Fixing A Failure of Tactics: Record Your Process. Mcdonald'S Has More Than 35,000 Locations
Fixing A Failure of Tactics: Record Your Process. Mcdonald'S Has More Than 35,000 Locations
Review and adjust your tactics. The fatiguing thing about Stage 1 failures is
that they never stop. Tactics that used to work will become obsolete. Tactics
that were a bad idea previously might be a good idea now. You need to be
constantly reviewing and improving how you do your work. Successful
people routinely give up on tactics that don't move their strategy and vision
forward. Fixing a Failure of Tactics is not a one time job, it is a lifestyle.
It was March of 1999. Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, had just
announced that his company would launch a new service called Amazon
Auctions to help people sell “virtually anything online.” The idea was to
create something that could compete with eBay. Bezos knew there were
millions of people with goods to sell and he wanted Amazon to be the place
where those transactions happened.
Greg Linden, a software engineer for Amazon at the time, recalled the project
by saying, “Behind the scenes, this was a herculean effort. People from
around the company were pulled off their projects. The entire Auctions site,
with all the features of eBay and more, was built from scratch. It was
designed, architected, developed, tested, and launched in under three
months.”
Amazon Auctions was a spectacular failure. Just six months after launch,
management realized the project was going nowhere. In September 1999,
they scrambled to release a new offering called Amazon zShops. This version
of the idea allowed anyone from big companies to individuals to set up an
online shop and sell goods through Amazon.
Again, Amazon swung and missed. Neither Amazon Auctions nor Amazon
zShops are running today. In December 2014, Bezos referred to the failed
projects by saying, “I’ve made billions of dollars of failures at Amazon.com.
Literally billions.”
Undaunted, Amazon tried yet again to create a platform for third-party
sellers. In November 2000, they launched Amazon Marketplace, which
allowed individuals to sell used products alongside Amazon's new items. For
example, a small bookstore could list their used textbooks directly alongside
new ones from Amazon.
It worked. Marketplace was a runaway success. In 2015, Amazon
Marketplace accounted for nearly 50 percent of the $107 billion in sales on
Amazon.com.