Amazon.com A History and Evolution of Business

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Amazon.com A History and Evolution of Business

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Title: Amazon.com A History and Evolution of Business


1
Amazon.comA History and Evolution of Business
TechnologySeptember 2008
Rich Prem V.P. of Indirect Taxes/Tax
Reporting Amazon.com richprem_at_amazon.com (206)
266-2708
Emmett OKeefe Director, U.S. Public Policy
Amazon.com eokeefe_at_amazon.com (202) 347-7390
1
2
In The Beginning
3
There was a Man
4
a few books
5
and a concrete floor.
6
  • On July 5, 1994 that man incorporated
  • Cadabra, Inc.
  • Cadaver, Inc.???
  • New Name!
  • Amazon.com, Inc.

7
We have grown fast
  • 1994
  • Incorporated July 5, 1994 - Originally named
    Cadabra, Inc.
  • 1995
  • 11 employees
  • Website launches mid-1995
  • First warehouse opens (7,000 sq feet)
  • 1997
  • IPO completed
  • 1 millionth customer
  • 2008
  • More than 70 million customers

7
8
Our website has changed a lot over time
Then (95)
Now
8
9
Outline
  • Amazon.com an e-commerce technology provider and
    a retailer
  • The online retail market
  • Amazon Services
  • Biggest challenges to sales tax collection
  • Conclusion suggestions

10
Amazon.coms Mission
  • Earths most customer-centric company, where you
    can find, discover, and buy anything online.

11
Overview of Amazons Businesses
  • Amazons Service Business consists of the
    following programs
  • Merchants_at_ and Marketplace
  • WebStore by Amazon
  • Fulfillment by Amazon
  • Amazon Payments
  • Amazon online retail business
  • Amazon is the seller of record for a broad range
    of new products, including electronics,
    computers, kitchen and house wares, books, music,
    DVDs, videos, cameras and photo items, software,
    computer and video games, cell phones, tools and
    hardware and outdoor living items.

12
Amazon Services Leveraging Technology
Investments (www.amazonservices.com)
12
13
Amazon Services Leveraging Technology
Investments (www.amazonservices.com)
13
14
Overview of Amazons Third-Party Seller Programs
  • Amazons Merchants_at_ and Marketplace
  • Allows other businesses and individuals to offer
    their new, used and collectible products for sale
    on Amazons web sites.
  • Their products are fully integrated on Amazons
    web sites and are purchased by customers through
    a single checkout process.
  • Amazon is not the seller of record in these
    transactions.
  • Amazon is not responsible for fulfilling orders
    placed by the customer using the Merchants_at_
    programs.
  • Amazon earns fixed fees, variable fees, per-unit
    activity fees or some combination thereof for the
    services that it provides to the third parties.
  • Sellers who participate in the Merchants_at_ program
    are businesses, generally medium or large retail
    sellers.
  • Sellers who participate in Amazons Marketplace
    program may be business entities or individuals,
    and some make only occasional, one-off sales,
    while others make regular sales out of their own
    inventory.
  • Amazon Marketplace is available on
    www.amazon.com, www.amazon.co.uk, www.amazon.de,
    www.amazon.fr, www.amazon.ca, and
    www.amazon.co.jp.

15
Outline
  • Amazon.com an e-commerce technology provider and
    a retailer
  • The online retail market
  • Amazon Services
  • Biggest challenges to sales tax collection
  • Conclusion suggestions

16
The Fragmented State of the Online Sales
Environment
  • Highly Fragmented, a multitude of products being
    sold and business models used
  • Millions of small sellers
  • Thousands of search engines
  • Hundreds of marketplaces beyond "Amazon,"
    "Craigslist" and eBay
  • Hundreds of online shopping carts and payment
    tools
  • Huge opportunity for small sellers to benefit
    from service providers economy of scale

17
Online Sales Dominated by Multi-channel and Small
Sellers
  • A significant portion of the Top 500 retailers
    are multi-channel.
  • Retail chain nearly 40 percent
  • Consumer brand manufacturers 14 percent
  • Catalogue/call center 15 percent
  • Web only sellers - just over 30 percent
  • The current online market is largely comprised of
    two groups of sellers multi-channel retailers
    collecting sales tax in most states and a large
    group of small retailers with limited nexus.

18

The Long Tail is Longer than You Think The
Surprisingly Large Extent of Online Sales by
Small Volume Sellers. (2008)
  • Millions more small sellers than originally
    thought.
  • Three Ranges of Seller Size
  • Top 500 (Region I)
  • Next 28,128 medium-sized Internet retailers
    (Region II) with revenues between 1 million and
    10 million dollars, and accounting for 29.9
    billion in annual sales.
  • At least 5 million small sellers (a conservative
    number, defined as those too small to measure
    activities at a unique web site) collectively
    accounting for 65.4 billion in 2004 annual sales
    (Region III).

Source, University of Maryland Smith School of
Business
19
Amazon Sees Opportunity in the Tail
  • Amazon Services represents a significant
    investment in technology to help small sellers
    succeed online.
  • Technology diminishes the importance of scale as
    small sellers compete on the basis of things such
    as the scope of products offered and service.

20
Technology Allows Small Sellers to Use Ever-More
Sophisticated Tools
  • Manage your inventory
  • Automatically list and re-list items
  • Automatically send feedback
  • Monthly profit and loss reporting
  • Free Listing Designer
  • Print shipping labels and invoices in bulk
  • Calculate shipping and taxes it just takes a
    few minutes to set up shipping costs, sales tax,
    or value-added tax. (Source www.paypal.com).

21
Shopping Carts One Example of the Robust Market
for E-commerce Services
22
Outline
  • Amazon.com an e-commerce technology provider and
    a retailer
  • The online retail market
  • Amazon Services
  • Biggest challenges to sales tax collection
  • Conclusion suggestions

23
Amazon Services Seller Tools
24
How to Sell on Amazon 1
25
How to Sell on Amazon 2
26
How to Open Your Own WebStore
27
Let Amazon Handle Shipping Fulfillment by Amazon
28
Payment Services Checkout by Amazon 1
29
Payment Services Checkout by Amazon 2
30
Overview of Amazons Tax Services Offering
  • Amazon's tax calculation engine ("tax engine")
    has been implemented to provide the functionality
    necessary to calculate US sales and use taxes for
    all fifty states (plus the District of Columbia)
    and thousands of related local tax jurisdictions.
  • Number of tax enabled merchants selling on
    Amazon.com over 2,500, most are multi-channel
    retailers. Adoption has been slow amongst
    sellers with limited nexus.
  • The tax engine does not support the calculation
    of federal, state, or local product-based excise
    or similar gross receipt taxes (e.g., NJ special
    fur clothing tax). However, it does support the
    calculation of some taxes labeled as "excise" or
    "gross receipt" taxes, but that are commonly
    acknowledged as sales and use taxes (e.g., NM and
    HI).
  • The tax calculation results generated by the tax
    engine are not only dependent on the tax rules
    submitted by the seller and the logic built into
    the third-party rate engine software, but also
    dependent on the accompanying methodology used by
    Amazon to calculate such taxes. For instance, the
    third-party software does not decide how
    order-level promotions are allocated to the
    individual items in an order Amazon's
    methodology does.

31
Survey of Checkout Options and Features
Amazon Merchant Programs Amazon Payments Checkout by Amazon eBay ProStores Google Checkout GoDaddy Quick Shopping Cart IBM Websphere Yahoo Stores X-Cart
Does platform have shopping cart? Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Does platform allow for tax collection? Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Does platform allow for customization of tax rates? Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes
Does platform allow for taxation of shipping and handling? Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes
Does platform allow for different products to be taxed differently? Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes No Yes
Does platform allow for customer-based tax exemptions? No1 No No Yes No awaiting email response No Yes
Does platform support use of promotional discounts? Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes awaiting email response Yes Yes
How are taxes calculated for promotional discounts? Net Net Net Net Net awaiting email response Net Net
Does platform accommodate for tax issues related to returns? Depends2 No No No No awaiting email response No No
Footnotes
1 - Customers must request tax refund post-purchase. Tax audit records are not adjusted for refunds. 1 - Customers must request tax refund post-purchase. Tax audit records are not adjusted for refunds. 1 - Customers must request tax refund post-purchase. Tax audit records are not adjusted for refunds. 1 - Customers must request tax refund post-purchase. Tax audit records are not adjusted for refunds. 1 - Customers must request tax refund post-purchase. Tax audit records are not adjusted for refunds. 1 - Customers must request tax refund post-purchase. Tax audit records are not adjusted for refunds. 1 - Customers must request tax refund post-purchase. Tax audit records are not adjusted for refunds. 1 - Customers must request tax refund post-purchase. Tax audit records are not adjusted for refunds.
2 - Taxes related to returns of shipments fulfilled by the seller must be calculated by the seller tax records are not adjusted. Taxes related to returns of shipments fulfilled by Amazon are calculated by the platform tax records are adjusted. 2 - Taxes related to returns of shipments fulfilled by the seller must be calculated by the seller tax records are not adjusted. Taxes related to returns of shipments fulfilled by Amazon are calculated by the platform tax records are adjusted. 2 - Taxes related to returns of shipments fulfilled by the seller must be calculated by the seller tax records are not adjusted. Taxes related to returns of shipments fulfilled by Amazon are calculated by the platform tax records are adjusted. 2 - Taxes related to returns of shipments fulfilled by the seller must be calculated by the seller tax records are not adjusted. Taxes related to returns of shipments fulfilled by Amazon are calculated by the platform tax records are adjusted. 2 - Taxes related to returns of shipments fulfilled by the seller must be calculated by the seller tax records are not adjusted. Taxes related to returns of shipments fulfilled by Amazon are calculated by the platform tax records are adjusted. 2 - Taxes related to returns of shipments fulfilled by the seller must be calculated by the seller tax records are not adjusted. Taxes related to returns of shipments fulfilled by Amazon are calculated by the platform tax records are adjusted. 2 - Taxes related to returns of shipments fulfilled by the seller must be calculated by the seller tax records are not adjusted. Taxes related to returns of shipments fulfilled by Amazon are calculated by the platform tax records are adjusted. 2 - Taxes related to returns of shipments fulfilled by the seller must be calculated by the seller tax records are not adjusted. Taxes related to returns of shipments fulfilled by Amazon are calculated by the platform tax records are adjusted.
32
Outline
  • Amazon.com an e-commerce technology provider and
    a retailer
  • The online retail market
  • Amazon Services
  • Biggest challenges to sales tax collection
  • Conclusion suggestions

33
Based on Our Experience Offering Tax Services
  • The cost and complexity is in the exceptions
  • Tax Exempt Sales and Sales Tax Holidays
  • Customer Returns Adjustments and Restocking
    Fees
  • Shipping and Handling Fees
  • Product Taxability Coding
  • (See appendix for more detail)

34
The Joint Cost of Collection Study
35
Outline
  • Amazon.com an e-commerce technology provider and
    a retailer
  • The online retail market
  • Amazon Services
  • Biggest challenges to sales tax collection
  • Conclusion suggestions

36
Conclusion
  • There is growth in the long tail of small
    sellers.
  • Technological and market forces will compete to
    help small sellers if sales tax collection is
    required.
  • The Governing Board should encourage that process
    with additional simplifications to streamline
    collection.

37
Amazons Suggestions
  • Further streamline transactions involving
    exceptions which represent nearly 60 percent of
    collection cost for small sellers.
  • - Consider a blended rate for small sellers
  • Provide additional vendor comp for small sellers
  • The Gov. Board should take actions to encourage
    the private market to develop technologies and
    tools to help small sellers. Setting a small
    seller exemption too high will only largely
    eliminate any incentive for developers of these
    services.
  • Actions the Gov. Board should take
  • - Centralize and standardize the states rates
    and taxability databases.
  • - Follow the model of member states and
    establish an IT office to liaison with
    developers and small sellers and encourage the
    development of tools for small sellers.
  • - Establish standards for private certification
    of automated tax collection software.

38
Amazons Estimate of Lost Revenue Relative to
Size of Business Exempted
State and Local Revenue Loss (assuming 5MM sellers)
5,000,000 gt51
1,000,000 gt42
100,000 gt28
10,000 gt15
39
2008 Annual Meeting of Stockholders
40
Questions?
?
41
Appendix
42
Sales Tax Holidays
No Holiday (8/7/XX)
Holiday (8/14 - 8/17/XX)
No Holiday (8/18/XX)
1200?
1200?
Not Ordered But Shipped
Ordered But Not Shipped
Order (quote) 8/7/XX Backpack 50.00 Tax
4.00 Total 54.00
Shipment (sale) 8/16/XX Backpack 50.00 Tax
0.00 Total 50.00 WINNER!!!
Order (quote) 8/16/XX Backpack 50.00 Tax
0.00 Total 50.00
Shipment (sale) 8/21/XX Backpack 50.00 Tax
4.00 Total 54.00 LOSER
  • Tax Calculation requires date -- date is used by
    the external engine to determine applicable rates
    and rules.
  • Remote sellers generally charge tax at shipment
    using shipment date rules.
  • Without customization, items may be ordered
    during a tax holiday and quoted no tax, only to
    have the item shipped outside the holiday and
    charged tax.

43
Returns and Restocking
  • States need to take uniform approach on the
    treatment of returns.
  • Retention of shipping handling charges and
    imposition of restocking fees
  • California shipping and handling charges
  • Time limits
  • Connecticut (90 days of purchase)

44
Shipping Handling Fees
  • States need to take uniform approach to the
    taxation of shipping handling charges.
  • Too many variations
  • Profit elements (winners versus losers)
  • Separately stated
  • Allocation methodologies (mixed taxability)
  • Type of carrier
  • Title passage
  • Caps and thresholds
  • Clothing (state differences, and general v. tax
    holidays)
  • Explainable and understandable to customers
  • Mail order catalog order form test
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