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This video is sponsored by Brilliant.
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On September 4th, 2018, Amazon became a 1 trillion dollar company.
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That's twice what it was a year ago, and only a month after Apple first broke the record.
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Now, if your name rhymes with Real deGrasse Bison, you might point out that 1 trillion
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is a pretty arbitrary milestone, that new years is fake, leap day is a lie, and the
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phrase “time flies” is scientifically inaccurate.
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But it's still a good excuse to stop and ask, Why?
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Why is Amazon valued higher than Walmart, Samsung, Netflix, and Disney put together?
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First, Jeff Bezos thinks only in the long-term.
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And because investors understand this, the company can act in ways that only make sense
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three, five, ten years in the future.
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Second, they focus more on customers than the competition.
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The goal is building loyalty, even if it means sacrificing profit today.
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And finally, with remarkable scale comes remarkable efficiency.
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When you ship billions of packages a year, you can buy your own airplanes, start your
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own shipping company, and lower your prices.
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But there's another reason Amazon has such an advantage: data.
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No other website even comes close to the number of sales made with Amazon.
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Not Ebay, not Apple, not even Walmart.
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The battle seems already won.
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Unlike a Costco or a Staples, companies can't really choose whether to sell on Amazon, only
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whether they make the profit.
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Say you're shopping for a pair of tennis shoes,
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Most people would click buy, receive it in the mail, and never question who it came from.
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It says Nike, the pictures are real, it even has the logo.
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But often it's actually a reseller, who buys in bulk, adds a margin, and sells on
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the same official-looking product page.
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Sometimes it's not even the real product.
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Knockoffs are everywhere.
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In part, because Amazon isn't really incentivized to police them.
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To you and me, it doesn't matter who the seller is if the price is right.
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But for Nike, it's everything.
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Brands can either refuse to sell on Amazon and watch other people do it for them,
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Or they can embrace it, and yes, give them a cut of the profit, but at least see some
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of it.
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So, you can guess which one they choose.
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Either way, Amazon wins.
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In theory, a company the size of Nike doesn't need them, they have a recognizable brand,
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and they can easily sell on their own website.
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But even they submit to Amazon, who, at this point, isn't so much a player as the game
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itself,
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There's a whole industry around making sure your product shows up when someone searches
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for it, and you get picked as the seller when someone clicks “buy”.
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It's called “Winning the buy box”, in fact, here's a whole book about it, which
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you can purchase, you guessed it, on Amazon.
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Now, controlling 49% of online sales is impressive, But here's the catch: Online is only one-tenth
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of retail,
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It's a big slice of a relatively small pie.
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To really prove its trillion-dollar valuation, Amazon needs to beat Walmart, at its game.
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And that's harder than it looks.
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This is Amazon's revenue from retail, this is Costco's, and this is Walmart's.
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90% of Americans live within 15 miles of its doors.
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You could drive twenty-six hundred miles through Canada, and take a ferry to the remote Kodiak
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Island, but you still haven't escaped the land of low prices and… poor fashion choices.
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Not even if you're Pitbull.
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Whole Foods gives Amazon a 500 store head start, but nothing compared to Walmart's
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eleven thousand.
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And yet, I'd still bet on Amazon.
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Here's why.
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The average grocery store has a profit margin of about 1%.
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The slightest change in efficiency can be the difference between failing and thriving.
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They need to know what customers are buying, how much they're willing to spend, and when
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they're vulnerable to advertising.
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This is why stores are so eager to sign you up for their rewards program, are you sure
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you want to pass up on this 5% cash back opportunity of a lifetime?
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Because all of a sudden you're the perfect customer, voluntarily identifying yourself
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at the cash register, allowing them to link your purchases together and slowly build a
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profile.
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No individual receipt is all that valuable, but together, they can start to see trends
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and even make predictions.
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A few years ago, Target made the news for doing exactly this:
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A man from Minnesota drove to the store, demanding to see a manager,
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His teenage daughter was receiving coupon after coupon for baby clothes and diapers
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and strollers - what were they trying to encourage?
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So Target called him a few days later to apologize, but by then, he had his own apologizing to
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do, his daughter was pregnant, and Target knew before he did.
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You might say they hit the bullseye.
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The other benefit of all this data is predictive stocking, not the creepy kind, well, depending
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on who you ask, It's being able to order and ship products in anticipation of their
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demand.
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Walmart began doing this back in 2004, Guessing which items it should order in preparation
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for Hurricane Frances.
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The answer was strawberry pop-tarts, of course
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Today, this isn't just handy information, it's an essential part of the business model.
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Consumers expect faster delivery and wider availability.
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As free shipping becomes 2-day shipping… becomes 2-hour shipping, the dynamics of retail
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change dramatically.
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There isn't enough time to ship your bananas from Colombia, they have to be waiting in
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a local warehouse before you decide to buy, but without wasting valuable space.
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And that means predicting which items will be ordered and when.
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Here Amazon has the advantage, It doesn't just know what products you buy but what device
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you use, what you search for, how long you spend looking, all that and a whole lot more,
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at much bigger scale than someone like Walmart.
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It doesn't have to guess how shoppers behave, it knows.
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Of course, there's also a downside.
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Amazon has always been the magic way to make stuff show up at your door.
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Walmart, well, controversial.
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“Criticism of Walmart” isn't exactly the shortest Wikipedia page.
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Part of which is just distance.
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Walmart is visible.
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With Amazon, you see only the results.
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But public perception may start to change - more stores, more warehouses, more people
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concerned about their privacy.
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The seeds are already planted, there's even talk of regulating Amazon as a monopoly.
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But it has a built-in defense against those arguments: Low prices.
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It may control huge portions of many huge industries, but it uses that scale to save
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money for consumers.
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It even competes with its own sellers.
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Amazon can find which products are selling well but whose brands people don't care
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about, things like batteries and knives, analyze their return and review data, and manufacture
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a cheaper version without the normal marketing expenses.
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It's their version of generic brands, with the power of data.
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Their most successful is AmazonBasics, which, if you search for something like “iPhone
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charger”, is practically all you see, here, here, here, here, here and here.
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Many of its brands you wouldn't even know were Amazon's, like Rivet and Presto.
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It knows how to rank first on its own website, which allows it to sell more products, therefore
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manufacture them cheaper, lower their prices, which, again, sells more products.
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And the beauty of being in so many different industries, online storage, movie production,
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music distribution, print publishing, organic groceries, personal electronics, and so on,
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is more data and more uses for it.
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That's why investors are so confident, Scale, long-term investment, customer-focus, and
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data are all universal - they give Amazon an advantage in any business they enter.
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In other words, if your business sells, well anything to consumers… there's a good
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chance you should be worried.
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Amazon isn't alone, the future of many industries is using algorithms to predict and analyze
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big sets of data.
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With Brilliant, you can learn those valuable computer science skills in a very approachable,
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intuitive way.
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Say you have a list customers and their purchases, and you want to guess what one of them will
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buy next.
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One way to do that is called Collaborative Filtering, noticing that many people who buy
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a backpack also look for school supplies.
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Some patterns are invisible to you and me, so we use a neural network.
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For example, retailers might want to automatically classify their shoppers in different categories.
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So you train the network with data you already have, which it can use to understand completely
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new information you give it.
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Those are the kinds of topics you can learn with Brilliant.
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To get started or dive deeper into the world of computer science and learn more about Brilliant,
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go to brilliant.org/Polymatter and sign up for free.
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The first 200 people to use that link will get 20% off the annual Premium subscription.