📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

Why Amazon is Poised to Further Command the Ecommerce Space The largest Internet company in the world has positioned itself to play a seemingly ever-larger role in online commerce, with its third-party sellers poised to take additional advantage.

By Seth Kniep Edited by Matt Scanlon

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

In 2020 alone, U.S. online ecommerce grew by an astonishing 32.4%, totaling $791.7 billion in online consumer spending. Part of the resulting effect is that online stores are increasingly grabbing sales from physical locations, as consumers are expected to spend more than $1 trillion through digital retail channels in 2022. Additionally, older consumers who never used to engage in ecommerce are now going online for their needs, particularly as they apply to health concerns. And even after commerce returns to a semi-post-pandemic normal, these people are likely to keep shopping online.

Amazon is poised to own the lion's share of these ecommerce gains. It simply dominates the online space, with Digital Commerce 360 estimating the company represented more than a third of all ecommerce spending in 2020. The reasons for this are many, but include gained trust of shoppers thanks to an "A-to-Z guarantee", that its refund and return policies are standard-bearers, and the one- to two-day shipping available for Prime members. In a 2019 Feedvisor survey among U.S. shoppers, 89% said they are more likely to buy from Amazon than other ecommerce websites.

Related: How to Start a Multimillion-Dollar Amazon Business With Less Than $2,000

Interestingly, it's actually third-party sellers that stand to gain the most from Amazon's continued rise. The company is, in part, a platform for third-party brand owners to sell their products — essentially the world's largest shopping mall. Amazon gets a cut, but most of the money shoppers spend on the platform goes to third-party sellers, which range from massive name brands to those owned and operated by relative unknowns. According to Statista, third-party sellers are Amazon's single greatest revenue generator for all its retail sales. It's incentivized to help such brand owners make money, since that's a win-win-win: The seller wins with a sale, Amazon wins via referral fees for facilitating the sale and the shopper wins for getting the best product for the best value.

Another future-bankable asset for the Seattle-headquartered giant is that when shoppers trust Amazon, that faith transfers to the often consumer-unknown branded products it sells (and that shoppers can also lean on Amazon reviews to help further validate product choices). In 2020, a survey published by Statista asked U.S. consumers, "How often do you use Amazon to discover new products or brands?" Over half of respondents said they use the site "sometimes" to do just that. An additional 23.6% said they use Amazon "frequently" to discover new products or brands. That means hundreds of millions of shoppers are open to and buy from new brands there, so vast potential is there.

Related: Why You Should Start (or Buy) a Fulfillment by Amazon Business in 2021

Seth Kniep

CEO of Just One Dime

Seth Kniep is the co-founder of Just One Dime, an ecommerce company that has trained over 10,000 entrepreneurs in over 150 countries, 27 of whom are multi-millionaires today. Today, his team manages over 100 million in annual revenue for name brands and silent investors on the Amazon platform.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Social Media

Here's How I Determine If I'm Getting Value Out of X (and How You Can, Too)

Don't let low-value accounts and promotional material bog down your time on X (formerly Twitter). Here are some strategies to curate content, engage with quality people and maximize your time.

Business News

'This Year Almost Broke Me': Tom Schwartz Reveals 'Scandoval' Almost Shut Down His Restaurant After Losing 80% of His Business

As Bravo's "Vanderpump Rules" ends its 11th season, longtime cast member, Tom Schwartz, and Schwartz & Sandy's business partner, Greg Morris, open up about how public scandal almost shuttered their restaurant — and how they kept it afloat.

Health & Wellness

How This CEO Turned 99 No's Into a $500 Million Sleep Tech Powerhouse

Eight Sleep's Matteo Franceschetti reveals his journey from nightmarish rejection to dream-like motivation.

Buying / Investing in Business

How to Recognize Money-Making Trends in The Market — And Boost Your Profits

These patterns and seasonal changes in the markets, especially over a set number of years, can provide some investors with an interesting map that may help their portfolios perform well all year long or even be a key to long-term riches.

Leadership

5 Ways to Spend Less Time in Meetings Each Week

Want to get more done — and be happier at work? Spend less time in meetings. Here are five ways to do that.