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If It's Friday, Amazon Must Be Changing Its Business Plan
Written by Evan Schuman
February 14, 2008
Amazon this week is undergoing two more strategic changes, one of its own doing and one being foisted upon it by a state government.
Amazon's own change involves it selling access to its pages to direct rivals. The backstory involves the stunningly thin margins that an E-Commerce behemoth like Amazon enjoys and the realization that Amazon might be able to enjoy better profits by taking a cut of a rival's revenue than by selling the item directly.
This business plan twist from an Associated Press story that explores these new text-link ads and a renewed push for "movie and music downloads, digital items that don't take up shelf space or incur shipping costs when they're purchased."
In the external forces category, New York state is pushing again to try and force Amazon to charge New York customers the Empire State's sales tax.
This comes from a New York Times story that could have huge E-Commerce implications. If New York succeeds, only a handful of milliseconds will pass before just about every other state will line up to do the same.
Ironically, one of the key reasons for the Borders-Amazon breakup last year was that Amazon didn't want to get involved in kiosk E-Commerce within Borders' stores because they feared it would expose them to the costs and complexities of sales tax issues. |
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Evan Schuman is the former retail technology editor for eWEEK.com, PCMagazine, CIOInsight and retail reporter for RISNews and Consumer Goods Technology. Having covered IT issues for 21 years - and other stuff like legal affairs, politics, Wall Street and the environment for about eight years before that - Schuman is in a good position to gripe about technology trends and sometimes accidentally make a good point.
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Sears.com Melts Down On Black Friday, But Costco, Walmart, Saks and Kmart Have Issues, Too
Sears.com suffered the worst Web problems on Black Friday (Nov. 28), experiencing a series of complete site crashes for much of the day. Although no other major retailer came close, according to preliminary reports, many of the industry's largest merchants suffered site slowdowns or other Web problems, including Walmart, Kmart, Saks, Overstock, Amazon, Target, Kohl's, Costco and Buy.com.
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