Leadership on line: Barnes & Noble vs. Amazon.com

Essay by crizoUniversity, Master'sA+, September 2006

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Based on your own experience of traditional bookselling and your exploration of online bookselling, compare willingness-to-pay for books supplied by these two business models.

If I had to do segmentation for Amazon.com's online business I would define one of the most valuable segments as those customers who:

- Don't have time (e.g. to go to a retail store just to find out that the book they wanted is not in stock!)

- Know in 95% what they want, but are open for suggestions (e.g. other books that the same author has written)

- "Bite more off then they can chew" (e.g. have 1000 unread pages in books sitting on their bookshelf, waiting for one of these periods where I will have to time to read them)

- Are not worried about paying more (range of 10-30 %)

This list of value attributes describes my personal preferences and I know from my buying behavior that I am willing to pay a slight premium to receive this value from an Online-retailer. One thing I want to note here is that my loyalty is based on convenience (Amazon.com is the URL that I know immediately) but is completely gone when I realize that BarnesandNobels.com provides similar service at a cheaper price, which in fact they do with their B&N Membership discounts!

Also compare the forecast long-run cost position of a successful online bookseller to Barnes and Noble's traditional business model. (Assume that Exhibits 4 and 7 in the case reflect average discounts of 10% off list price for Barnes & Noble's traditional bookstores and 25% off list for the online bookseller.)

In the short-run we typically focus on marginal costs that a business has to provide just the next unit of goods, while in a long-run analysis we look at a...