4 December 2024

The Legacy That Jeff Bezos Is Leaving Behind At Amazon

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Twenty seven years after starting Amazon out of his garage and turning it into one of the world’s most valuable companies, founder Jeff Bezos said on Tuesday he is stepping down as CEO. Bezos has been a recurring character in the pages for Forbes since the days when he was a scrappy entrepreneur in the crosshairs of Barnes & Noble to a net worth of $196 billion.

"A couple of years ago, people were looking at Barnes & Noble's plans to go on-line and calling us Amazon.toast —and I thought they had a pretty good argument!" Bezos joked to Forbes in 1999. "But what they didn't understand is how the Internet shifts power to the customer.”

Here’s a retrospective, in photos, of his path to becoming the world’s richest person. Below is a look back at the pivotal moments from his tenure, which set the course for the company and forever reshaped the retail industry:

Books were the beginning, but certainly not the end 

Jeff Bezos took on the big bookstore chains like Borders and Barnes & Noble when he started selling books online in 1994. By the time the company went public three years later, it carried more than 2.5 million titles and generated annual sales of $148 million. Its inventory turned over 42 times that year, compared to only 2.1 times for Barnes & Noble. “Amazon.com cannot exist in the physical world," Bezos told Forbes in 1996, the first year that the company appeared in the publication. "No metropolitan area could support a million-title bookstore."

Plus, Bezos didn’t have any intention at stopping there. By 1998, Amazon had begun expanding its offering to include all sorts of things, like CDs, DVDs, clothing, toys and office products. Bezos also began to hint at his outsized ambitions, dropping the company’s tagline as the “Earth’s Biggest Bookstore” and beginning to describe Amazon as an online retailer that would offer “Earth’s Biggest Selection.”

Welcoming third-party sellers 

In 1999, Amazon invited third-party sellers to begin listing merchandise on the marketplace and compete directly with the products that Amazon sold itself. These sellers (mostly small and medium-sized businesses) now form the backbone of the e-commerce giant, generating roughly 60% of its product sales today, double the percentage they represented a decade ago.

Making two-day shipping the new normal 

In 2005, Bezos introduced a new loyalty program called Amazon Prime with an enticing perk: For $79 a year, customers could receive free, two-day shipping on their orders. That would quickly shape customer expectations for online shopping and send the rest of the industry scrambling to compete. Amazon has remained a step ahead, thanks to over 100 fulfillment centers where it packages and sends out items. It has also built out its own transportation fleet that rivals the post office, with ShipMatrix recently estimating that it is delivering two thirds of its own packages. In 2019, it said it would invest further to bring one-day shipping to its Prime members.

Creating a cash cow to fund the retail business 

In 2006, Amazon began offering cloud computing services to other businesses. It had built the technology to run its own website and figured perhaps it could make a buck hawking it to others. Called Amazon Web Services, it quickly attracted customers from NASA to Netflix. It has served as a cash cow for the company, generating $35 billion in sales in 2019 and helping offset losses from the retail business.

“He's taken two very major industries, and simultaneously, and sort of under the nose of competitors, he's become in effect the leader and is redefining them and succeeding at really big businesses,” said Warren Buffett of Bezos’ success in both the retail and cloud competing sectors in a 2018 interview with Forbes.

Getting into physical stores 

Amazon made its first big foray into brick-and-mortar retail in 2017, when it announced it was acquiring Whole Foods for $13.4 billion. It has since lowered the prices on hundreds of products, plus rolled out special perks to Prime members, like free grocery delivery from all of its stores.

Pioneering automated checkout 

Amazon opened its first Amazon Go store to the public in 2018, offering shoppers the ability to pick up items and leave without waiting in the checkout line. Its “Just Walk Out” technology, which leverages a combination of cameras and artificial intelligence to automatically track what items shoppers put in their carts, has since been rolled out to more than two dozen locations. It is also available to other retailers; Hudson and OTG are experimenting with the technology at a handful of grab-and-go stores in the airport.

Becoming the richest person on the planet along the way 

Bezos first appeared on the Forbes 400 list in 1998 after taking his company public with a net worth of $1.6 billion, making him the 102nd richest person in the nation and earning him his first spot on Forbes’ cover. Nearly two decades later, in 2017, he overtook Bill Gates for the first time as the richest person in the world. His net worth also surpassed $100 billion that year. He’s now the richest person on the planet with a net worth of $196 billion, thanks to an 11% stake and a stock that has continued to defy gravity. (And this is after giving ex-wife MacKenzie a quarter of his shares in the divorce.) In August 2020, he became the first person ever to be worth over $200 billion.

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