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Why Amazon Is The New Google For Buying

They’re called the “duopoly” of online advertising. Facebook and Google account for 75% of the U.S. digital ad spend — and almost all of its growth, according to the Interactive Advertising Bureau.

Facebook reported 45% growth in the last quarter and Google’s parent company Alphabet posted earnings of $26 billion, 87% coming from advertising revenue.  

But are these behemoths about to be blindsided by a fierce competitor with a better ROI?

A consumer research study for a beverage manufacturer uncovered an interesting trend, one that might tip the scale for advertisers. Consumers who had an Amazon Prime account started their search for a purchase at Amazon 100% of the time. If they knew what they wanted to buy, they went directly to Amazon to search for different brands with the best price and delivery options.

With 85 million Amazon Prime members as of June 2017, it’s not going to take long for consumer brands to discover that if you want to invest ad dollars in finding buyers with high purchase intent and conversion rates, Amazon is going to be hard to ignore, as noted in this chart first published by Statista here.

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Although its ad business is small in comparison to Google and Facebook, with only 1% of global ads, it actually is one of Amazon’s fastest growing areas, now on track to generate close to $2 billion this year. 

Amazon also offers organizations a broad spectrum of advertising products, ranging from its ad platform offering mobile and desktop display and banner ads, to dynamic and coupon ads. Customer campaign pages allow advertisers to create immersive cross-platform landing pages that can display more than one product.

With the digital ad market predicted to grow at 16% this year to $83 billion according to eMarketer, the Facebook-Google duopoly will get its fair share, and almost all of the attention, especially considering the growth of Facebook’s Snapchat ad revenue, up 158% in the past year. And that may be just how Amazon likes it. It has a history of sneaking up on competitors. Just ask Microsoft and IBM about Amazon Web Services (AWS).

Andy Jassy, the AWS CEO, said that in some ways the growth of his business was a classic case of disruption dynamics. “The competition simply didn’t believe there was enough of a market to worry about it. The dominant players don’t have any reason to worry about someone attacking the bottom of the market.” AWS now owns a third of the cloud infrastructure services market, more than three times that of its next closest competitors.  

Amazon seems to follow Al Pacino’s “never let them see you coming” advice from “The Devil’s Advocate.” But one ad executive — Sir Martin Sorrell, WPP’s CEO — has noticed. In a recent interview with Bloomberg said, Sorrell said, “The company that would worry me if I was a client — or I think worries our clients, more than Google and Facebook — is Amazon.”

Smart ad dollars follow consumer behavior — and, as we just learned, those consumers are headed to Amazon.

3 comments about "Why Amazon Is The New Google For Buying".
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  1. Henry Blaufox from Dragon360, September 15, 2017 at 1:59 p.m.

    Does this make Amazon the new Yellow Pages? End of funnel, high intent, price and location (delivery turnaround) sensitive.

  2. Scott Gillum from Carbon Design, September 18, 2017 at 11:45 a.m.

    Thanks Henry, interesting POV. Definitely end of the funnel and high intent...not sure it a clean match with Yellow Pages. But I get your point. 

  3. Paula Lynn from Who Else Unlimited, September 18, 2017 at 3:29 p.m.

    Cassandra says: Another problem in the making. Deliveries creating other problems - dead trees, so much cardboard and waste, trucks and more trucks making more and more traffic and trucks cause more accidents by blocking driver vision (experienced it), trucks blocking traffic, trucks piling up in front of building blocking traffic including emergency vehicles, trucks and trucks and trucks blocking and blocking. No stopping and no parking signs going up. Local vs local laws and then more infighting. The more dense the population, the more problems. 

    Then what happens when a truck has 50 deliveries of fresh food and can only make 30 ? The list goes on. Anyone thinking ahead ?

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