Amazon Is Quietly Shipping Non-Amazon Orders To Compete With FedEx, UPS - YouTube

Channel: CNBC

[2]
Amazon is on a spending spree to grow its shipping business and compete with FedEx and UPS. It's increased capacity of its in-house logistics
[9]
network by 50% year-over-year, using all that growth to get into the big business of third-party shipping. That's right, Amazon may be the carrier
[18]
delivering to your door even when you didn't order on the world's biggest e-commerce site.
[22]
They want to be a new kind of U.S. Postal Service where everything can get everywhere, but also quickly.
[28]
In 2014, Amazon started building its global transportation network from scratch. Seven years and 10 billion deliveries later, Amazon now has
[37]
400,000 drivers worldwide, 40,000 semitrucks, 30,000 vans and a fleet of 70+ planes operating out of its very own air hub that just opened in
[47]
Northern Kentucky in August.
[49]
I don't think anybody in the industry would be surprised if this enormous capacity that Amazon has built out, if they use that to, you know, offer
[58]
shipping service that would compete directly with somebody like UPS or FedEx.
[62]
Although Amazon still depends on UPS and the Postal Service for more than a quarter of its deliveries, analysts say this reliance is shrinking.
[70]
Instead, Amazon is competing with them, already offering shipping services for non-Amazon orders in the U.K.
[77]
Eventually they were going to offer it to someone else. That's just how the system works. Amazon's usually more efficient than anyone else. Amazon's
[84]
usually focusing on the right numbers, and so they're usually able to get cheaper than everyone else, too.
[88]
CNBC headed to an online merchant conference in Las Vegas to talk to former Amazon employees and current sellers about how third-party shipping is
[96]
likely to be the behemoth's next big venture.
[102]
Back in 1994, when it was just a website selling books, Amazon says Jeff Bezos hand-delivered the first customer packages to a Seattle post office
[110]
himself. As business grew, it relied on UPS, the Postal Service and to a lesser degree FedEx for shipping.
[117]
In the old days, Amazon worked with FedEx, UPS, they needed help delivering packages, right, as quickly as possible. And they didn't want to disappoint
[124]
Prime members. Nowadays, Amazon has way more planes than they used to. They've got vans in every neighborhood.
[130]
Now Amazon's got 300 million customers in 200+ countries. Former Amazon Product Safety Program Manager Rachel Greer says by 2011 online shopping
[140]
volume was overwhelming even the most established nationwide shippers.
[144]
It turned out that UPS couldn't handle the volume. So at that point, our VP was saying we can't handle this, we can't have this happen. Amazon cannot
[153]
be hamstrung in our growth by a third-party service provider. We have to solve this ourselves.
[159]
By 2014, Amazon says it wanted better control. So it started developing a global transportation network from scratch to ensure consistent and
[167]
reliable delivery.
[168]
It really hasn't taken them that long to build that capability. It's a great moat around their business, right? Building a logistics network is a
[179]
really hard thing to do. And other companies, you know, won't be able to easily follow in their footsteps relative to that.
[188]
In 2019, Amazon was delivering less than 47% of its own packages. Now in 2021, that number has soared to 72%. Similar growth has happened with
[198]
warehouses. In 2018, 51% of the U.S. population lived within an hour of an Amazon warehouse. Now that's up to 77%. To get there, Amazon's Q1 capital
[209]
expenditures, which includes logistics expansion grew by a whopping 80% over the previous year.
[215]
I don't think they had a choice. They knew that it was going to be a challenge for UPS and FedEx to do the kind of investment required in order
[222]
to meet that standard for their customers.
[224]
In 2019, Amazon changed the game when it made one-day shipping the norm. That same year, FedEx announced it would not renew its partnership with
[231]
Amazon. But Amazon still depends on UPS and the Postal Service. At least for now.
[236]
USPS delivers to every zip code every small town in America, and Amazon built its strategy around taking away the high-volume centers.
[244]
According to one investigation, Amazon has already begun quietly transporting cargo on its planes for the Postal Service. USPS isn't exactly
[252]
known right now for being on time or efficient. So it may be that Amazon's the better option in those cases. And in May last year, Amazon launched a
[261]
logistics-as-a-service program in the U.K. Researchers from DePaul University predict something similar will launch here in the U.S. in the
[269]
next 18 months. While Morgan Stanley predicted it could happen this year. Analysts say Amazon will likely focus on shipping from retailers directly
[278]
to consumers rather than trying to replicate the vast array of services offered by FedEx and UPS
[284]
Well they're not going to be just this blanket carrier that will deliver whatever package that you want them to, to whatever address. Amazon is sort
[292]
of cherry-picking the routes they want to run and sort of the parcel sizes they want to deliver.
[298]
Like all carriers, Amazon experienced significant shipping delays during the pandemic. Yet the number of Prime members continued to soar, reaching
[306]
200 million in 2020. And as the number of customers grew, so too did Amazon's spend on logistics. Perhaps the biggest investment so far is the
[315]
new $1.5 billion Amazon air hub in Kentucky.
[318]
Planes were always part of the plan because, you know, if you're trying to do two-day delivery, there's just certain things you got to use planes for.
[325]
Amazon launched its air cargo division in 2016, contracting with several carriers to fly packages closer to Amazon's sprawling system of 185+ global
[335]
warehouses. The Kentucky hub has been in development for four+ years, with Bezos attending the groundbreaking in 2019.
[343]
It's going to let us get packages to customers faster. And that's a big deal.
[348]
The new 600-acre Amazon hub at the Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport includes an 800,000-square-foot robotic sort center.
[356]
A smaller 20,000-square-foot Amazon air hub opened in Germany last November. But as early as 2018, analysts were calling Amazon Air a
[365]
competitive risk to UPS and FedEx. By 2019, it had 50 planes. But it also faced the risk of pilot strikes, with one union saying Amazon paid pilots
[375]
33% less than they got paid to fly similar cargo planes for UPS and FedEx.
[380]
I don't believe that consumers will ever go backwards from where we are. But that doesn't mean it has to put this kind of pressure on the system.
[388]
It's going to take a lot of coordination between the big companies, Amazons of the world, and our contractors to build a system that's both fair,
[397]
equitable and sustainable.
[398]
After six+ years of labor negotiations, many Amazon pilots now have a new contract with improved pay rates and work rules. Amazon now says it leases
[408]
or owns more than 70 aircraft that fly to 35+ destinations in the U.S. and Europe. In comparison, FedEx operates a fleet of 680 aircraft and UPS has
[419]
576. At 70+ planes, Amazon's reach is still smaller, but its rapid growth sets it apart. DePaul researchers found Amazon has expanded from 122 daily
[430]
flights in August 2020 to 140 in February 2021. Predicting Amazon will have 200 planes by 2028. An earlier key to faster delivery was Amazon's big
[442]
investment in the most expensive part of the shipping process: getting a package that last mile to your door. Some of this is done by Amazon Flex
[450]
drivers, individual gig workers who make between $18 and $25 an hour driving routes on demand. Another 115,000 Amazon drivers work for Delivery
[460]
Service Partners, or DSPs, small independent companies that contract exclusively with Amazon. The DSP program started in 2018, with Amazon
[469]
offering $10,000 to incentivize current Amazon employees, veterans, Black, Latinx and Native American entrepreneurs to launch a DSP. There's now more
[478]
than 2,000 DSPs in the U.S.
[481]
Ultimately, it's a very low cost structure compared to the competitors. And so if you're a seller, and you don't have a personal issue with some of the
[489]
stories that are coming out, which are growing in number, unfortunately, then it's a real cost advantage for you.
[496]
But DSP drivers have voiced big concerns lately, from cameras recording inside vans at all times, to running stop signs and urinating in bottles to
[504]
keep up the pace.
[505]
Which is definitely disgusting, you know, getting into the vans the next day and seeing somebody's pee bottle sitting behind the seat, or sitting in
[516]
the cupholders.
[517]
Regardless, Amazon's army of drivers and branded vehicles is only growing. It purchased 100,000 electric vans from Rivian in 2019. They're being
[526]
tested in 16 cities now, with 10,000 of them scheduled to hit the road next year.
[531]
I think there are some growing pains there. But once they sort out some of those issues, it'll be more attractive as a side hustle for people the same
[537]
way Instacart was or Uber driving is.
[540]
For its growing number of international shipments, Amazon uses ocean liners, especially between China and the U.S. For domestic cross-country
[548]
shipments, Amazon has 40,000 Prime-branded semitruck trailers, and it's got powerful algorithms that know when one of those trucks won't be full.
[556]
Very few companies are filling in an entire 53-foot truck to ship somewhere. If you've got all these trucks running around and they're only
[564]
operating at 20-30% capacity, Amazon's smart enough to know hey, we should be filling these trucks up any way we can to maximize, you know, the
[573]
capital that we've invested in these things.
[575]
Keith Gregory's vitamin and supplement company is based in a 3,500-person town in Oregon. It does about $4 million of annual sales on Amazon.
[583]
They've reached out to us very aggressively trying to get us to work with them for our shipping arrangements, but not just for our own branded
[590]
products. They're interested in LTL and freight for our other segments of our business as well: the the pieces that UPS and FedEx are currently
[598]
handling for us.
[600]
The Amazon Freight program lets sellers like Gregory take advantage of LTL, less than load truck space, at discounted rates, while allowing Amazon to
[609]
make money on otherwise wasted space. Gregory just started using the program and says Amazon charges up to $17,00 less than FedEx or UPS Freight
[619]
for some of his routes from Oregon to Southern California.
[621]
They certainly seem to want to own the market. And, you know, for us being in a rural community, the fact that somebody is willing to cater to us and
[629]
they're willing to accommodate pickup schedules and not just say, okay, we'll be there every day at 3:30 is also very attractive to us. Not just
[637]
the rate piece, but the fact that they're also willing to, you know, use their vast fleet of vehicles to help us with our logistics as well, which
[645]
UPS and FedEx are not cooperative in that sense with us.
[649]
Amazon has this odd imbalance where they have an enormous amount of goods going inbound to Amazon warehouses, but then very often those trucks are
[660]
leaving empty going other places. Again, a kind of a classic Amazon thing to do: by taking that internal service and then making it available to
[671]
anyone to use externally, they're able to, you know, now have more revenue.
[678]
Many Amazon sellers like Bernie Thompson, pay to use a service called Fulfilled by Amazon, or FBA, where sellers store inventory in an Amazon
[686]
warehouse and rely on Amazon to pack and ship out customer orders. Amazon also offers FBA service for orders not made on Amazon.com.
[695]
There were points in time in our company's existence where really Amazon shipped 100% of our orders for all channels, not just an Amazon, but also
[702]
on eBay, Newegg, Walmart, Google.
[706]
Amazon calls this multi-channel fulfillment. Thompson uses it for many of the 120+ consumer electronic products he sells from his warehouse outside
[714]
Seattle.
[715]
So if you go today and buy a Plugable product on eBay, it's actually going to be coming from an Amazon warehouse and very often delivered by an Amazon
[723]
delivery service.
[724]
This explains why some orders from eBay or Walmart and others arrive at your door in Amazon packaging. Although Amazon has tried to solve this with
[733]
varying success,
[734]
Amazon's had on-off programs over the years to fulfill items from the warehouse but have it be in packaging that was not Amazon marked. They've
[743]
never really succeeded at that. Like, we were part of that program, and then we found out that yea, the boxes were blank, but they were using this
[751]
super colorful Amazon marketing Christmas tape. You know, and these were being used for Walmart orders.
[758]
I think the killer feature will be when Amazon is able to do merchant-branded fulfillment. They might be able to slap on or inkjet on
[769]
branded aspects to that fulfillment package so that a customer doesn't understand that this box is being delivered by Amazon and that it's in the
[781]
brand of the merchant.
[782]
So why does Amazon want to take on the expensive behind-the-scenes job of shipping non-Amazon orders? It may in fact help Amazon hold on to its
[791]
reputation for the lowest prices online.
[793]
It might cost me say $3.30 to send an envelope type of product across the country for an Amazon order. That same order, when it's not an Amazon
[805]
order, let's say an eBay order, might be $5.70 or something like that. And so that causes an effect where brands like us, on a $10 product or a $30
[816]
product, you will almost always find the Amazon price lower than the eBay price.
[822]
If they can double, even add 30% more revenue and capacity because they're delivering not just for Amazon customers but for, frankly, the entire
[831]
internet, it does help them get more scale, more costs benefits, especially as you move into more remote areas where they just don't have as much
[841]
Amazon customer volume.
[843]
There was in fact already a program called Amazon Shipping being tested in several U.S. cities last year, until it was shut down at the beginning of
[850]
the pandemic. Amazon drivers would pick up packages from businesses and deliver them to consumers without ever setting foot in a warehouse.
[857]
You'll see this start off in a couple of markets. And you know, they'll tweak it and they'll sort of take some learnings away from those initial
[863]
markets and then they'll expand the program more broadly.
[867]
And if you look at all of the third-party services that they opened up to sellers over the years, including AWS, they've had to become the best in
[875]
the business to service their own. And by bringing in additional revenue streams to help support scale, ultimately brings down cost, creates more of
[886]
a situation where they can gain more market share, more market power, and they are addicted to growth.
[891]
Indeed, Amazon's current shipping expansion is reminiscent of other times it's used immense resources and data to disrupt an industry. Think Prime
[899]
Video and Amazon Web Services.
[901]
I was part of the process for making sure that FBA sellers were compliant more than a decade ago. And they were like, well, we have excess capacity.
[908]
Let's use it. And then when AWS started, we have excess capacity. Let's use it. So of course, if Amazon develops a platform, it works well, and of
[915]
course it's going to be excess capacity, they're going to try to sell it to someone. And Amazon has learned much from its more established shipping
[921]
partners about how to keep costs down. For example, it still primarily outsources costly rural deliveries to USPS and outsources the expensive
[930]
last-mile portion to those small delivery service partner contractors.
[933]
What Amazon is able to do right now is sort of pick off probably the most attractive routes, the most attractive packages, and deliver like to the
[941]
most densely populated areas.
[943]
On the extreme end, some think there's a chance Amazon will try to buy other shippers outright.
[948]
Down the road, I think Amazon will be so big, so powerful and so wealthy, they will simply absorb UPS.
[953]
But one thing is certain. Amazon says it's continuing to spend on logistics, figuring out how to keep climbing to the top of e-commerce and
[961]
beyond.
[961]
Amazon is a company that will unabashedly compete with everyone. They will compete with their customers, they will compete with their partners, and
[969]
they will compete with themselves. And it's not a bad thing. It's just that's part of the secret to Amazon's success.