Does Wall Street have an inkling that "heh, if I take care of my customers, they will take care of me..." ??? Via the Good experience Blog, from the NYT:
When I spoke to analysts and investors, they had all kinds of reasons for Amazon's performance last year. "They finally reached a point where their R&D spending was not expanding as fast as their revenues," said Citigroup's Mark S. Mahaney. He and others also talked about Amazon's success in international markets, its fast-growing (and high margin) merchant market, which allows merchants to sell goods alongside Amazon, and its rapidly expanding Web services business....
But I couldn't help wondering if maybe there wasn't something else at play here, something Wall Street never seems to take very seriously. Maybe, just maybe, taking care of customers is something worth doing when you are trying to create a lasting company. Maybe, in fact, it's the best way to build a real business even if it comes at the expense of short-term results.
Full Story HereIt is almost impossible to read or see an interview with Mr. Bezos in which he doesn't, at some point, begin to wax on about what he likes to call "the customer experience." ... "They care about having the lowest prices, having vast selection, so they have choice, and getting the products to customers fast," he said. "And the reason I'm so obsessed with these drivers of the customer experience is that I believe that the success we have had over the past 12 years has been driven exclusively by that customer experience. We are not great advertisers. So we start with customers, figure out what they want, and figure out how to get it to them."
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