Amazon: Cost Leadership And The Success Of Amazon

1840 Words4 Pages

• operating losses & expenses of businesses we acquired or in which we invested;
• potential impairment of tangible/intangible assets & goodwill, resulting from acquisitions;
• potential impairment of customers, company relationships we acquired or in which we invested or our own customers as a result of any integration of operations;
• difficulty of incorporating acquired technology, rights and unanticipated expenses
• difficulty of integrating a new company’s acc., F/A reporting, management, information security, HR, & other Admin. systems
• for investments in which an investee’s financial performance is incorporated into our financial results, either in full or in part, the dependence on the investee’s accounting, financial reporting, and …show more content…

According to Panmore Institute, Amazon’s number one goal is to become the largest online retailer in the entire world. To make this dream a reality, Amazon will need to continue to use a Cost Leadership approach with its retail segment. However, with the shipping and delivery segment, Amazon will need to surpass their current capabilities to set themselves apart from their competitors. Therefore, it will be necessary to evolve their strategic position from simply a Cost Leadership into a hybrid of Cost Leadership and a Focused Low Cost strategy. Amazon has been able to sustain an advantageous profit position relative to its rivals in large part because it has already differentiated its method of delivery. Nevertheless, the company will need to improve this method further yet. When establishing a niche market for shipping, Amazon will need to consider its competition as well as the size of the niche market and the expected growth …show more content…

Amazon has a corporate strategy classified as a dominant business. Approximately 75% of its revenues are generated from merchandise sales and 25% from services. As a dominant business corporation, Amazon has the ability to be greatly diversified. Amazon’s product selection is brilliantly mastered as well as their dependency on third party sellers. The products and services the company offers vary tremendously from books and electronics to household, beauty products, and much more. Amazon is designed to take a market-wide view of potential product ranges. The company must then choose which products and third party sellers are most suitable for the range expansion that Amazon can get the biggest impact from. By doing this, Amazon satisfies both its business and corporate level

Open Document