Memo: The Amazon Counterpoint

The new Atlantic feature entitled “Cancel Prime” makes clear the cost of Prime, which added 30 million new users during the pandemic as people came to rely on Amazon to deliver goods when stores were closed or seemed risky to shop in. It’s on track to pass Netflix as the most-subscribed-to service. By scrutinizing the way Amazon’s flywheel – a powerful moat that has been emulated by other retailers – works, the report underscores just how much Amazon has altered our brains as consumers.

Prime is the financial engine keeping Amazon’s fulfillment-and-delivery machine running, and also the argument for its existence. If consumers don’t expect packages in 24 hours, there’s no reason to require workers to scan a new one every 11 seconds until their discs bulge. But those expectations—and their costs—are bigger than Prime, or even Amazon, because Amazon is so big that every sector of our economy has bent to respond to the new way of consuming that it invented.

It’s good to remind ourselves just how much Amazon dominates the current retail landscape. Prime Day’s force is enough that other retailers bent over to promote their own deals in hopes that people in the shopping mindset will find something they need there, instead of or in addition to Amazon. Companies like Shopify and Etsy position themselves as the anti-Amazon. And while Amazon’s armor can be dinged by dozens of worthwhile competitors, to be competitors they still have to play into the same customer patterns that Amazon created. Speed, convenience, efficiency are all expectations that tax our supply chains and workers. The Atlantic’s Ellen Cushing likens Amazon to climate change in that recognizing its damage on the individual level isn’t enough to lead to reform, and it’s not clear what would be.

This is a good piece but it is a starkly skeptical and narrow one. It’s a view shared by many analysts who don’t frequently engage those who view warehousing and last-mile work as real opportunity. The piece fails to highlight the middle-class sized hole that the eCommerce industry will fill as other decent wage-paying roles evaporate under the pressures of a bifurcating economy. Amazon has its faults and, if you have read my take on Lina Khan’s view of the company, I share many of Cushing’s concerns:

Amazon built its business around the belief that as long as consumer prices were low, antitrust laws wouldn’t apply. Lina Khan went on to say: “Due to a change in legal thinking and practice in the 1970s and 1980s, antitrust law now assesses competition largely with an eye to the short-term interests of consumers, not producers or the health of the market as a whole; antitrust doctrine views low consumer prices, alone, to be evidence of sound competition.”

The health of the retail sector has been on decline for quite some time. Retail business owners, real estate brokers, lenders, and commercial developers didn’t foresee how much of an effect Amazon and eCommerce would have on their adjacent sectors. Where there was originally confusion and apathy, there is now a shared disdain for the Seattle eCommerce giant.

I am also aware that without many of the roles that Walmart, Amazon, Costco, and other mega-retailers have provided over the last decade, our fragile economy would have been less likely to absorb the blow of a pandemic-induced recession. There is good and bad with everything in market economies. Amazon needs reformed, but so does our collective understanding of what’s at stake.

Web Smith on Twitter: “Thought more on $AMZN’s anti-trust concerns. Here’s a (short) history of U.S. monopolies being broken:1. Standard Oil owned oil. 2. U.S. Steel owned steel.3. American Tobacco owned it. 4. AT&T owned communications.Amazon owns just 4% of retail. And 43% of eCommerce. / Twitter”

Thought more on $AMZN’s anti-trust concerns. Here’s a (short) history of U.S. monopolies being broken:1. Standard Oil owned oil. 2. U.S. Steel owned steel.3. American Tobacco owned it. 4. AT&T owned communications.Amazon owns just 4% of retail. And 43% of eCommerce.

Our retail economy is evolving at a pace it has never seen. Without the roles that Cushing decries, millions more would be out of work. Digital commerce and its physical components are at the dawn of its role in domestic and international trade. We will rely on eCommerce infrastructure to support a resurgent middle class (even if the industry is archaic in its current form). It’s about time that we stop holding onto the notion that retail today will ever return to the proportions of retail before. It’s going to be different; it will be more distributed and much of it will be digital-first.

By Web Smith (with Hilary Milnes)

Memo: Linear Commerce and Content Fortresses

Apple’s intentions appear straightforward at first glance. The company wanted to improve the privacy of its end users. This virtuous effort came with a few additional outcomes.

By upgrading its privacy practices, Apple will impair large ad networks that have grown with the help of those end users. This could potentially cripple Facebook’s current model with its new privacy demands. Apple has also opened the door to an unintentional adjustment to its privacy mandate. In doing so, the Mark Zuckerberg-led advertising company (and social network) will adopt a new way to accomplish its most critical objectives: revenue growth and user utility. Facebook will become an eCommerce company instead.

The idea for the law of linear commerce was envisioned as a relationship between brands selling physical products and digital media. The first paragraph of the very first member brief read:

Linear commerce is a core tenet of 2PM’s understanding of an evolving commerce ecosystem. It is the prioritization of audience. Product manufacturers often outsource demand generation. Brands that are ahead of the curve emphasize their audience’s growth as much as they do their physical product’s manufacturing. Likewise, digital media publishers that follow these principles will prioritize organic and loyal audience growth over SEO or PPC-driven commodity clicks. [2PM, 1]

If you’ve built a great product, you’ll need a captive audience as a market for the goods. And if you’ve built a captive audience, you’ll need a great product to sell them. This can now be applied to software-driven audiences and the first-party products that monetize them. Mobile apps have, until now, been able to rely on valuable data derived from a tracking system called “Identifiers for Advertisers” or IFDA. As of the recent release of Apple’s iOS 14.5, this data source has been shut off.

Apple forced the advertising industry’s hand with its decision to implement new privacy policies. At the June 2020 WWDC event, Apple announced a new way that the mobile ecosystem’s IFDA would be accessible for advertisers. In the simplest terms, users would need to explicitly opt-in to allow an advertiser access to the IFDA, a $189 billion international industry. The App Tracking Transparency (ATT) framework is a detriment to advertisers who were dependent on this market for iOS customer acquisition.

Flurry Analytics, a Verizon Media company, tracks over 1 million mobile applications, aggregating data and insights from 2 billion mobile devices monthly. According to this data, worldwide opt-in rates are hovering around 11% for iOS 14.5 users. Shockingly, that number degrades further in the United States. It hovers around 4%.

Content Fortresses and “Other”

First-party data is the substance that fills the distillation column of today, retail media networks process that oil-like first-party data into key assets. In this analogy, crude oil is content. As I recently wrote on the reimagining of content’s value, it is now the core of all first-party data strategies. I explained:

First-party data will define the next wave of advertising and sales. American businesses are now in a race: They’ll build, acquire, or market to the audiences that have it. The independent media industry is quick to discuss outcomes but rarely do we dissect the early steps. As more pursue first-party data, audience development will become one of the most coveted skills on the market.

To acquire targeted customers, first-party audiences are replacing third-party collections. An early indicator of things to come: Over the past six months, two major newsletters were acquired by much larger companies. [2PM, 4]

Apple’s decision accelerated the adoption of linear commerce (media meets commerce) by years. Look no further than Facebook’s strategy to rely less on Apple’s ecosystem. With the iOS 14.5 update, Facebook’s ability to track view through conversions has been impaired.

That’s where these eCommerce products come in. If Facebook can sell more products through its own apps, it’s not so dependent on cross-site user tracking. [2]

While Facebook will emerge as an eCommerce company, they aren’t necessarily in it to compete with Amazon. They are likely to make a relatively small margin on the sale of goods. But the advertising of those products will move brand marketers to continue investing in running ads for their goods across Facebook-owned apps, including Instagram and its native shop.

When you make a sale, we deduct a fee from your payout automatically. We call this a selling fee. The selling fee is 5% per shipment, or a flat fee of $0.40 for shipments of $8.00 or less. You keep the rest of your earnings. [3]

When the intended target is reached, Facebook’s efficacy as an advertiser can be tracked no differently than it was before IFDA was impacted by the 14.5 upgrade. Facebook CFO David Wehner shared his optimism with analysts: “The impact on our own business, we think, will be manageable.” Facebook has long held a valuable audience and a recent commitment to native commerce; Apple’s privacy push has steered the Menlo Park company to prioritize its walled garden, a page taken from Amazon’s growth as a walled-garden advertiser.

Ad sales, which the company breaks out as “other,” rose 77% year-over-year to $6.9 billion, Amazon said in its Q1 earnings call on Thursday.

Amazon now encompasses 10.3% of the digital advertising market (up from 7.9%) in the United States with a projected 13% market share by 2023. Amazon’s walled-garden approach ranks them third in an advertising market that is currently dominated by Google and Facebook (one that Apple wants a piece of). Facebook’s walled garden approach is intended to help them climb to the No. 1 position. They are better positioned than Google in this respect.

The phrase “content fortress” was coined by Eric Benjamin Seufert, an analyst at Mobile Dev Memo. The walled-garden approach is indicative of a larger trend to acquire and monetize first-party data.

In early February, Applovin, the mobile ad network, acquired Adjust, a mobile attribution company. Beyond financial engineering (given that Applovin is approaching an IPO), there’s no strategic justification for this acquisition other than that Applovin is building a self-sufficient advertising ecosystem to connect its first-party properties. [5]

First-party data was well on its way to becoming the key asset for advertisers; Apple’s decision further moved advertisers to prioritize its collection, refinement, and monetization. Apple will eventually eliminate data sharing across vendors, a long-time complaint of many of its users. In doing so, walled gardens will take the place of the open web funded by this data practice. Media companies and commerce companies will become indistinguishable, in many ways. The law of linear commerce is no longer just about brands and their content strategies or publishers and their eCommerce development.

Facebook is an advertiser using commerce to sell more first-party ads. Amazon is an eCommerce retailer using first-party advertising to sell more goods. Apple may help the two companies accomplish both, all while bolstering its own privacy practices, which were a solution to an expiring era of advertising.

By Web Smith | Editor: Hilary Milnes

Member Brief: Pat McAfee and YouTube

When we think of independent creators today, we think of a finished product: polished, well-produced, perfected. Our mind conjures images of rambunctious YouTube videographers, vloggers, TikTok creators, artists, and larger-than-life independent journalists. Pat McAfee is neither of those, at least not in the conventional sense.

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