amazon's meteoric success, some people had their doubts about the company. On Newsnight in 2000, the Amazon founder embraced the quips critics made about his company, like "Amazon-dot-con", "Amazon-dot-bomb" and his personal favourite, "Amazon-dot-org", alluding to its difficulty in making a profit.
    "To lose money when you've got 20 million customers takes real skill," Vine remarked, earning one of Bezos's signature chortles.
    "Well, we have that," Bezos replied jokingly, before fading to a more tempered demeanour. "But what's really going on here is we're investing."
    Amid the turmoil of instability in the dotcom and ecommerce space, Bezos was already thinking toward expansion. In 1999, Amazon invested about four million sq ft of distribution around the world, including two million sq ft into the company's largest distribution centre in the UK, just outside of London. Adopting a strategy, according to Bezos, of "offering a wide selection of products for as little cost as possible" also contributed to the company's losses at time. But the main priority was to fulfil Amazon's ever-growing customer demand, Bezos said in 2000.
    #AmazonDotCom #JeffBezos #TuanNguyenCapital #FamouslyUnprofitable #DotComBoom #EcommerceHistory #InvestingForGrowth #AmazonHistory #EarlyInternetDays #TechStartup #businessstrategy
    Tuan Nguyen Capital
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ความคิดเห็น • 5

  • @user-xf9wg3oy9h
    @user-xf9wg3oy9h หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    At the end, his kinda soft voice and then that laugh.. damn

  • @JM-ll2vv
    @JM-ll2vv หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Why did you add the silly music?

    • @tuannguyencapital
      @tuannguyencapital  หลายเดือนก่อน

      😂💯💔 Yeah, you are a discerning viewer

  • @Trying_to_Make_a_Million
    @Trying_to_Make_a_Million หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I have a feeling Jeff went to the future before he created Amazon.

  • @SuperPerfectMan
    @SuperPerfectMan หลายเดือนก่อน

    He knew they were gonna win