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The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon Hardcover – October 15, 2013
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 readers 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 is 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.
- Print length384 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherLittle, Brown and Company
- Publication dateOctober 15, 2013
- Dimensions6.5 x 1.5 x 9.7 inches
- ISBN-100316219266
- ISBN-13978-0316219266
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Editorial Reviews
Review
Chosen as a Best Book of the Year by the Washington Post, Forbes, The New Republic, The Economist, Bloomberg,and Gizmodo, and as one of the Top 10 Investigative Journalism Books by Nieman Reports
"Mr. Stone tells this story with authority and verve, and lots of well-informed reporting.... A dynamic portrait of the driven and demanding Mr. Bezos." -- Michiko Kakutani, New York Times
"Engrossing.... Stone's long tenure covering both Bezos and Amazon gives his retelling a sureness that keeps the story moving swiftly." -- New York Times Book Review
"Jeff Bezos is one of the most visionary, focused, and tenacious innovators of our era, and like Steve Jobs he transforms and invents industries. Brad Stone captures his passion and brilliance in this well-reported and compelling narrative." -- Walter Isaacson, author of Steve Jobs
"Stone's account moves swiftly and surely." -- New York Times Book Review, "Editor's Choice"
"The Everything Store is a revelatory read for everyone--those selling and those sold to--who wants to understand the dynamics of the new digital economy. If you've ever one-clicked a purchase, you must read this book." -- Steven Levy, author of Hackers and In the Plex
"A deeply reported and deftly written book.... Like Steven Levy's "In the Plex: How Google Thinks, Works, and Shapes Our Lives," and "Gates: How Microsoft's Mogul Reinvented an Industry -- and Made Himself the Richest Man in America" by Stephen Manes and Paul Andrews, it is the definitive account of how a tech icon came to life." -- Seattle Times
"Stone's book, at last, gives us a Bezos biography that can fit proudly on a shelf next to the best chronicles of America's other landmark capitalists." -- Forbes
"Stone's tale of the birth, near-death, and impressive revival of an iconic American company is well worth your time." -- Matthew Yglesias, Slate
"An engaging and fascinating read.... An excellent chronicle of Amazon's rise.... A gift for entrepreneurs and business builders of the new generation." -- Business Insider
"Outstanding.... An authoritative, deeply reported, scoopalicious, nuanced, and balanced take that pulls absolutely no punches." -- Adam Lashinsky, Fortune
"Fair-minded, virtually up-to-the-minute history of the retail and technology behemoth and the prodigious brain behind it.... Stone's inside knowledge of a company ordinarily stingy with information is evident throughout the book.... Stone presents a nuanced portrait of the entrepreneur, especially as he sketches in Bezos' unusual family history and a surprising turn it took during the writing of the book. His reporting on the Kindle's disruption of traditional publishing makes for riveting reading. A must-add to any business bookshelf." -- Kirkus
"Brad Stone has done a remarkable job in The Everything Store, in a way that Bezos would appreciate...." -- The Financial Times
"An immersive play-by-play of the company's ascent.... It's hard to imagine a better retelling of the Amazon origin story." -- The New Republic
"The meticulously reported book has plenty of gems for anyone who cares about Amazon, Jeff Bezos, entrepreneurship, leadership just the lunacy it took to build a company in less than two decades that now employs almost 90,000 people and sold $61 billion worth of, well, almost everything last year." -- Washington Post
"Stone has broken new ground, demonstrating the massive influence Amazon exercises not only in the retail sector, but also throughout society, including government regulation or the lack of it." -- Neiman Reports
"Offers absorbing management insights... Insiders will get a serious glimpse at an industry behemoth." -- San Francisco Chronicle
"A tome that paints a fascinating picture of a remarkable tech entrepreneur." -- The Economist
"Illuminating." -- Salon
"Stone's shoe-leather reporting is what makes the book stand out." -- GeekWire
"As fine a profile of a secretive, fast-growing company as you are likely to encounter." -- Michael Moritz, Chairman, Sequoia Capital, LinkedIn.com
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The Everything Store
Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon
By Brad StoneLittle, Brown and Company
Copyright © 2013 Brad StoneAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-316-21926-6
CHAPTER 1
The House of Quants
Before it was the self-proclaimed largest bookstore on Earth or the Web'sdominant superstore, Amazon.com was an idea floating through the New York Cityoffices of one of the most unusual firms on Wall Street: D. E. Shaw & Co.
A quantitative hedge fund, DESCO, as its employees affectionately called it, wasstarted in 1988 by David E. Shaw, a former Columbia University computer scienceprofessor. Along with the founders of other groundbreaking quant houses of thatera, like Renaissance Technologies and Tudor Investment Corporation, Shawpioneered the use of computers and sophisticated mathematical formulas toexploit anomalous patterns in global financial markets. When the price of astock in Europe was fractionally higher than the price of the same stock in theUnited States, for example, the computer jockeys turned Wall Street warriors atDESCO would write software to quickly execute trades and exploit the disparity.
The broader financial community knew very little about D. E. Shaw, and itspolymath founder wanted to keep it that way. The firm preferred operating farbelow the radar, deploying private capital from wealthy investors such asbillionaire financier Donald Sussman and the Tisch family, and keeping itsproprietary trading algorithms out of competitors' hands. Shaw felt stronglythat if DESCO was going to be a firm that pioneered new approaches to investing,the only way to maintain its lead was to keep its insights secret and avoidteaching competitors how to think about these new computer-guided frontiers.
David Shaw came of age in the dawning era of powerful new supercomputers. Heearned a PhD in computer science from Stanford in 1980 and then moved to NewYork to teach in Columbia's computer science department. Throughout the earlyeighties, high-tech companies tried to lure him to the private sector. InventorDanny Hillis, founder of the supercomputer manufacturer Thinking MachinesCorporation and later one of Jeff Bezos's closest friends, almost convinced Shawto come work for him designing parallel computers. Shaw tentatively accepted thejob and then changed his mind, telling Hillis he wanted to do something morelucrative and could always return to the supercomputer field after he gotwealthy. Hillis argued that even if Shaw did get rich—which seemedunlikely—he'd never return to computer science. (Shaw did, after he becamea billionaire and passed on the day-to-day management of D. E. Shaw to others.)"I was spectacularly wrong on both counts," Hillis says.
Morgan Stanley finally pried Shaw loose from academia in 1986, adding him to afamed group working on statistical arbitrage software for the new wave ofautomated trading. But Shaw had an urge to set off on his own. He left MorganStanley in 1988, and with a $28 million seed investment from investor DonaldSussman, he set up shop over a Communist bookstore in Manhattan's West Village.
By design, D. E. Shaw would be a different kind of Wall Street firm. Shawrecruited not financiers but scientists and mathematicians—big brains withunusual backgrounds, lofty academic credentials, and more than a touch of socialcluelessness. Bob Gelfond, who joined DESCO after the firm moved to a loft onPark Avenue South, says that "David wanted to see the power of technology andcomputers applied to finance in a scientific way" and that he "looked up toGoldman Sachs and wanted to build an iconic Wall Street firm."
In these ways and many others, David Shaw brought an exacting sensibility to themanagement of his company. He regularly sent out missives instructing employeesto spell the firm's name in a specific manner—with a space between theD. and the E. He also mandated that everyone use a canonicaldescription of the company's mission: it was to "trade stocks, bonds, futures,options and various other financial instruments"—precisely in that order.Shaw's rigor extended to more substantive matters as well: any of his computerscientists could suggest trading ideas, but the notions had to pass demandingscientific scrutiny and statistical tests to prove they were valid.
In 1991, D. E. Shaw was growing rapidly, and the company moved to the top floorsof a midtown Manhattan skyscraper a block from Times Square. The firm's strikingbut sparely decorated offices, designed by the architect Steven Holl, included atwo-story lobby with luminescent colors that were projected into slots cut intothe expansive white walls. That fall, Shaw hosted a thousand-dollar-a-ticketfund-raiser for presidential candidate Bill Clinton that was attended by thelikes of Jacqueline Onassis, among others. Employees were asked to clear out ofthe office that evening before the event. Jeff Bezos, one of the youngest vicepresidents at the firm, left to play volleyball with colleagues, but first hestopped and got his photo taken with the future president.
Bezos was in his midtwenties at the time, five foot eight inches tall, alreadybalding and with the pasty, rumpled appearance of a committed workaholic. He hadspent five years on Wall Street and impressed seemingly everyone he encounteredwith his keen intellect and boundless determination. Upon graduating fromPrinceton in 1986, Bezos worked for a pair of Columbia professors at a companycalled Fitel that was developing a private transatlantic computer network forstock traders. Graciela Chichilnisky, one of the cofounders and Bezos's boss,remembers him as a capable and upbeat employee who worked tirelessly and atdifferent times managed the firm's operations in London and Tokyo. "He was notconcerned about what other people were thinking," Chichilnisky says. "When yougave him a good solid intellectual issue, he would just chew on it and get itdone."
Bezos moved to the financial firm Bankers Trust in 1988, but by then, frustratedby what he viewed as institutional reluctance at companies to challenge thestatus quo, he was already looking for an opportunity to start his own business.Between 1989 and 1990 he spent several months working in his spare time on astartup with a young Merrill Lynch employee named Halsey Minor, who would latergo on to start the online news network CNET. Their fledgling venture, aimed atsending a customized newsletter to people over their fax machines, collapsedwhen Merrill Lynch withdrew the promised funding. But Bezos nevertheless made animpression. Minor remembers that Bezos had closely studied several wealthybusinessmen and that he particularly admired a man named Frank Meeks, a Virginiaentrepreneur who had made a fortune owning Domino's Pizza franchises. Bezos alsorevered pioneering computer scientist Alan Kay and often quoted his observationthat "point of view is worth 80 IQ points"—a reminder that looking atthings in new ways can enhance one's understanding. "He went to school oneverybody," Minor says. "I don't think there was anybody Jeff knew that hedidn't walk away from with whatever lessons he could."
Bezos was ready to leave Wall Street altogether when a headhunter convinced himto meet executives at just one more financial firm, a company with an unusualpedigree. Bezos would later say he found a kind of workplace soul mate in DavidShaw—"one of the few people I know who has a fully developed left brainand a fully developed right brain."
At DESCO, Bezos displayed many of the idiosyncratic qualities his employeeswould later observe at Amazon. He was disciplined and precise, constantlyrecording ideas in a notebook he carried with him, as if they might float out ofhis mind if he didn't jot them down. He quickly abandoned old notions andembraced new ones when better options presented themselves. He already exhibitedthe same boyish excitement and conversation-stopping laugh that the world wouldlater come to know.
Bezos thought analytically about everything, including social situations. Singleat the time, he started taking ballroom-dance classes, calculating that it wouldincrease his exposure to what he called n+ women. He later famously admitted tothinking about how to increase his "women flow," a Wall Street corollary todeal flow, the number of new opportunities a banker can access. JeffHolden, who worked for Bezos first at D. E. Shaw & Co. and later at Amazon, sayshe was "the most introspective guy I ever met. He was very methodical abouteverything in his life."
D. E. Shaw had none of the gratuitous formalities of other Wall Street firms; inoutward temperament, at least, it was closer to a Silicon Valley startup.Employees wore jeans or khakis, not suits and ties, and the hierarchy was flat(though key information about trading formulas was tightly held). Bezos seemedto love the idea of the nonstop workday; he kept a rolled-up sleeping bag in hisoffice and some egg-crate foam on his windowsill in case he needed to bunk downfor the night. Nicholas Lovejoy, a colleague who would later join him at Amazon,believes the sleeping bag "was as much a prop as it was actually useful." Whenthey did leave the office, Bezos and his DESCO colleagues often socializedtogether, playing backgammon or bridge until the early hours of the morning,usually for money.
As the company grew, David Shaw started to think about how to broaden its talentbase. He looked beyond math and science geeks to what he called generalists,those who'd recently graduated at the tops of their classes and who showedsignificant aptitude in particular subjects. The firm also combed through theranks of Fulbright scholars and dean's-list students at the best colleges andsent hundreds of unsolicited letters to them introducing the firm andproclaiming, "We approach our recruiting in unapologetically elitist fashion."
Respondents to the letters who seemed particularly extraordinary and who hadhigh enough grade point averages and aptitude-test scores were flown to New Yorkfor a grueling day of interviews. Members of the firm delighted in asking theserecruits random questions, such as "How many fax machines are in the UnitedStates?" The intent was to see how candidates tried to solve difficult problems.After the interviews, everyone who had participated in the hiring processgathered and expressed one of four opinions about each individual: strong nohire; inclined not to hire; inclined to hire; or strong hire. One holdout couldsink an applicant.
Bezos would later take these exact processes, along with the seeds of other Shawmanagement techniques, to Seattle. Even today, Amazon employees use thosecategories to vote on prospective new hires.
DESCO's massive recruitment effort and interview processes were finely tuned toBezos's mind-set; they even attracted one person who joined Bezos as his lifepartner. MacKenzie Tuttle, who graduated from Princeton in 1992 with a degree inEnglish and who studied with author Toni Morrison, joined the hedge fund as anadministrative assistant and later went to work directly for Bezos. Lovejoyremembers Bezos hiring a limousine one night and taking several colleagues to anightclub. "He was treating the whole group but he was clearly focused onMacKenzie," he says.
MacKenzie later said it was she who targeted Bezos, not the other way around."My office was next door to his, and all day long I listened to that fabulouslaugh," she told Vogue in 2012. "How could you not fall in love withthat laugh?" She began her campaign to win him over by suggesting lunch. Thecouple got engaged three months after they started dating; they were marriedthree months after that. Their wedding, held in 1993 at the Breakers, a resortin West Palm Beach, featured game time for adult guests and a late-night partyat the hotel pool. Bob Gelfond and a computer programmer named Tom Karzesattended from D. E. Shaw.
Meanwhile, DESCO was growing rapidly and, in the process, becoming moredifficult to manage. Several colleagues from that time recall that D. E. Shawbrought in a consultant who administered the Myers-Briggs personality test toall the members of the executive team. Not surprisingly, everyone tested as anintrovert. The least introverted person on the team was Jeff Bezos. At D. E.Shaw in the early 1990s, he counted as the token extrovert.
Bezos was a natural leader at DESCO. By 1993, he was remotely running the firm'sChicago-based options trading group and then its high-profile entry into thethird-market business, an alternative over-the-counter exchange that allowedretail investors to trade equities without the usual commissions collected bythe New York Stock Exchange. Brian Marsh, a programmer for the firm who wouldlater work at Amazon, says that Bezos was "incredibly charismatic and persuasiveabout the third-market project. It was easy to see then he was a great leader."Bezos's division faced constant challenges, however. The dominant player in thespace was one Bernard Madoff (the architect of a massive Ponzi scheme that wouldunravel in 2008). Madoff's own third-market division pioneered the business andpreserved its market lead. Bezos and his team could see Madoff's offices in theLipstick Building on the East Side through their windows high above the city.
While the rest of Wall Street saw D. E. Shaw as a highly secretive hedge fund,the firm viewed itself somewhat differently. In David Shaw's estimation, thecompany wasn't really a hedge fund but a versatile technology laboratory full ofinnovators and talented engineers who could apply computer science to a varietyof different problems. Investing was only the first domain where it would applyits skills.
So in 1994, when the opportunity of the Internet began to reveal itself to thefew people watching closely, Shaw felt that his company was uniquely positionedto exploit it. And the person he anointed to spearhead the effort was JeffBezos.
D. E. Shaw was ideally situated to take advantage of the Internet. Most Shawemployees had, instead of proprietary trading terminals, Sun workstations withInternet access, and they utilized early Internet tools like Gopher, Usenet, e-mail, and Mosaic, one of the first Web browsers. To write documents, they usedan academic formatting tool called LaTeX, though Bezos refused to touch theprogram, claiming it was unnecessarily complicated. D. E. Shaw was also amongthe very first Wall Street firms to register its URL. Internet records show thatDeshaw.com was claimed in 1992. Goldman Sachs took its domain in 1995, andMorgan Stanley a year after that.
Shaw, who used the Internet and its predecessor, ARPANET, during his years as aprofessor, was passionate about the commercial and social implications of asingle global computer network. Bezos had first encountered the Internet in anastrophysics class at Princeton in 1985 but hadn't thought about its commercialpotential until arriving at DESCO. Shaw and Bezos would meet for a few hourseach week to brainstorm ideas for this coming technological wave, and then Bezoswould take those ideas and investigate their feasibility.
In early 1994, several prescient business plans emerged from the discussionsbetween Bezos and Shaw and others at D. E. Shaw. One was the concept of a free,advertising-supported e-mail service for consumers—the idea behind Gmailand Yahoo Mail. DESCO would develop that idea into a company called Juno, whichwent public in 1999 and soon after merged with NetZero, a rival.
Another idea was to create a new kind of financial service that allowed Internetusers to trade stocks and bonds online. In 1995 Shaw turned that into asubsidiary called FarSight Financial Services, a precursor to companies like E-Trade. He later sold it to Merrill Lynch.
Shaw and Bezos discussed another idea as well. They called it "the everythingstore."
Several executives who worked at DESCO at that time say the idea of theeverything store was simple: an Internet company that served as the intermediarybetween customers and manufacturers and sold nearly every type of product, allover the world. One important element in the early vision was that customerscould leave written evaluations of any product, a more egalitarian and credibleversion of the old Montgomery Ward catalog reviews of its own suppliers. Shawhimself confirmed the Internet-store concept when he told the New York TimesMagazine in 1999, "The idea was always that someone would be allowed to makea profit as an intermediary. The key question is: Who will get to be thatmiddleman?"
(Continues...)Excerpted from The Everything Store by Brad Stone. Copyright © 2013 Brad Stone. Excerpted by permission of Little, Brown and Company.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- Publisher : Little, Brown and Company; American First edition (October 15, 2013)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 384 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0316219266
- ISBN-13 : 978-0316219266
- Item Weight : 1.4 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.5 x 1.5 x 9.7 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #72,641 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Brad Stone is senior executive editor for global technology at Bloomberg News and the author of Amazon Unbound: Jeff Bezos and the Invention of a Global Empire. The book, to be published in May 2021, continues the story that he began with The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon, a New York Times bestseller that won the 2013 Business Book of the Year Award from the Financial Times and Goldman Sachs and has been translated into more than 35 languages. He is also the author of The Upstarts: Uber, Airbnb, and the Battle for the New Silicon Valley. He is a twin, and the father of twins, and lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book engaging and informative. They appreciate the insightful storytelling and good examples of Jeff Bezos' vision. The book provides a well-written biography of Amazon's founder and history. Readers describe the pacing as fast and breezy. They find the story believable and describe the man behind Amazon as intelligent and passionate. Overall, customers find the book an excellent look into the company's history and culture.
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Customers find the book engaging and well-written. They appreciate the great reporting and storytelling. The book covers the inside story in detail.
"...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
"...I'll make it easy for you - this one is. It's a good read as a business book, as a tech book, and it is helpful if you're interested in Seattle..." Read more
"...Stone's book gets a feel for the factory floor too -- an exciting whoosh of making history, and also, grueling work weeks: "..." Read more
"...9. Inventing is cool. Explorers are cool. Conquerors are not cool. Thinking big is cool. The unexpected is cool. Missionaries are cool...." Read more
Customers find the book provides insightful information about Amazon and its visionary leader, Jeff Bezos. They appreciate the well-crafted blend of facts, narrative anecdotes, and storytelling that adds depth and perspective. The book conveys an important set of business principles and provides source material for professors.
"...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
"...author himself acknowledges that this is one of the first complete histories of the company, and I would wager that there will be an afterword to..." 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
"...A's corporate mission is to raise the bar across industries , and around the world, for what it means to be customer focused,..." Read more
Customers find the book provides an interesting look into Amazon's history and culture. They appreciate the insightful account of a brilliant founder who drove the vision. The book offers a good combination of history, business case studies, and dynamic storytelling that immerses readers in the time and characters.
"...that came out just a year back. "To me, A is a story of a brilliant founder who personally drove the vision. ....." 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 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
"...Bezos is a dynamic and driven personality, who demands similar commitment from his subordinates...." Read more
Customers find the book's pacing fast and fluid. They appreciate the tight execution and the author's balanced tone, which is neither overly praiseful nor overly critical.
"...The author writes in an accessible, fast-paced style...." Read more
"...business reporter Brad Stone delivers an incisive, balanced, and fast-paced peak inside the secretive and amazingly innovative $150 billion tech..." Read more
"...It does not glorify or vilify Amazon but leaves the reader with thought provoking questions about the organization and its impact on economic..." Read more
"It starts dry, just spouting facts but after 20% it comes to its own being able to describe Amazon culture key personalities and Jeff Bezos...." Read more
Customers find the book insightful about a brilliant, passionate entrepreneur. They appreciate learning about his leadership principles and Jobs-like style. The story is described as interesting and believable.
"...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
"...Jeff is quite inventive and smart, but also collaborative, an amazing brainstormer, a long-term thinker, not one to give up on an initiative easily,..." Read more
"...Sort of -- long-term thinking, a focus on the customer, insisting on hiring top performers, and a willingness to disrupt your own business are all..." Read more
"...I predict that Mr Bezos will go down in history as being the very best businessman, we have seen up to this point in time...." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's look. They find it informative and well-researched, with a great portrait of the man behind Amazon. The background is represented well, while the author does a great job looking forward. The book captures the essence beautifully, with thorough research and a fast-paced presentation. They like the photos and the author's style of presentation.
"...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
"...This book is an amazing look at the culture and inside workings of a notoriously secretive company...." 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
"...This book was brilliantly laid out, and whether you like Bezos’ or Amazon, by the end of this book you will come to see how a simple idea can turn..." Read more
Customers find the book entertaining and interesting. They say it's exciting, lively, and full of valuable lessons. The anecdotes make them laugh and the book doesn't feel like a biography.
""The Everything Store" was such an engaging and fascinating read, I inhaled it in less than 36 hours...." Read more
"...a long-term thinker, not one to give up on an initiative easily, and fun...." Read more
"...The book is very interesting, well written, keep you interested (no boring moment)...." Read more
"...the story of Jeff Bezos and Amazon as told by Mr. Stone is both exciting and unexpected...." Read more
Customers find the storytelling in the book repetitive and disjointed at times. They feel the story is unfinished and not very interesting. The narrative seems aggressive and rambles on for some readers, making it not fun to read.
"...there's a whole lot more that's been left out, making this an incomplete and somewhat unbalanced telling of Jeff's and Amazon's story." Read more
"...What's missing is the magic, the crazy stories, the sheer fun of innovation...." Read more
"...think the book is guilty of this in parts, and as such, fell victim to the narrative fallacy...." Read more
"...the most part Stone does an admirable job, but the book does feel a bit disjointed at times as it bounds from topic to topic....I'm not sure that's..." Read more
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Best Part of the Book is Chapter 11
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2013"The Everything Store" was such an engaging and fascinating read, I inhaled it in less than 36 hours. (For the sake of my sleep and work schedule, I'm glad books like this don't come along too often.)
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.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 15, 2013So, I just finished reading "The Everything Store" by Brad Stone.
I am not a fan of elaborate and long-winded reviews about whether a book is worth reading or not.
I'll make it easy for you - this one is. It's a good read as a business book, as a tech book, and it is helpful if you're interested in Seattle history.
I'll go into more detail below if you're reading what the "self absorbed internet troll" Robby Delaware thinks.*
If you're like most people who peruse reviews, I hope this helps. I was contemplating writing a too-cool-for-school review that mentioned the time I thought I ran into Bezos in Ballard on the sidewalk in back of the BofA building. But I didn't.
...
Now for some of my self absorbed ramblings. This isn't what I liked about the book, more about what I found surprising. The author himself acknowledges that this is one of the first complete histories of the company, and I would wager that there will be an afterword to future releases of this book.
I've been looking forward to the release this book for some time. I downloaded it as soon as it was released for Kindle.
I began reading this book in a sort of unusual way. I began reading it by kind of keeping a mental checklist in my own mind. I was curious if the author, who has covered Amazon for a long time, would omit certain things. The book is clearly biased towards Amazon and Bezos - which isn't surprising and doesn't diminish the appeal of the book. Still, I couldn't help but think that portions of the book were clearly written by someone who wasn't familiar with Seattle culture and by someone who didn't quite view events the same way that many other people did.
I took notes while reading the book, and here's a list of things that I found surprising about the book while I was reading it:
I was very surprised that a number of relatively small controversies since 2008 didn't make it into this book. I believe that the absence of these stories is unfortunate, and won't help those seeking a full understanding of the company.
Amazon, since the rise of social media, has become the source of a number of controversies that I like to call "Twitter worthy." Many of you may recall stories like Amazon Japan selling whale meat, or a pedophile self-publishing an e-book how-to guide, or the remote removal of Orwell books from Kindle readers for DRM reasons, or the deranking of Gay and Lesbian literature.
While these stories in an of themselves aren't the kind of stories that are likely to make it on the front page of a newspaper like the Wall Street Journal, these stories will be remembered. One of the only times I ever saw a DRM issue discussed on television was a segment I watched on a cable news show in 2009 about the kid in Minnesota whose Orwell books (and notes) were remotely removed.
Why are these stories important, and why do they matter for Amazon? It's simple, because Amazon has grown so large and so global, obscure controversies become easier to understand and even easier to pin on a single retailer. Plus, you've got to feed the twitter beast.
Remember the gay/lesbian deranking scandal in 2009? Didn't a hacker do it? Didn't the hacker claim that pulling the urls of gay/lesbian themed books was very easy, and that used an automated script to flag each one as adult? Didn't the hacker claim that he did it for very specific political reasons, and that if you're going to do something like that for political reasons - it's only natural to target Amazon?
You see what I'm getting at. There's always been little stories like this - but in an age of twitter and Drudge the smallest story about a holocaust themed board game that one, solitary, third party seller offered can blow up in a spectacular manner.
That was the controversies - I was also a little dismayed by how little space was given to Amazon's overall role in the life of Seattle, and I was shocked by how little of a role the Nisqually earthquake played in the narrative of the story.
Why is the Nisqually earthquake important? Well, first off, the book claims the earthquake measure 6.9 on the richter scale. I don't believe that's correct - it measured 6.8. Why quibble over something so minor? I believe, strongly, that when future writers look back at the history of Seattle and Amazon's role in city life, the Ash Wednesday earthquake will play a much larger role than anyone who didn't experience it can imagine.
That earthquake, which wasn't even that large, trashed a lot of Seattle's commercial real estate. It wasn't just Amazon's PacMed building - there are still boarded up buildings in the city of Seattle today. It is my belief that Paul Allen's South Lake Union project (which had been resounding defeated by Seattle voters during the "commons" debate years earlier) would not have proceeded if it had not been for that earthquake. Which company has dived head first into the transformation of South Lake Union? You guessed it, Amazon.
I used to hanging out in the late 90s in South Lake Union. You know who occupied South Lake Union in the late 90s? Dudes who lived in vans, that's who. I went back to that same exact area in 2011 and the place was virtually unrecognizable.
This isn't Apple building a UFO shaped HQ in a California suburb that already resembles a golf course combined with the set of "Logan's Run." The project to transform South Lake Union is like Robert Moses on ten lattes - a massive transformation of an urban environment - with Amazon at the center.
I could go on about this. About how the book neglected to mention the 1999 WTO conference, when newspaper columnists berated that the "black clad" protestors were "raging against the dot-coms in their own backyard as much as they were against global trade."
Or I could mention the recent Seattle Times series from the Blethen family that snootily noted that Bezos is the least engaged civic leader in a city that hosts the majority of America's richest people. But, I won't. You get the picture. I don't think the book covered Amazon's tangled relationship with the city that well.
Two other small points - and then I'll stop yakking.
The book mentioned Pelago (where I spent seven months as a contract tester) as having been engaged in a mobile search project. I don't think that description is entirely correct. Yes, search was important, and yes, i'd heard that somehow people had or hadn't been asked by Google to come aboard.
Still, I remember being told (even as a lowly contract tester) several times - "you might have heard this start-up is about location, email notifications, and tying coupons and deals together. It's not about that. You're not getting it."
What's the old saying that was used during the Clinton impeachment trial? "When they say it's not about the sex, it's about the sex!"
Pelago might had a lot of energy focused on mobile search - but it was basically an attempt to be a location-based Groupon before Groupon. It's infrastructure fit so well with what Groupon wanted to do that it (surprise!) folded into Groupon.
Why did the book make so little mention of the relationship between Groupon and Amazon? Seattle tech blogs like GeekWire are regularly filled with stories of Groupon poaching Amazon executives. Both the rise of Groupon and their quirky and endearing first CEO wouldn't have been possible without Amazon and the existence of Bezos. Wall Street wouldn't have allowed it.
One final point before I get off my soapbox. The very end of the book mentions a woman who worked for seven months at Amazon trying to get the company to embrace social media more broadly. Talk about understatement of the year.
I've been continually amazed at the haphazard and lazy approach of both Amazon and Apple to social shopping. If Bezos isn't a big fan of music (grabbing assorted cds off a shelf without even looking to see what they are) I'm going to guess he doesn't use or see much need in using social media for shopping - which is a shame, since the Kindle is such a perfect platform for doing this.
The @Author program was a great idea - but with zero follow up. The twitter feed hasn't been updated since February.
The purchase of Goodreads looks like buying your way out of the problem.
Anyways, I could write more. Amazon's a fascinating company, that I have a variety of opinions about. Purchase this book. You won't regret it.
*You have to refer to yourself in the third person to be truly self absorbed.
Top reviews from other countries
- Aymane DavyReviewed in Canada on December 30, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful book
This book is just wonderful and a must.
- HumbertoReviewed in Mexico on March 27, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book great story
Love the story behind amazon
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TimReviewed in Sweden on April 13, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Jeff Bezos
Väldigt intressant läsning. Jeff är verkligen en otrolig entreprenör
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MarleneReviewed in Italy on March 6, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Lo tengo sul comodino e lo leggo ogni sera.
Non ho ancora finito di leggerlo, ma la ritengo una narrazione particolareggiata e molto interessante della nascita di Amazon.com, che io utilizzo frequentemente per i miei acquisti, la visione di film e l'ascolto di musica. Lo consiglio a chi è interessato nella realtà delle dinamiche imprenditoriali.
MarleneLo tengo sul comodino e lo leggo ogni sera.
Reviewed in Italy on March 6, 2021
Images in this review
- R de BulatReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 21, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderfully informative and readable
Some, but not all books, allow you to inhabit them and, at least while you are reading them, they become a part of your life; I can think of a few books like this and they are the ones that linger, that you return to, sometimes again and again. Certainly this book at a little over 400 pages takes some time to read, if, as I do, you read a little each evening before turning-in for the night, so I was slightly disappointed to have finished it. The story which covers the early genesis of what becomes Amazon, covers the early years and thereafter up to 2013, although I cannot imaging a sequel adding much to what has already been written, which is deep, extensive and in-glossed in its coverage of the ups and down of the Amazon journey. Jeff Bezos, the chief architect and principal character does not actually develop in a way that you could say that reading the book, you now know the man, but he is intrinsically bound up in the story and the edifice that is Amazon; the two are inseparable and give character, each to the other. Many people, other than Jeff inhabit the story and play their parts in the creation of the everything store and they come and go, for many reasons, not least exhaustion, but this account as everything and everyone becomes subsumed by the ethics that drive the inexorable rise of a monolith: is that the right word? Probably not; Amazon does not exclude the possibility of other such stores entering the market place, but the disruptive quality of the enterprise makes it seem unassailable, for not anyway. In the end, this is an interesting account of how a business develops, against all odds, due to the single-mindedness and resilience of one man, supported by an array of others, men and women, who for a while take part in the unfolding story. It is an account of how to do it and how to do it well, but also why you need a person of extraordinary grit and almost supra-human resolve. The book is amazing; it does justice to the character of Jeff Bezos, without over eulogising or ignoring his failures: read it.