Tim Ronaldson discusses Amazon as the 'ultimate disruptor.'

Tim Ronaldson Discusses How Amazon is the ‘ultimate disruptor’

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How you can learn from Amazon’s relentless customer-centric  focus 

It’s an online store that offers products from third-party retailers around the  globe. It’s a shipping company that hires contract drivers to deliver packages to  homes. It’s a grocery store chain focused on fresh, organic produce and healthy  options. It’s a technology company that embraces drones, smartphones and  streaming video. It’s a membership service that provides subscribers with top notch customer service, feedback, reviews and perks. 

Tim Ronaldson discusses Amazon as the 'ultimate disruptor.'

It is, of course, Amazon – the ever-evolving, ever-expanding, never-resting-on-its laurels company that has changed the way companies across the globe, in all  sectors, think about how they approach business. 

Since its founding in 1994 – one year before eBay and four years before Google – Amazon has been intently focused on one thing: Its customers. Amazon’s  customer-first approach has allowed it to be a disrupter in the global retail  marketplace. 

As Tim Ronaldson explains, though, it’s not just the company’s “focus” on the customer that has been important  for Amazon. As Jeff Bezos, the founder and chief executive officer, alluded to in  Amazon’s 2017 Letter to Shareholders, it’s more about anticipating what the  customer will want in the future rather than simply satisfying what they know  they want now. 

“One thing I love about customers is that they are divinely discontent. Their  expectations are never static – they go up. It’s human nature. We didn’t ascend  from our hunter-gatherer days by being satisfied. People have a voracious  appetite for a better way, and yesterday’s ‘wow’ quickly becomes today’s  ‘ordinary.’ I see that cycle of improvement happening at a faster rate than ever  before,” Bezos wrote.

“It may be because customers have such easy access to more information  than ever before – in only a few seconds and with a couple taps on their phones,  customers can read reviews, compare prices from multiple retailers, see whether  something’s in stock, find out how fast it will ship or be available for pick-up, and  more. These examples are from retail, but I sense that the same customer 

empowerment phenomenon is happening broadly across everything we do at  Amazon and most other industries as well. You cannot rest on your laurels in this  world. Customers won’t have it.”

The Vision Bezos Had for Amazon

Nearly 30 years ago, Bezos had a vision about how he would build Amazon into the global giant it is today. In his 1997 Letter to Shareholders, he hinted at  Amazon’s business model – “in my view, obsessive customer focus is by far the  most protective of Day 1 vitality.”  

According to Tim Ronaldson, that focus has enabled Amazon to constantly build on its success as an online  retailer and enter into new markets, diversifying itself and significantly boosting  other small businesses along the way. In early May, Amazon released its first  Small Business Impact Report, which found, among other noteworthy items, that  half the items purchased on Amazon come from small- and medium-sized  businesses, with 20,000 of these businesses worldwide surpassing $1 million in  sales in 2017, creating 900,000 jobs worldwide in the process. 

Today, Amazon is known for so much more than online retail. Its membership  service, Amazon Prime, began as a way to get free two-day shipping on most  items purchased on Amazon and was targeted to the site’s high-frequency  shoppers. Now, a subscription gives added benefits of access to Prime streaming  videos and preferred pricing in Amazon’s book stores. The company announced  recently that it has more than 100 million Amazon Prime members; at $99 per  year in the U.S., and soon to be $119, that’s, well, quite a few truck loads of  revenue. 

Whole Foods was a huge purchase for Amazon, according to Tim Ronaldson

In August 2017, Amazon purchased Whole Foods for $13.7 billion and  immediately began making changes – cutting costs, selling Amazon tech wares in  store, implementing Amazon Prime as the store’s loyalty discount program and  testing free two-hour delivery of groceries. Amazon is also expanding its  experimental Amazon Go stores to Chicago and San Francisco, with their high tech monitoring and checkout systems where customers can shop freely and  “check out” without the need to scan bar codes. 

Tim Ronaldson points out that other companies have taken notice to all Amazon is doing and are trying to  implement some of Amazon’s features and perks into their own models. Walmart  is now offering free two-day shipping, and you don’t even have to be a subscriber  to a special program to get the perk; you do, however, need to order at least $35 

in goods to get the free shipping. It’s a new strategy for Walmart after its  ShippingPass – a $50 per year membership service – couldn’t compete with  Amazon Prime since all it provided was the free shipping. 

The Lessons Amazon Can Teach Us

It’s a lot to digest how Amazon got where it is today, and where it’s going  tomorrow. We haven’t even touched on the company’s newest project, the  Amazon Experience Center – pre-wired, voice-activated smart homes powered by  Amazon’s Alexa that are coming to Vallejo, Calif. So instead of just playing your  music, the technology can control everything in your home. Potentially, Alexa  could be your doctor one day, too. 

Got all that? 

If there’s one lesson to be learned from Amazon, according to Tim Ronaldson, it’s that business success comes  from being obsessively focused on your customer, no matter who your customer  is and what industry you’re in. Being customer-centric allows Amazon to  constantly evolve based on what its customers want. Simultaneously, as Amazon  is focusing on its customers’ needs and desires, it’s always thinking about what’s  next. 

In an October 2017 interview with Walter Isaacson of Vanity Fair, Bezos said, in  part, “You always have to be leaning into the future. If you’re leaning away from  the future, the future is going to win every time.” 

“Amazon is a case study in ceaseless innovation and interminable disruption,”  said Artemis Berry, the vice president of digital retail for Shop.org and the  National Retail Federation, in a 2016 article posted on its site. “They have truly  earned the nickname of ‘ultimate disrupter.” 

Can you become that “ultimate disrupter” in your industry? Start with a  customer-centric approach to your business. Pay attention to what your customer  not only says he or she wants and needs now, but also anticipate what he or she  will want and need in the future. By doing this, you’ll be able to leverage your  today to get to your tomorrow.

Tim Ronaldson is a classically-trained journalist who helps businesses of all sizes communicate their message in a way that resonates with their target audience. He has led his own business for the last seven-plus years, serving a wide variety of clients in multiple industries.