10 FACTS ABOUT AMAZON
Hashim Ali
Helping Amazon Sellers To Grow Their Brands || Product Research Expert || Competitor Analysis Specialist
1. Amazon Held Its Meetings at Barnes and Noble
In the early stages of Amazon, Jeff Bezos, his then-wife, MacKenzie Bezos, and?Amazon's first employee, Shel Kaphan, held their meetings inside their local Barnes and Noble. Before founder?Jeff Bezos landed on "Amazon" as the name of the?e-commerce?giant, he had other names he kicked around, such as "Cadabra" (as in "Abracadabra") and "Relentless."?
However, his lawyer convinced him that "Cadabra" did not sound magical at all. Rather, "Cadabra" sounded too similar to "cadaver." Although "Relentless" did not make the cut to be the name of the company, Jeff Bezos liked the name enough to buy the domain name, and now the website; relentless.com redirects to the Amazon.com homepage.
2. Amazon Launched as an Auction Site
In Amazon's early stages as a public company, it launched an auction site to compete with its competitors in the e-commerce space.
?The day Amazon launched the auction site in 1999, its shares soared over 8%.
3. It Was Also an Early Competitor of Yahoo! and Google
Before powerhouse search engine company Google (GOOG) had its "Street View" on its map application, Amazon launched a search engine in 2004, A9.com, which started a project called Block View.
Block View was a visual Yellow Pages that allowed its users to see the street view of addresses and directions to their destinations.
4. Amazon Users Can Donate to Charities When they Buy
AmazonSmile allows its users to support charities of their choice when they shop at smile.amazon.com. The AmazonSmile Foundation donates 0.5% of the purchase price of products eligible for AmazonSmile purchases.
5. Amazon Piloted an Augmented Reality App
Amazon Flow was an augmented reality phone app that could identify millions of products from tissue boxes to book covers.?With Amazon Flow, users didn't have?to memorize their shopping lists as the app allowed them to take pictures on their phones. When integrated with Amazon's application, users could?find products on Amazon and purchase them?without the need to type or scan the bar code.
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6. Amazon Has Convenience Stores With No Checkout
Amazon Go, a high-tech supermarket, allows shoppers to buy groceries without ever having to wait?in line for a cashier. Amazon Go stores are equipped?with hundreds of cameras that?utilize a similar?type of technology that?self-driving cars use. This technology?keeps a virtual?shopping cart that?allows?customers to just walk out when they are done shopping. A bill is automatically sent to their Amazon account.
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7. It Sold Its First Book in 1995
The first book ever sold on Amazon was?Fluid Concepts and?Creative Analogies?by Douglas Hofstadter, according to a Quora question answered by former Amazon employee Ian McAllister. The book was purchased in 1995 and it's believed that John Wainwright was the customer, claiming to have purchased the book on April 3rd, 1995.
8. The Company Is Working on Drone Delivery
Amazon is developing a?futuristic delivery system, Prime Air, which would let Amazon deliver packages to customers within 30 minutes using small drones. The service is being developed for the U.S. and other countries.
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9. A Bell Used to Ring
When Amazon first started, they?rang?a bell every time a customer?made a purchase. “We had, at the time, a little bell that would ring every time a book was ordered, so we’d all be working and the bell would ring, and it would go?Ding!?and we’d go, ‘Yay! We sold a book!’” says former Amazon employee Jonathan Kochmer.
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10. Over One and a Quarter Million Employees
Amazon employed 1.271 million people as of the end of 2020 across the globe, more than Google, Facebook (now Meta), and Alibaba combined. It managed to grow employee count by 51% year-over-year at the end of the second quarter.