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the Scale of Amazon explained

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As Amazon continues its takeover of the retail sector, the scale at which it operates continues to impress. Back in late 2016 we examined the extraordinary from a market valuation perspective, which showed that the eCommerce giant was worth more than most brick and mortar retailers put together. The infographic from 16Best continues along that same thread, except this time focusing on Amazon from more of an operational perspective.

AT A GLANCE

Amazon has more than 304 million users, and 3 billion products selling on their 11 marketplaces – and every day, 1.3 million new products are added. The company has a 43.5% market share of U.S. eCommerce spending. It’s no surprise then, that the average customer spends $700 per year, and that 34.7 items are shipped every single second.

SHIPPING AND LOGISTICS

Amazon has 45,000 warehouse robots that work in the company’s 77 million square feet of warehouse space. This is equivalent to the size of 1,336 football fields.

The biggest single warehouse is in Schertz, TX, just outside of San Antonia, which alone measures 1,264,200 square feet. Warehouses this size can ship up to 1 million items per day during the holiday rush.

While They spent $7.2 billion on shipping in 2016, it’s now looking to bring down the cost per unit shipped by using drone deliveries. The company anticipates to have 450,000 drones in its fleet by 2020.

AMAZON PRIME AND PARTNERS

A whopping 64% of U.S. households have Amazon Prime, which has proven to be a lucrative model for Amazon since those subscribers spend $1,300 per year on the site. Impressively, there are 40 million items eligible for Prime, and 8,000 cities where same-day shipping is a possibility.

Amazon Partners also play a big role in the ecosystem. There are 2 million sellers, and 70,000 of them have sales of $100,000 or more per year using Amazon as a selling platform.

Why do sellers use this platform? About 47% of sellers say it’s because it gives them access to new customers, while 65% say it’s to increase sales.

The top five categories for Amazon sellers: Clothing, Shoes & Jewelry, Electronics, Home & Kitchen, Sports & Outdoors, and Books.

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