The Economist July 10th 2021 Business 61TheJassyage
It wasn’ta badstartforAndyJassy,whoonJuly5thsucceededJeffBezosasbossof
Amazon.Thenextdaythesharepriceofthedigitalempire,whichMrBezoshadled
sincefoundingitasanonlinebookshopin1994,rosebynearly5%,anditsmarketvalue
jumpedabove$1.8trn.MrJassy’sundoubtedmanagerialvirtuesprobablyweren’tthe
reason.ThelikeliercauseisthePentagon’sdecisiontobina cloudcomputingdealwith
Microsoft.The$10bncontract,whichAmazonhadchallenged,arguingitwasunfairly
awardedtoitsrival,isinsteadtobesharedbythetwotechgiantsandpossiblyothers.
Still,ifthenewceoistomaintainMrBezos’ssterlingrecord,a littleluckwon’thurt.Primemover
Amazon,$trnSources:Bloomberg;TheEconomist *Alsoreported as AprilJul
1995*
First
book
soldMay 1997
Initial
public
oeringSep 1997
One-click
shopping
launchMar 2000
Dotcombubble
burstsOct 1998 Launchoffirstinternational
sitesinBritainandGermanyNov 2000
Marketplace
launchMar 2006
AmazonWebServices
(AWS)launch
Feb 2005 Prime
memberships
openAug 2007 AmazonFresh
grocerylaunchinSeattleNov 2007
FirstKindle
e-readerNov 2010 Launchof“price
check”barcode-readerappSep 2011 KindleFire
tabletgoesonsaleMar 2012 BuysKivaSystems,
a warehouse-roboticscompanyJun 2014 FirephonelaunchAug 2014 Twitch(video
streamingplatform)acquiredJun 2017 BuysWholeFoodsOct 2018 RaisesminimumwagesinUSandBritainAnnual
netprofitAnnual
revenues191715131109070503200199971995 21Jul 5th 2021 Je Bezos steps down as CEO2.01.51.00.50Market
capitalisationConversationalcommerce
Chat-up lines
M
essagingisanintimatemediumfor
sharing  private  views  and  senti
ments. It is a cocktailparty whisper in dig
ital  form,  as  one  user  of  WhatsApp,  a  ser
vice owned by Facebook, put it. Now some
of the world’s biggest brands are venturing
into this personal realm. Aware of the limi
tations  of  conventional  communication
channels like call centres and email, a few
years  ago  firms  started  using  WhatsApp
and its sister app, Facebook Messenger, as
well as Apple’s iMessage and independent
apps such as Line.
The  pandemic  gave  all  such  apps  a  fil
lip.  Messaging  on  Instagram,  Facebook’s
photosharing app, and on Messenger rose
by 40%. Fourfifths of mobiledevice time
is now spent on chat apps. Companies can
usually be relied upon to go where custom
ers are, so messaging has become vital for
business, not just experimental, says Javier
Mata,  founder  of  Yalo,  a  startup  whose
technology  connects  firms  to  messaging
platforms.  Firms  once  used  them  chiefly
for customer service. Now they want to get
people to buy stuff via chat, as hundreds of
millions of Chinese do on WeChat, owned
by Tencent, China’s mightiest tech giant.
Because many popular messaging plat
forms are encrypted, data on transactions
are  hard  to  come  by.  But  growth  is  un
doubtedly  happening.  Over  1bn  people
now interact with businesses via chat, not
counting  China.  Each  day  175m  people
send a message to WhatsApp business ac
counts  (WhatsApp  channels  designed  for
companies). Yalo’s customers include con
sumergoods  giants  such  as  CocaCola,
Nestlé,  PepsiCo  and  Unilever,  as  well  as
Walmart,  the  world’s  biggest  retailer.  Ap
ple Business Chat, which started in 2017, is
used by Home Depot diystores, Hilton ho
tels  and  Burberry,  a  fashion  brand.  Face
book’s  roster  includes  Sephora,  a  cosmet
ics  retailer,  and  ikea,  a  furniture  giant.
lvmh,  a  French  luxurygoods  conglomer
ate, is testing out messaging, according to
Jeroen  van  Glabbeek,  chief  executive  of
cm.com,  a  Dutch  conversationalcom
merce platform. 
“Ccommerce” is already entrenched in
Asia  and  Latin  America,  where  spotty  ac
cess  to  broadband  and  highquality  de
vices puts ecommerce and companyspe
cific apps out of reach for many. Now West
ern  consumers  are  beginning  to  embrace
the  ease,  speed,  personalisation  and  con
venience  of  messaging.  For  firms,  the  re
turnoninvestmentseemshigherformes
saging  than  for  callcentre  exchanges  or
email  chains,  says  Emile  Litvak,  head  of
business messaging at Facebook. 
Boosters  of  business  messaging  claim
that  ccommerce  will  displace  ecom
merce within a decade or two. But messag
ing is best understood as a refinement of e
commerce,  and  a  sibling  of  “social  com
merce”  (shopping  on  social  media).  Most
messaging  conversations  between  large
firms and consumers start from corporate
ecommerce  websites  equipped  with  a
“click to message” button. Plenty begin on
social networks.
In  some  ways  ccommerce  is  a  throw
back to the past. Apart from mail order and
its  modern  guise,  online  shopping,  trade
has  relied  on  conversation  for  millennia.
Yet business messaging does have new ele
ments.  It  is  more  personalised  than  sms
marketing, which has itself had success inrecent years in America and Europe. Auto
matic  messaging  is  moving  beyond  rudi
mentary  chatbots,  which  have  been
around  since  the  mid2010s.  Artificial  in
telligence (ai) is getting better at unstruc
tured  exchanges  that  shoppers  used  to
have with expertretail assistants.
For  now,  says  Marc  Lore,  who  led  Wal
mart’s digital efforts, a lot of business mes
saging  has  humans  in  the  loop.  In  future,
he  reckons,  aiwill  be  able  to  answer  cus
tomer requests as fuzzy as “get me a birth
day  toy  for  a  fiveyearold  around  science
education  for  roughly  $40”,  suggesting
choices and completing the transaction in
seconds. And when aigets better at natural
dialogue, as it will after learning from hu
man  interactions,  consumertobusiness
messaging  may  sound  if  not  exactly  like
J.A.R.V.I.S, Tony Stark’s digital butler in the
Marvel comics, then close enough.
Until  that  time,  firms  must  tread  deli
cately. Full of family and friends, chat apps
are emotional spaces, says Robert Bennett,
ceoof Rehab, an agency that helps brands
reach  consumers  digitally.  Try  to  sell
someone  yoga  leggings  after  an  exchange
with  their  mother,  he  says,  and  your  firm
might find itself deleted faster than an ex.
But  get  it  right—think  gentle  reminderof
evening  meditation  from  a  purveyor of
herbal teas—and the rewards look tasty.nCompanies are getting up close and personal with consumers in messaging apps
