This week, Reuters broke the news that the world’s largest store, Walmart,
had taken the decision to no longer carry the world’s largest etailor’s Kindle tablets
and eReaders once the existing inventory and purchase commitments had been
honoured. It was reported as being a merchandising strategy and a recognition
that Amazon is a real competitor across all media content. Is more about who
owns the customer, who is providing the service and whose brand is actually
being built than dropping some devices?
In the physical world it was all about filling the shelf and
if you didn’t have the product on the shelf everything else could simply fail.
The likes of Amazon then created the virtual shelf with vitual inventory and online
service and many failed to match the offer. Some even effectively gave their
digital business, be it for physical or digital product, to these new virtual traders.
Amazon built a significant marketplace which few have been able to emulate,
where even when they didn’t get the sale themselves, it was done effectively in
their name and they earned a commission on it. Amazon is no longer about books,
or digital media, it is a retail virtual market. The Apple store then took this
commission approach to a new level and established that doing business through
their appstore , on their iPads, be it for purchases or subscriptions, warranted
a hefty 30% commission payment. They even tried to force the whole digital
market back into fixed pricing with them being the ‘most favoured nation.’
We have gone from digital device and format/DRM lock-ins and
transaction charges to platform commission and portal charges and now have to
ask what next and how many slices can the pie take?
It is somewhat pleasing to see the emergence of HTML5 as the
potential great leveller, but equally interesting to see the browser positions
adopted by Amazon Kindle with their Silk browser and
Apple with own browser. Are these to
become the new toll booths and open market restrictions?
If we were to ask the
consumer who is their first choice gateway for music, film, games, TV, radio, news,
books, will they select one umbrella service or many separate ones? Are they
now looking for a simplified access and a one stop shop and is this driven by a
marketplace or merely a platform. We don’t know the answer but unless we ask we
will merely assume we know the answer. The
important thing is that what once was the brand everyone thought they bought
from may now be changing and the power shifting through technology to others
who simple attract consumers and facilitate access.
Walmart may so no to selling Kindles but if all they devices
they sell still access Amazon and they don’t have the comparable offer are they
exposed to the same risk? By not stocking Kindles are they also just driving
their consumers who want one to another store full stop?
1 comment:
Quote: If we were to ask the consumer who is their first choice gateway for music, film, games, TV, radio, news, books, will they select one umbrella service or many separate ones?
I know what I want. I want to get away from gateways that force me to use a different reader, depending on where I got an ebook. And I want to get away from having to remember just where I got an ebook to know which app it is on.
I want one library of all my ebooks (backed up to the cloud), and I want to read it in the reading app of my choice.
The problem is that no one in the industry either wants or is in a position to provide me with any solution that isn't heavily proprietary.
The one hope might be a consortium of major publishers, but Amazon seems to have gotten their obedient little lap puppy, the DOJ, to block that possibility with dubious anti-trust charges.
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