Post by bullishbear32 on Sept 6, 2012 15:50:18 GMT -5
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos may model his presentation skills after the late Steve Jobs, but his company's business model looks more like the Bizarro version of Apple.
Take today's announcement of several new Kindle Fire tablets, as well as a discounted price on the original. Amazon is hardly making a large profit on these competitively priced products, something Bezos is quick to own up to.
"We want to make money when people use our devices, not when they buy our devices," he said during an event in Santa Monica, Calif., today.
The three versions of the Kindle Fire HD represent an expansion of the company's strategy with the original Kindle Fire. Amazon worries about getting the tablets into the hands of its consumers first, and then focuses on making money off of the services and products it can deliver to them later. While Bezos denies this is the razor-and-razor-blade model, it's actually an apt analogy.
With the high-definition version of the Kindle Fire coming out, Amazon is hoping the more beautifully rendered online store will only spur further interest in Amazon Prime, e-books, or other goods and services. If the first Kindle Fire was a mobile storefront in the hands of consumers, the Kindle Fire HD tablets represent an even better looking one.
"Amazon's services are the core of its devices, and the devices enhance Amazon's service: a virtuous cycle where Amazon gains an increasing share of consumers' wallets," said Forrester Research analyst Rotman Epps, adding that subscription services are key to the company's future success.
Amazon's model, of course, is antithetical to Apple's approach of generating its profit of the hardware. Everything Apple does, from the iTunes music store to its App Store and iCloud service, drives sales of the phones, tablets and computers that are its primary money-makers. Considering the industry-leading margins on those products, it's a no-brainer.
But in the battle for the consumers' credit card, Amazon has the edge. A recent survey conducted by Forrester found that nearly a third of respondents had a credit card on file with Amazon, compared to 18 percent with Apple and 5 percent with Google.
The models are poised to clash if Apple moves into the smaller tablet arena with a lower-priced iPad Mini.
Amazon has prepared itself as well as it could. The company unveiled three versions of the Kindle Fire HD, a 7-inch version for $199, a larger 8.9-inch version for $299, and a 4G LTE-enabled version for $499.
The Kindle Fire HD was clearly the star of Amazon's event, which also saw the unveiling of a new Kindle Paperwhite e-reader that works in the dark, a discounted non-touch Kindle, and an update to the original Kindle Fire at a lower $159 price tag.
"We want to have the best tablet at any price," Bezos said.
Amazon already fired a shot across Apple's bow with its $499 Kindle Fire, which Bezos compares directly to the iPad. He argued that the total cost of the Kindle Fire plus its $50 annual data plan -- $549 -- put it well iahead of the $959 that it would cost for an iPad and LTE data plan for the first year.
Take today's announcement of several new Kindle Fire tablets, as well as a discounted price on the original. Amazon is hardly making a large profit on these competitively priced products, something Bezos is quick to own up to.
"We want to make money when people use our devices, not when they buy our devices," he said during an event in Santa Monica, Calif., today.
The three versions of the Kindle Fire HD represent an expansion of the company's strategy with the original Kindle Fire. Amazon worries about getting the tablets into the hands of its consumers first, and then focuses on making money off of the services and products it can deliver to them later. While Bezos denies this is the razor-and-razor-blade model, it's actually an apt analogy.
With the high-definition version of the Kindle Fire coming out, Amazon is hoping the more beautifully rendered online store will only spur further interest in Amazon Prime, e-books, or other goods and services. If the first Kindle Fire was a mobile storefront in the hands of consumers, the Kindle Fire HD tablets represent an even better looking one.
"Amazon's services are the core of its devices, and the devices enhance Amazon's service: a virtuous cycle where Amazon gains an increasing share of consumers' wallets," said Forrester Research analyst Rotman Epps, adding that subscription services are key to the company's future success.
Amazon's model, of course, is antithetical to Apple's approach of generating its profit of the hardware. Everything Apple does, from the iTunes music store to its App Store and iCloud service, drives sales of the phones, tablets and computers that are its primary money-makers. Considering the industry-leading margins on those products, it's a no-brainer.
But in the battle for the consumers' credit card, Amazon has the edge. A recent survey conducted by Forrester found that nearly a third of respondents had a credit card on file with Amazon, compared to 18 percent with Apple and 5 percent with Google.
The models are poised to clash if Apple moves into the smaller tablet arena with a lower-priced iPad Mini.
Amazon has prepared itself as well as it could. The company unveiled three versions of the Kindle Fire HD, a 7-inch version for $199, a larger 8.9-inch version for $299, and a 4G LTE-enabled version for $499.
The Kindle Fire HD was clearly the star of Amazon's event, which also saw the unveiling of a new Kindle Paperwhite e-reader that works in the dark, a discounted non-touch Kindle, and an update to the original Kindle Fire at a lower $159 price tag.
"We want to have the best tablet at any price," Bezos said.
Amazon already fired a shot across Apple's bow with its $499 Kindle Fire, which Bezos compares directly to the iPad. He argued that the total cost of the Kindle Fire plus its $50 annual data plan -- $549 -- put it well iahead of the $959 that it would cost for an iPad and LTE data plan for the first year.