1 / 30

Amazon vs. Wal-Mart

Let’s Get Ready to Rumble!!!!. Amazon.com vs. Wal-Mart. E-Commerce Presentation Team. John Lin Darin Bodin Carmen Saleh. Eric Head Robert Distefano Dom Gaudin. The Amazon Team. CEO Jeffrey Bezos. Expertise: Bits & Bytes. Company Statistics:. Market Cap: $16 Billion

judson
Télécharger la présentation

Amazon vs. Wal-Mart

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Let’s Get Ready to Rumble!!!! Amazon.com vs. Wal-Mart E-Commerce Presentation Team • John Lin • Darin Bodin • Carmen Saleh • Eric Head • Robert Distefano • Dom Gaudin

  2. The Amazon Team CEO Jeffrey Bezos • Expertise: • Bits & Bytes Company Statistics: • Market Cap: $16 Billion • Stock Price: $100 1/16 • Net Profits: $-138 Million (2Q ‘99) • Headquarters: Seattle, Washington

  3. The Wal-Mart Team CEO David Glass • Expertise: • Bricks & Mortar Company Statistics: • Market Cap: $188 Billion • Stock Price: $42 1/4 • Net Profit: $4.43 Billion • Headquarters: Bentonville, AR

  4. HISTORIES

  5. History of Amazon.com • July 1994: • Incorporated • Focus: software development • Sold books in his garage with ten employees • July 1995: • Virtual doors open • September 1997: • Introduced personalized recommendations and one-click purchase • June 1999: • Obtained 10 million registered customers

  6. History of Amazon.com (continued) • 2nd quarter 1999 Revenues $314 billion • 1st quarter 1998 Revenues $87.4 million • Projected sales for 1999: over $1 billion • $138 million loss in 2nd quarter 1999 • Has not made a profit since company started • 10.7 million registered customers • 8.4 million in 1st quarter 1999 • 3.14 million in 1st quarter 1998

  7. History of Amazon.com (continued) • Operates two international sites: • www.amazon.co.uk • www.amazon.de • Other sites operated or owned include: • Gear.com • Drugstore.com • Homegrocer.com • Pets.com • IMDB.com • Planetall.com • Livebid.com • Accept.com

  8. History of Amazon.com (continued) Mission: To be the world’s most consumer-centric company where people can find and discover anything that they want to buy online.

  9. History of Wal-Mart 1962 Company founded in Rogers, Arkansas 1969 Wal-Mart Incorporated 1970 Wal-Mart Goes Public 1979 First Billion Dollar Sales Year 1993 First Billion Dollar Sales Week!

  10. History of Wal-Mart (continued) 1988David Glass named CEO 1991 Established International Presence in Mexico 1995 Established Presence in South America 1996 Entered Asia 1997 Largest national employer with 680,000 associates and first $100 Billion sales year!

  11. History of Wal-Mart (continued) • Originally launched Website in 1996 • Owns six registered web addresses: • samsclub.com • w-mtour.com • samsclubtravel.com. • Has established alliances with: • Fingerhut • Books-A-Million • Announced plans for an Internet megasite in 1999!!!

  12. STRENGTHS

  13. Amazon’s Strengths • E-commerce is its core mission and environment • Amazon.com has enjoyed a first mover advantage • Amazon has: • a strong brand image • vast customer database • exceptional customer trust

  14. Amazon’s Strengths • Amazon provides: • 100% guaranteed secured credit card transactions • Personalized product recommendations • Hassle-free shopping through 1-click and 1-bid technology • Risk-free return policy • Amazon’s IT and Logistics executives were formerly employed at Wal-Mart

  15. Wal-Mart’s Strengths • A leader in almost every retail category • $137.6 billion in sales last year • $4.43 billion in net earnings • Excellent vendor alliances

  16. Wal-Mart’s Strengths (continued) -History and image as a discount retailer -State of the art supply chain network -Culture of customer service -More than 3700 stores worldwide can be used in a “hybrid strategy”

  17. WEAKNESSES

  18. Amazon’s Weaknesses • Amazon has yet to achieve a profit • Customers cannot physically touch the product prior to purchasing • Lack of social interaction before purchasing • Risk-averse consumers may find buying on-line intimidating • Not every person has access to the Internet

  19. Wal-Mart’s Weaknesses • Brand image not attractive to “upscale consumers” • High fixed costs • First Web launch was not very successful • Will a mature and successful firm be willing to make the necessary commitment?!

  20. OPPORTUNITIES

  21. Amazon’s Opportunities • Expand internationally • Actively pursue online auctions • Evolution of mass market from merchant-centric to consumer-centric

  22. Create “segment fluidity” • Segments within segments • Typical segments • Low cost/value/high quality • Embedded segments • Customer service • Product uniqueness • Social experience • Quick and easy purchase • Personalized recommendations • Catch customers with high attention scarcity Amazon’s Opportunities (continued)

  23. Wal-Mart’s Opportunities • Exploit vendor relationships • Establish strategic alliances • Explore hybrid models to enhance customer service • Spin off wal-mart.com as a separate IPO

  24. Wal-Mart’s Opportunities (continued) • Market aggressively using traditional and online media • Explore hybrid models to enhance customer service • Do not worry about cannibalization. Use the Internet to expand customer base

  25. THREATS

  26. Amazon’s Threats • The future of E-Commerce • Amazon may bite off more than it can chew(over-diversification) • Other retailers are quickly creating an on-line presence • Amazon must effectively manage its growth to minimize growing pains

  27. Wal-Mart’s Threats • Wal-Mart is NOT the first mover. The “wait and see” strategy could be problematic • Other retailers are getting into the game (Sears, Target, Kmart, etc.) • Establishing an online brand will cost….the longer the wait, the greater the cost!!

  28. CONCLUSION

  29. Prediction: NO ONE WINNER! • The Hybrid Model • Segment “Fluidity” - Attention Scarcity • Bits & Bytes vs. Bricks & Mortar Analysis

  30. Questions??

More Related