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The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon
Audible Audiobook
– Unabridged
Audie Award Finalist, Business/Educational, 2014
The definitive story of Amazon.com, one of the most successful companies in the world, and of its driven, brilliant founder, Jeff Bezos.
Amazon.com started off delivering books through the mail. But its visionary founder, Jeff Bezos, wasn't content with being a bookseller. He wanted Amazon to become the everything store, offering limitless selection and seductive convenience at disruptively low prices. To do so, he developed a corporate culture of relentless ambition and secrecy that's never been cracked. Until now.
Brad Stone enjoyed unprecedented access to current and former Amazon employees and Bezos family members, giving listeners the first in-depth, fly-on-the-wall account of life at Amazon. Compared to tech's other elite innovators - Jobs, Gates, Zuckerberg - Bezos is a private man. But he stands out for his restless pursuit of new markets, leading Amazon into risky new ventures like the Kindle and cloud computing, and transforming retail in the same way Henry Ford revolutionized manufacturing.
The Everything Store will be the revealing, definitive biography of the company that placed one of the first and largest bets on the Internet and forever changed the way we shop and read.
- Listening Length13 hours
- Audible release dateOctober 15, 2013
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB00FJFJOLC
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
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Product details
| Listening Length | 13 hours |
|---|---|
| Author | Brad Stone |
| Narrator | Pete Larkin |
| Whispersync for Voice | Ready |
| Audible.com Release Date | October 15, 2013 |
| Publisher | Hachette Audio |
| Program Type | Audiobook |
| Version | Unabridged |
| Language | English |
| ASIN | B00FJFJOLC |
| Best Sellers Rank | #11,930 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals) #16 in E-Commerce (Audible Books & Originals) #33 in Web Marketing (Books) #37 in Organizational Behavior (Audible Books & Originals) |
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the story interesting and well-written. They also appreciate the excellent insight into a certain type of successful person and user-friendly website. Customers describe the narrative as good and gives a good overview of the story. They are impressed with the unwavering passion and confidence each leader expresses for their company. They find the long-term vision of Amazon inspiring and driven. Customers also describe the author as superb and an exceptional man. Opinions are mixed on the entertainment value, with some finding it engaging and funny in places, while others say it's not very entertaining.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book very interesting, well-written, and incisive. They say it's the best business book of the year, and mention it touches on topics deeply enough. Readers also say it provides new knowledge on startups, corporations, and good.
""The Everything Store" was such an engaging and fascinating read, I inhaled it in less than 36 hours...." Read more
"...In closing, “The Everything Store” is an eye-opening account into an iconic and innovative corporation, which Stone calls “…relentlessly innovative..." Read more
"...It's darn interesting. The story is about Bezos the person and Amazon the business...." Read more
"...The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon is a book that reads well, and provides new knowledge on business strategy in every chapter...." Read more
Customers find the book an excellent insight into a certain type of successful person. They say it illuminates the contexts in which these events happened. Readers also say it's a well-written business biography that includes many details about Amazon's growth. They find it inspiring, and say the research seems strong.
"...Through an excellent weave of facts, narrative anecdotes and storytelling, you get a clear picture of how Amazon surged out of the gate in the late..." Read more
"...Frugality breeds resourcefulness, self-sufficiency and invention. There are no extra points for headcount, budget pie or fixed expense.”..." Read more
"...the Age of Amazon is a book that reads well, and provides new knowledge on business strategy in every chapter. A wonderfully entertaining read." Read more
"...Brad Stone provides source material for professors, enough to fill a semester-long course...." Read more
Customers find the writing style very well written, allowing them to understand the industry as a whole. They also say the book is a quick read and fluid.
"...Here is a guy who started out smart, talented and exceptionally bold, and had the chutzpah to act on a wildly ambitious vision and see it through..." Read more
"The Everything Store is a well written book by Brad Stone that describes the growth of Amazon through its trials and tribulations under the..." Read more
"...The author writes in an accessible, fast-paced style...." Read more
"...This book had a lot to cover. The style is readable and anecdotal, as it should be for the general reader...." Read more
Customers find the narrative interesting, giving a good overview of the story of Amazon. They also say the book carefully explains the history of Amazon, with Bezos as the main character. Customers also say it's the best corporate biography they've read, and that the author spends just enough time explaining situations to provide context. They say the journey is astounding and the book provides high quality, incomparable depth, and superior pricing.
"...“The Everything Store” is a good biography of a company; but only a lukewarm biography of Jeff Bezos the man, even though Amazon is, in many ways,..." Read more
"...I really like this book. Best corporate biography I ever have read. (Okay it beats Lee Iacocca's autobiography that I read in 1986.)..." Read more
"...found them all intriguing, however this book is such a detailed version of the history of Amazon that I'd suggest you read it first...." Read more
"...This is not only great reporting, but great storytelling...." Read more
Customers find the plot inspiring, determined, and taut. They also appreciate the unwavering passion, commitment, and commitment to vision, leadership, and perseverance. Readers also mention that the book keeps them hooked and is fearless.
"...In actuality, Jeff's laugh is spontaneous, sincere, warm and endearing. It diffuses stressful situations...." Read more
"...•Jeff's lack of fear of failure when experimenting. He's thinking light years ahead & that shows in all the rabbit holes he'll go into...." Read more
"...It illustrates the drive and passion that an entrepreneurs must have in order to succeed, with a never die attitude and the vision to look long-term..." Read more
"...This makes this story riveting and Brad Stone makes sure you feel like you were there when every challenging decision was faced...." Read more
Customers find the author smart and creative, and say the book is superb on an exceptional man and an exceptional business. They also say the author is a professional reporter and a fearless leader.
"...Here is a guy who started out smart, talented and exceptionally bold, and had the chutzpah to act on a wildly ambitious vision and see it through..." Read more
"...Interesting characters fill the book, such as the Riggio Brothers (Barnes & Noble founders), who, all by themselves, cover just about every..." Read more
"...The first is that he is an amazing man with unbelievable energy and drive - he never seems to feel that enough is enough - Amazon must expand even..." Read more
"...In the grand scheme of things, it's an impressive and insightful work." Read more
Customers find the pacing of the book fast and fluid. They also say the presentation is thorough and the book reads easy.
"...business reporter Brad Stone delivers an incisive, balanced, and fast-paced peak inside the secretive and amazingly innovative $150 billion tech..." Read more
"...The author writes in an accessible, fast-paced style...." Read more
"...The author made the book easy to read, and at a pace that explained in great detail the key players and events in Amazon and Bezos’ history,..." Read more
"...All in all, I enjoyed the book thoroughly. The pacing is quick, but not thin, and the author spends just enough time explaining situations to..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the entertainment value of the book. Some find the writing engaging, full of the ups and downs of entrepreneurs, and inspiring. They also find the book funny in places and frustrating. However, some customers feel the book is not very entertaining but interesting.
""The Everything Store" was such an engaging and fascinating read, I inhaled it in less than 36 hours...." Read more
"...Not terribly interesting, particularly in the quantity that was provided." Read more
"...Nothing could be farther from the truth. In actuality, Jeff's laugh is spontaneous, sincere, warm and endearing. It diffuses stressful situations...." Read more
"...a long-term thinker, not one to give up on an initiative easily, and fun...." Read more
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As I write this review, Amazon just announced a partnership with the US Postal Service to start delivering on Sundays for Prime members in key cities. This backs up the best description I have heard of Amazon and its founder -- which, amusingly, comes from the blog of ex-Amazon employee Eugene Wei, someone who was not interviewed in this book.
"Amazon has boundless ambition," Wei writes. "It wants to eat global retail... there are very few people in technology and business who are what I'd call apex predators. Jeff [Bezos] is one of them, the most patient and intelligent one I've met in my life. An apex predator doesn't wake up one day and decide it is done hunting."
Stock valuation aside -- you either believe or you don't, and as of this writing Bezos is clearly having a messianic moment -- "The Everything Store" is an excellent chronicle of Amazon's rise.
In the book -- and I don't mean this as a criticism -- Bezos comes off as the lead character in an Ayn Rand novel. A real world John Galt or Hank Rearden, with an e-commerce twist. The immigrant step-father who taught him the value of hard work... the maternal grandfather who instilled a deep do-it-yourself attitude... the flashes of extraordinary competitiveness from an early age... the burning desire to conquer space... it all coalesces into a sense of destiny (though, of course, a good portion of this could be narrative hindsight).
Steve Jobs was the last great business figure, the hero entrepreneur of our time. I think that, reputationally, Bezos will ultimately surpass Jobs -- leave him in the dust, really -- because while, what Bezos is doing is unsexy, the fundamental nature of "hard problems" that Amazon approaches and solves (on its way to eating global retail) is adding to the free market knowledge base at a tremendous evolutionary rate.
One of the most intriguing and powerful things about Amazon, in my opinion, is the sheer logistical prowess of what they do behind the scenes. The coordination of supply chains, manpower, algorithmic decision making, and countless other unseen problems they have had to solve on the way to delivering "everything" in a two-day shipping window is off-the-charts impressive.
To a certain degree Apple accomplished a similar behind-the-scenes feat, in that Apple's masterful ability to implement and coordinate global supply chains made it the most profitable company in the world for a time. But Apple's breathtaking profit margins always had a slightly ephemeral feel to them. You knew that someone (like Samsung or Google's Android) would eventually come along and take a bite of the Apple so to speak... whereas with Bezos' strategy, staking out the hard, grinding, low-nutrient territory of thin margins, the next competitor is going to have to get bloody in the toughest octagon of all (logistics and scale). As Bezos likes to say, "Your margin is my opportunity," which should scare the hell out of any large retailer, perhaps save Wal-Mart (and maybe even Wal-Mart too).
Those who doubt Amazon's business model (myself among them in the past) have been prone to use the "switch flip" criticism, e.g. bullish investors assume Amazon will one day be able to "flip a switch" and become profitable. But I agree with Eugene Wei that this is an overly simplistic characterization of a more subtle process. In reality, Amazon is less like a company with one switch to flip and more like one with tens of thousands of individual switches, each of which can be incrementally adjusted to swing from loss to profit when the time is right. This seems far less fantastical when you picture thousands upon thousands of instances where, say, a 2% margin mark-up creates profit where previously there was break-even, and/or a simple slowdown in the prodigious rate of ongoing capital expenditure spending lets more cash flow spill over into the profit column.
As for the prodigious capital expenditures, Amazon's most recent quarterly revenue figure, as of this writing, was roughly $17 billion. Bezos no doubt foresees the day when that quarterly number will hit $100 billion. On the way there, it only makes sense for him to exploit every inch of leeway he can get from Wall Street -- in terms of taking all the money and opportunity he can for long-term investment -- with the goal of scaling up the infrastructure to serve and support an order-of-magnitude larger sales base. If investors get loopy with their valuation assessments in the meantime, so be it. The vision is the thing for Bezos... just as it has always been.
But getting back to "The Everything Store," my favorite thing about this book was the brutally honest nature of the flaws and the messiness of Amazon's evolution (and the evolution of Bezos himself) in the first 5-10 years or so of the company's existence.
Through an excellent weave of facts, narrative anecdotes and storytelling, you get a clear picture of how Amazon surged out of the gate in the late 1990s, and then almost choked to death on hundreds of millions of dollars worth of bad acquisitions it made with "bubble money." Many dumb mistakes were made, some deservedly fatal... but Amazon survived them all, and managed to learn from them too.
The evolution of Bezos as a CEO is fully apparent as well. While those who ponder Bezos today are likely to assume he stepped on the world's stage as a wise genius fully formed, in actuality he picked up many of his strong core beliefs along the course of Amazon's existence, learning through intense study of rivals and mentors from afar, like D.E. Shaw (early on) and Sam Walton and Jim Sinegal of Costco.
The book is really a gift for entrepeneurs and business builders of the new generation -- like myself, ahem cough cough -- in the manner it lays bare the luck, the guts, and the serious mistakes that are inevitably made on the way to forming a world-class enterprise.
The other thing that really came through is the sheer ruthlessness of Bezos. (No doubt this is what got Mackenzie Bezos riled up -- what spouse wants to see their husband portrayed as a tyrant?) But as the book points out, there is a reason why so many of the great builders in tech -- Gates, Ellison, Jobs and so on -- all had that same ruthless character to them. Building and scaling a world-dominating business is hard. As in really, really hard. When you are trying do something on that kind of scale, with that level of competitiveness, you are not just fighting against cut-throat competitors. You are also fighting against entropy and mediocrity, that pull of ordinary results, ordinary outcome (as opposed to extraordinary) that holds back every ambitious endeavor in the same manner the NASA shuttle is held back by gravity. It takes something special to get off the launching pad, let alone into orbit.
The fact that Bezos can be extremely ruthless, even cold-blooded, in pursuit of his vision, will not gain extra points with much of his audience. (No doubt a reason Amazon itself wants to tone that side down.) But investors should be glad for this trait, and it's a trait that benefits capitalism on the whole too. When a strong player legitimately uses skill and efficiency to best a weaker player in the marketplace, costs are lowered as such that customers benefit, and other businesses can learn from the strong player's pioneering example.
The final chapters of the book showed Amazon at its most ruthless by far. I had no idea the level of wargame strategy that had occurred in the purchase of Zappos. The Quidsi (diapers.com) acquisition was simultaneously even more brilliant and brutal. You do not, not, not want to be in head-to-head competition with Amazon. It is here where I stop and whisper a small prayer of thanks to the free market gods that my own career path does not involve selling commodity-type retail products.
I had reason to examine my own motives as to why I enjoyed this book so much. I am a trader, not a retailer. While I have plans to lead and scale a business to large (perhaps even very large) size, it has nothing to do with traditional retail really. So why was this book so fascinating? Perhaps for the sheer cultural value of what Bezos represents and what he has accomplished. Here is a guy who started out smart, talented and exceptionally bold, and had the chutzpah to act on a wildly ambitious vision and see it through every step of the way. Learning and stumbling as he went, sometimes screwing up royally, but always pulling in the errors and coming back from the brink... having laid the architecture more than a dozen years ago to sustain a vision ten times bigger (or maybe even 100 times).
The broader inspirational lesson from the Amazon story, I think, is the reaffirmation of what's possible when motivated dreamers decide to work harder, work smarter, and break traditional molds all at the same time. You really can execute on a compelling vision. You really can get a team together and, with the help of that team, accomplish a hundred or a thousand times more than you ever could running solo. You really can practice patience and boldness -- no coincidence "bold" is one of Bezos' favorite words -- and in so doing apply an Art-of-War like strategic nous to flanking and beating your rivals. Big and exciting things can be done in this world.
As a Silicon Valley technology executive who has long admired what Jeff Bezos has done up in Seattle, this book delivered two critical insights I found especially noteworthy.
First, nothing can compensate for a founder/CEO of genius with a commanding ownership share in the enterprise. The more I live and the more learn, the more I realize that individuals really, really matter, particularly when they are in a position to make sweeping decisions. Like Steve Jobs at Apple or Larry Ellison at Oracle or Henry Ford, truly amazing things happen only when lightning strikes: when visionary entrepreneurs are also strong enough to hold on to their business creations and guide them forward, often pushing the kind of bold gambles and innovative risks that classically trained CEOs beholden to Wall Street analysts simply would never ponder.
Nowhere is this more evident than with Amazon’s improbable rise from the ashes of the Dotcom bubble in the 2000s. The early story of Amazon’s rise in the mid-90s is familiar and, frankly, not terribly interesting in my opinion. A few daring and naïve young men and women in a garage pursuing a crazy dream that nobody thinks can work. It’s been told a thousand times. What makes Amazon so impressive is how the company survived and then thrived in the later years when many in the industry had written the company off for dead or irrelevancy. If Amazon had had a founder like eBay’s Pierre Omyidar, who quickly hired a seasoned executive like Meg Whitman to take over leadership of his highflying startup, I’m quite certain that the Amazon we know today would not exist. In fact, I’m nearly certain it would be gone, gobbled up by Walmart or some other retailer. Amazon Web Services, Kindle, Prime; each of these strategic initiatives were risky multi-billion dollar bets that would takes years to pay off, and yet Bezos bet big on each despite much hand-wringing from his board of directors and top lieutenants. As Stone writes, “Amazon had grown from a beleaguered dot-com survivor battered by the vicissitudes in the stock market into a diversified company whose products and principles had an impact on local communities, national economies, and the marketplace of ideas.” In short, Amazon is the Amazon we know today only because of Jeff Bezos. He has a vision, an irrepressible will, and an iron grip on strategic decision making.
The second key insight has to do with that Bezosian vision, which Stone demonstrates is a relatively simple philosophy. “We don’t have a single big advantage,” Bezos has said, “so we have to weave a rope of many small advantages.” What is so remarkable is how tenaciously Bezos adheres to those principles and makes the most out of those small advantages, even when conventional business school wisdom suggests they are being foolish or reckless. At the core of the philosophy is long-term, customer centric thinking. Here’s how Bezos describes it: “We are genuinely customer-centric, we are genuinely long-term oriented and we genuinely like to invent. Most companies are not those things. They are focused on the competitor, rather than the customer. They want to work on things that will pay dividends in two or three years, and if they don’t work in two or three years they will move on to something else. And they prefer to be close-followers rather than inventors, because it’s safer. So if you want to capture the truth about Amazon, that is why we are different.” Again, only a company with a visionary founder with general management acumen and a commanding ownership stake in the enterprise can ensure that a company sticks to those kinds of principles in the face of mounting losses and withering criticism from Wall Street analysts.
Closely associated to this “long-term-customer-first” mentality is Amazon’s relentless focus on lowering prices. Stone suggests that a 2001 meeting between Bezos and Costco founder Jim Sinegal was pivotal. Sinegal told Bezos: “There are two kinds of retailers: there are those folks who work to figure how to charge more, and there are companies that work to figure how to charge less.” For Bezos it was an epiphany – and a roadmap. Amazon was “going to be the second, full-stop.” The focus on “customer first” and low prices has allowed Amazon to emerge as a world class, truly unique retailer that blends the best of “Walmart AND Nordstrom’s.”
These core values have shaped the culture at Amazon. The first, “frugality,” is starkly different from competitors like Google, famous for their free lunches and massages. “We try not to spend money on things that don’t matter to customers. Frugality breeds resourcefulness, self-sufficiency and invention. There are no extra points for headcount, budget pie or fixed expense.” To this day, senior Amazon executives flight coach and Stone notes that Bezos, one of the richest men in the world, still uses his coffee card at Amazon that allows him to get his 10th drink free. Next, Amazon prides itself on a no-holds-barred approach to getting things done, where teamwork is critical, yet all executives are exhorted to “Have Backbone.” “Disagree and Commit: Leaders are obligated to respectfully challenge decisions when they disagree, even when doing so is uncomfortable or exhausting. Leaders have conviction and are tenacious. They do not compromise for the sake of social cohesion. Once a decision is determined, they commit wholly.” In Bezos’ own words: “The reason we are here is to get stuff done; that is the top priority. That is the DNA of Amazon. If you can’t excel and put everything into it, this might not be the place for you.”
The drive for delivering lower costs has also developed a bare knuckles style of market competition. Stone suggests that Amazon is willing to go to extraordinary lengths to deliver on that low price promise, often throwing its weight around in a way that would even make the flinty executives in Bentonville blush. Once a new and threatening competitor like Zappos was identified, Bezos was prepared to go nuclear to ensure that either Zappos caved and sold out or they would be put out of business. “They have an absolute willingness to torch the landscape around them to emerge the winner,” one vanquished rival is quoted as saying.
The story of Kindle is illustrative as well. Bezos witnessed how quickly Apple destroyed Amazon’s music business with the launch of iPod and iTunes. He was determined not to see the same thing happen to their core books business. His heavy handed approach with the major book publishers was reminiscent of Steve Jobs browbeating the major music labels. Bezos picked an eBook price of $9.99 despite the howls of publishers and the absence of any market research to back up the decision. He picked $9.99 straight from the gut, much as Jobs did with $0.99 per song. The price ensured that Amazon would lose money and generated a near revolt from their publisher partners. Bezos simply didn’t care; he stuck to his guns even in the face of a major lawsuit.
One of the few disappointing aspects of this book for me was how little attention Stone devoted to Bezos’ private life, especially his marriage and family. Bezos married before founding Amazon and his wife, MacKenzie, was an early and important employee. Twenty-five years later they are still married and have four children. Yet none of this is discussed in the book. We learn in the book’s final pages that MacKenzie still often drives Jeff to work in a Honda mini-van after dropping their kids off at school, giving the corporate titan a peck-on-the-cheek before depositing him at the gates of his empire. It’s an intriguing glimpse into the human side of Bezos that the author did not pursue for one reason or another.
In closing, “The Everything Store” is an eye-opening account into an iconic and innovative corporation, which Stone calls “…relentlessly innovative and disruptive, as well as calculating and ruthless.” Indeed, Amazon is something of a Jekyll and Hyde. Or to use Randy Komisar’s terms from his 2001 book “The Monk and the Riddle,” Amazon is both a “missionary” (a company with a mission beyond making money) and a “mercenary” (a company dedicated to competing and winning). “The Everything Store” is a good biography of a company; but only a lukewarm biography of Jeff Bezos the man, even though Amazon is, in many ways, the corporate manifestation of its brilliant founder and chief executive.
Top reviews from other countries
From Amazon, we can understand the importance of caring about your customers in true sense. Throughout Amazon's journey, they are having single motto of giving the best prices and experience to their customers. And, in order to achieve this, they can fight the world.
One of the important lesson that I learnt was that you create your own destiny. Jeff's biological father was not successful in life but on the other hand Jeff has excelled amazingly in his field. So, we should never blame our genes or the family for what we are.
Amazon started right from the Garage with 3-4 people and rose to multi billion business. A lot can be learnt from Jeff's personality too. He is able to balance his personal and professional life perfectly. And, in his life, his mother and wife has been supportive, always.
Vocab is used nicely through the book and I was able to learn a lot of new words for sure. This is a true masterpiece for all.
thanks!
Reviewed in India on October 15, 2018
From Amazon, we can understand the importance of caring about your customers in true sense. Throughout Amazon's journey, they are having single motto of giving the best prices and experience to their customers. And, in order to achieve this, they can fight the world.
One of the important lesson that I learnt was that you create your own destiny. Jeff's biological father was not successful in life but on the other hand Jeff has excelled amazingly in his field. So, we should never blame our genes or the family for what we are.
Amazon started right from the Garage with 3-4 people and rose to multi billion business. A lot can be learnt from Jeff's personality too. He is able to balance his personal and professional life perfectly. And, in his life, his mother and wife has been supportive, always.
Vocab is used nicely through the book and I was able to learn a lot of new words for sure. This is a true masterpiece for all.
thanks!
























