首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
The Amazon Mystery: What America’s Strangest Tech Company Is Really Up To A) If there’s a sentence that sums up Amazon, the
The Amazon Mystery: What America’s Strangest Tech Company Is Really Up To A) If there’s a sentence that sums up Amazon, the
admin
2022-06-25
44
问题
The Amazon Mystery: What America’s Strangest Tech Company Is Really Up To
A) If there’s a sentence that sums up Amazon, the weirdest major technology company in America, it’s one that came from its own CEO, Jeff Bezos, speaking at the Aspen Institute’s 2009 Annual Awards Dinner in New York City: "Invention requires a long-term willingness to be misunderstood." In other words: if you don’t yet get what I’m trying to build, keep waiting.
B) Four years later, Amazon’s annual revenue and stock price have both nearly tripled, but for many onlookers, the long wait for understanding continues. Bezos’s company has grown from its humble Seattle beginnings to become not only the largest bookstore in the history of the world, but also the world’s largest online retailer, the largest Web-hosting company in the world, the most serious competitor to Netflix in streaming video, the fourth-most-popular tablet (平板电脑) maker, and a sprawling international network of fulfillment centers for merchants around the world. It is now rumored to be close to launching its own smartphone and television set-top box. The every-bookstore has become the store for everything, with the global ambition to become the store for everywhere.
C) Seriously: What is Amazon? A retail company? A media company? A logistics (物流) machine? The mystery of its strategy is deepened by two factors. First is the company’s communications department, which famously excels at not communicating. (Three requests to speak with Amazon officials for this article were delayed and, inevitably, declined.) This moves discussions of the company’s intentions into the realm of mind reading, often attempted by the research departments of investment banks, where even optimistic analysts aren’t really sure what Bezos is up to. "It’s very difficult to define what Amazon is," says R. J. Hottovy, an analyst with Morningstar, who nonetheless champions the company’s future.
D) Second, investors have developed a seemingly unconditional love for Amazon, despite the company’s reticence (沉默寡言) and, more to the point, its financial performance. Some 19 years after its founding, Amazon still barely turns a profit—when it makes money at all. The company is pinched between its low margins as a discount retailer and its high capital spending as a global logistics company. Last year, it lost $39 million. By comparison, in its latest annual report, Apple announced a profit of almost $42 billion—nearly 22 times what Amazon has earned in its entire life span. And yet Amazon’s market capitalization, the value investors place on the company, is more than a quarter of Apple’s, placing Amazon among the largest tech companies in the United States.
E) "I think Amazon’s efforts, even the seemingly eccentric ones, are centered on securing the customer relationship," says Benedict Evans, a consultant with Enders Analysis. The Kindle Fire tablet and the widely rumored phone aren’t boring experiments, he told me, but rather purchasing devices that put Amazon on the coffee table so consumers can never escape the tantalizing glow of a shopping screen.
F) In a way, this strategy isn’t new at all. It’s ripped from the mildewed playbooks of the first national retail stores in American history. Amazon appears to be building nothing less than a global Sears, Roebuck of the 21st century—a large-scale operation that aims to dominate the future of shopping and shipping. The question is, can it succeed?
G) In the late 19th century, soon after a network of rail lines and telegraph wires had stitched together a rural country, mail-order companies like Sears built the first national retail corporations. Today the Sears catalog seems about as innovative as the prehistoric handsaw, but in the 1890s, the 500-page "Consumer’s Bible" popularized a truly radical shopping concept: the mail would bring stores to consumers.
H) But in the early 1900s, as families streamed off farms and into cities, chains like J.C. Penney and Woolworth sprang up to greet them. Sears followed. The company’s focus on the emerging middle-class market paid off so well that by mid-century, Sears’s revenue approached 1 percent of the entire U.S. economy. But its dominance had deflated by the late 1980s, after more competitors arose and as the blue-collar consumer base it had leaned on collapsed.
I) Now that Internet cables have replaced telegraph wires, American consumers are reverting to their turn-of-the-century shopping habits. Families have rediscovered the Consumer’s Bible while sitting on their couches, and this time, it’s in a Web browser. E-commerce has nearly doubled in the past four years, and Amazon now takes in revenue of more than $60 billion annually. The Internet means to the 21st century what the postal service meant to the late 1800s: it welcomes retailers like Amazon into every living room.
J) "Sears took advantage of the U.S. postal system and railways in the early 20th century just as transportation costs were falling," says Richard White, a historian at Stanford, "and Amazon has done the same with the Web." Its national logistics machine mimics Sears’s pneumatic-tube-powered (气动管驱动的) Chicago warehouse, but is more powerful, and much faster.
K) Like the mail-order giants did a century ago, Amazon is moving to the city. In the past few years, the company has added warehouses in the most-populous metros to cut shipping times to urban customers. People subscribing to Amazon Prime or AmazonFresh (which, in exchange for an annual payment, provides fast delivery of most goods or groceries you’d like to order) commit themselves financially, with Prime members spending twice as much as other buyers. If those subscriptions grow numerous enough, Amazon’s search bar could become the preferred retail-shopping engine.
L) At least, that’s the vision. Defenders say Amazon is trading the present for the future, spending all its revenue on a global scatter plot of warehouses that will make the company unbeatable. Eventually, the theory goes, investors expect Amazon to complete its construction project and, having swayed enough customers and destroyed enough rivals, to "flip the switch," raising prices and profits greatly. In the meantime, they’re happy to keep buying stock, offering an unqualified thumbs-up for heavy spending.
M) But this theory assumes a practically infinite life span for Amazon. The modern history of retail innovation suggests that even the giants can be overtaken suddenly. Sears was still America’s largest retailer in 1982, but just nine years later, its annual revenues were barely half those of Walmart.
N) Amazon is not as insulated from its rivals as some think it is. Walmart, eBay, and a bounty of upstarts (新贵) are all in the race to dominate online retail. Amazon’s furious spending on new buildings and equipment isn’t an elective measure; it’s a survival plan. The truth is Amazon has won investors’ trust with a reputation for spending everybody to death, and it can spend everybody to death because it has won investors’ trust. For now.
O) "Amazon, as best I can tell, is a charitable organization being run by elements of the investment community for the benefit of consumers," Slate’s Matthew Yglesias joked earlier this year. Of course, Amazon is not a charity, and its investors are not philanthropists (慈善家). Today, they are funding an effort to fulfill the dreams of the turn-of-the-century retail kings: to build the perfect personalized shopping experience for the modern urban household. For once, families are reaping the dividends of Wall Street’s generosity. The longer investors wait for Amazon to fulfill their orders, the less we have to wait for Amazon to fulfill ours.
Investment banks often try to figure out Bezos’s intention but even their optimistic analysts cannot make it.
选项
答案
C
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/krx7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
根据快递企业(expressdeliveryenterprise)的性质及规模,可将我国快递企业分为四类。一是外资企业,外资快递企业具有丰富的经验、雄厚的资金和发达的全球网络;二是国有企业,国有快递企业依靠其背最优势和完善的国内网络在快递市场处于领
这就是同他一起工作的女孩。
社区公益(communitypublicbenefit)以公益机构为主体,为达成公益目的而鼓励社区居民积极参与各种公益服务或活动。近年来,越来越多的机构和企业投身到社会公益事业之中,或进行大额捐款,或成立慈善基金,力图在履行社会责任的同时,凸显企业
当今世界,环境保护已经成为各国政府和各界人士共同关心的问题。过去10年,海平面上升和森林砍伐的速度都是前所未有的;生态恶化、物种灭绝(extinction)、温室效应等一系列环境问题已经严重影响到人类的生存环境和健康。中国作为一个发展中国家,面临着发展
ShouldParentsAccompanyTheirChildreninStudying?1.越来越多的家长选择陪读2.有人认为家长陪读利大于弊,有人持相反观点3.我的观点
A、Shelikestravellingandmeetingvariouskindsofpeople.B、Sheenjoystheprocessofhelpingothers.C、Shehasgottenaquali
A、Shewantsthemtoloseweighttoo.B、Shewantsthemtodoexercisewithher.C、Shewantsthemtoeatpoorfoodwithher.D、She
A、Afitnessprogramofferedtothegeneralpublic.B、Aphysicalexercisetobuildupmuscles.C、Aprogramthatmakespeoplekeep
A、HowmanynativespeakersithadinShakespeare’stime.B、ThenumberofpeoplewithanadequateworkingknowledgeofitC、Thes
随机试题
荠菜原产于中国,________大量上市。
下列各种功能活动所消耗的能量中,最终不能转化为体热的是
使用约束带时应重点观察的是
维生素A缺乏病的实验室血浆维生素A浓度测定,低于何种浓度可以诊断为维生素A缺乏症
小腿青筋暴露多见于
具有泄肺止咳平喘的药物有
批评者该如何批评艺术家?此处的批评当然不只是_______的批评、毫不留情的“炮轰”、恨铁不成钢的指责,还包括善意的提醒、温和的建议以及诚恳的交流等等。但是,无论是声色俱厉还是_______,都应该坚守一个底线,即真实、善意、有真见解、_______内心的
中央银行实行货币政策的手段不包括:
国家权力机关的监督的主体是()。
TheEndofAIDS?A)OnJune5th1981America’sCentresforDiseaseControlandPreventionreportedtheoutbreakofanunusualfor
最新回复
(
0
)