Amazon Spreads Its Ecosystem

Only Amazon can still win when you buy some other company’s product

Those who wish to invest in the Amazon ecosystem—which includes Kindle books, Audible audiobooks, MP3 music purchases and a cloud player, streaming, purchasable, and rentable movies, streaming and purchasable TV shows, Android apps, and more—will get the best experience with one of the firm’s Kindle Fire HD devices. But Amazon’s secret plan is to make its ecosystem services available universally on competing devices and platforms as well. And this week, it took further steps towards that future.

This, I think, is the long-term differentiator between Amazon and all of its competitors. As CEO Jeff Bezos noted at the Kindle Fire HD launch event in September, Amazon makes money when people use their devices, not when people buy their devices. At the time of this revelation, the tech blogosphere tripped over itself to report that Amazon “makes no profit” on the Kindle line. The real story there, however, was two-fold: Contrary to previous reports, Amazon does not lose money on Kindle devices, or sell them under cost. Where Amazon makes money is on its ecosystem. It’s selling services, not devices.

I mean, obviously, Amazon is selling devices. But the Kindle Fire HD line is a Trojan Horse, something Amazon can afford to sell at cost—i.e. at lower prices than the competition, and at much lower prices that those competitors, like Apple, that exist solely to sell you hardware devices, ideally at a steady, once-a-year clip.

Apple sells devices. Amazon sells the ecosystem.

And that ecosystem is vast. It’s just not available equally everywhere.

Explaining why this is so is a bit complex, frankly, because Amazon makes so much stuff and it supports it in different ways on different platforms. I write about this stuff a lot, most recently in When Shopping Tablets, Buy Into Ecosystems, Not Into Devices. But let me provide two examples, Kindle and Amazon MP3/Cloud Player.

Amazon provides Kindle apps for a surprisingly wide range of devices, including Windows PCs, Macs, iPad, Android tablets, iPhone, iPod touch, Android handsets, Windows Phone, and Blackberry. There’s also a web client called Cloud Reader. The best experience, of course, can be had on Amazon’s own devices, which include various Kindle eBook readers and the Kindle Fire and Fire HD tablets. And some features are only available, today, on Amazon’s own devices, or on a very select list of other devices.

Newspaper subscriptions is an example. While you can subscribe to and read some newspapers on many devices (via the Kindle app), the two I currently read, The New York Times and The Boston Globe, are only available on Amazon devices. So I can’t subscribe to or read these periodicals on an iPad, Windows tablet, or Google Nexus 7 (using the Kindle app).

Another feature that’s not broadly available is Whispersync for Voice. For a growing collection of books, you can purchase both the Kindle and Audible versions of the same book and switch back and forth between them, with your position being maintained in the story no matter which version you use. So you might read part of a book on Kindle at home, listen to the next part during a commute with Audible, and then pick up where you left off in Kindle later that night. This is a neat feature, but you can only use it on the Audible side with the apps on Android or iPhone.

As for the music stuff, anyone can of course buy music from Amazon MP3 at any time, and on virtually any device, and if you use Amazon Cloud Player, as I do, those purchases don’t even need to be downloaded; they’re just placed in your Cloud Player. But Amazon only provides apps for this player (which are often confusingly called Amazon MP3) on Kindle Fire/HD tablets, Android devices, and iPhone. On the PC, you can use a nice web client. But there’s no Metro-style app for Windows 8/RT, no app for iPad, and no app for Windows Phone.

There are many other examples, but you get the idea. The Amazon ecosystem experience will vary wildly depending on which device(s) you use.

Because Amazon is making money on its ecosystem, however, and not on its devices, I expect these holes to be filled. I expect that, over time, Amazon’s services will be roughly equally available on all popular devices, and that it won’t matter which device type you use, because all Amazon cares about is that you’re using its services. In fact, looked at in this light, the Kindle devices are almost superfluous to the company’s future. They exist now to get you hooked.

Of course, we need to get there. And the way that happens is for Amazon to bring more and more services to more and more devices. That actually happens pretty regularly. Here are some examples from just this week.

Amazon Instant Video App Now Available for iPhone and iPod touch. Amazon’s Netflix competitor was previously available on the web, Kindle Fire/HD devices, and iPad.

Amazon Cloud Player App Comes to Samsung Smart TVs and Amazon Cloud Player Now Available on Roku Streaming Players. This is one I’ve really been waiting for, not so much Roku specifically, though I have one, but rather some way to get Cloud Player content playing in the living room in a way that makes sense. I’d love to see an Xbox 360 app next.

It’s quite possible that Amazon will be the eventual obvious choice for content and that those who purchase devices can do so based only on other criteria, such as hardware design or apps. That’s because Amazon is the only company that will make its services available broadly on competing devices. That’s right: Only Amazon can still win when you buy some other company’s product.

Brilliant.

Discuss this Article 9

DBSync
on Dec 13, 2012

Paul, don't forget this is only true in the US. Amazon's ecosystem internationally is pretty poor other than books.

luis3007
on Dec 13, 2012

The Amazon CloudPlayer is available in Latin America in its web version, besides the Kindle books, not sure about video

phreezerburn
on Dec 17, 2012

Amazon in Germany has a solid footprint and even in Canada where the CRTC has gone to draconian measures in forcing Canadian media provider's dominance. No small feat that Amazon is even in Canada, such as it is.

Marty
on Dec 13, 2012

I really with they'd release an app for WP that would let you stream music from their cloud service. It seems ridiculous that they wouldn't already have that at this point, but maybe they were holding off for WP8? Or something?

abw1987
on Dec 13, 2012

"Apple sells devices, Amazon sells the ecosystem"

I wouldn't say the line is quite that distinct. I'd say Apple sells both, since they make money on iDevices as well as apps/music/etc. It grinds my gears how much they get away with charging for their devices.

GoodThings2Life
on Dec 13, 2012

Amazon Instant Video has fantastic selection... dot dot dot... IF and ONLY IF you don't mind paying per-episode or per-season outside of Amazon Prime subscription. This is something they really need to correct. I've been saying the same thing about Xbox Video (by having a Video Pass).

If either company fixes these missing pieces, it would be a HUGE boon to their respective ecosystems. But you're right overall, Amazon is all about getting us to use their-- frankly wonderful-- services.

Also... I'd actually really like Amazon to obliterate Apple in terms of content access.

Willem
on Dec 13, 2012

When I get Win 8 phone apps for Amazon Cloud Player and Amazon Instant Video, I think that I will finally be content with my Win Phone

richv1
on Dec 14, 2012

Amazon has the right idea, which is why they get my business. I view their content of a variety of disparate devices, Android phones/tablets, Windows pc's, and a PS3. I steer a wide berth around Apple's lock-in strategy.

Ken H.
on Mar 23, 2013

While I agree in general, and tried to move to Amazon Instant Video, the problem is how many devices an episode/movie can be downloaded onto varies with the show/movie. The other problem is the only way to unregister your computer is to unistall the UPlayer program. These problems, along with the amount of content I have from iTunes caused me to go back to iTunes. I still want to switch, it is just to much hassle and issues at present.

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