Inside Amazon's culture of scaling, agility and innovation (2024)

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Amazon’s culture of scaling, agility and innovation is the secret to its phenomenal growth.

When you look at Amazon’s record performance in 2020, with annual revenue up 38% to $386 billion, a yearly increase of over $100 billion, and net profit up to 84% for the year compared to the previous year, it’s difficult for most business leaders to comprehend how they have been able to to do it. How have they been able to scale and maintain their culture of agility and innovation?

Amazon has enabled continuous transformation, innovation, and agility and scaled to an organisation of over 1 million employees. What can we learn from Amazon about their combination of culture, ways of working and technology that has enabled them to continue to scale and innovate?

Here are some insights about Amazon’s ongoing transformation journey of all its different businesses.

The mission

A favourite quote from Jeff Bezos is:

“Agility is the only sustainable advantage because everything else people can copy; they can replicate it. Nothing else is sustainable.”

And that belief really was what drove him when he started building and scaling Amazon. He intentionally designed an organisation of small, empowered teams in all the different businesses. These teams are driven by a culture of innovation and agility that is centred on the customer. Amazon’s mission is to be the earth’s most customer-centric business.

The aim is always to get to market quickly with what they think customers need, expose the product or service to the customers, get feedback and then iterate. Basically, it’s reinventing with customers. This whole culture of customer-centricity is a key part of how Amazon has developed and scaled.

Innovating by failing fast

Amazon’s culture and their ways of working promote constant innovation, and constant failure. Amazon sees failure as the necessary flip side of innovation. If you’re not failing, you’re not pushing the boundary. If all experiments succeed, they are not really experiments.

This is quite revealing because most companies don’t talk about failing. When you think about your own company culture, think about whether it encourages or punishes failure?

Building with customers

Every single employee in every part of the business at Amazon is expected to be innovative and agile. Amazon very carefully hires what they call ‘builders,’ people who work backward from the customer. They aim to hire builders not just for the immediate role but for the long-term talent pool that they believe can work in many different businesses and functions in the group.

Each Amazon business is always focused on time to value of a new capability. Amazon creates a new product or service to address a customer need, expecting that the first instance will be roughly right. But then continually iterates it based on customer feedback.

Amazon in effect crowdsources, iterating and quickly reinventing with customers. If you remember what the original Kindle was like, you’ll see it’s changed out of all recognition from that first model.

Small, empowered teams

Every business function is also expected to be innovative and agile, and each function is treated like a customer. Take Amazon finance, as an example.

Amazon finance is expected to work backward from its internal customers and reinvent. To enable this Amazon aligns technology teams within finance to build solutions for the internal customers of the finance function.

Treating internal functions as customers and applying the same strategies used for external customers allows Amazon to keep evolving their processes and business functions to drive efficiencies. This is how Amazon has been able to scale so quickly and maintain innovation.

This internal alignment strengthens the company culture and ways of working and ultimately benefits the external customer.

Customers at the centre

The key learning here is the relentless focus on putting the customer at the centre of everything. This culture and way of working fosters innovation close to the customer rather than driving behaviour by cascading strategy and objectives down the organisation structure.

In conclusion, their small, empowered, customer-centric teams with access to technology can then continually iterate the products and services to maintain business agility.

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Andrew Salmon

A true digital veteran with over 20 years’ experience working in the UK and international digital markets. He has a proven track record as a successful business consultant and senior executive in strategic planning, development and execution.

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By Andrew Salmon|2023-01-10T11:50:28+00:00Wednesday, May 19, 2021|Categories: Blog, , |Tags: agility, Amazon, culture, customer, customer-centric, scale innovation, ways of working|0 Comments

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Inside Amazon's culture of scaling, agility and innovation (2024)

FAQs

What are the Amazon beliefs for building a strong culture of innovation? ›

We are creating powerful self-service platforms that allow thousands of people to boldly experiment and accomplish things that would otherwise be impossible or impractical. We will make bold rather than timid investment decisions where we see a sufficient probability of gaining market leadership advantages.

How did Amazon build a culture of innovation by working backwards? ›

We start with the customer and work backwards from their needs. By digging into their experiences and frustrations and deeply understanding the context behind them, we avoid inventing in isolation, or producing a solution in search of a customer.

How does Amazon describe its culture? ›

Amazon's culture of innovation and scale powers world-changing ideas and creates a safe, inclusive environment that allows employees to do their best work.

How would you describe Amazon's organizational culture? ›

Amazon's organizational culture is characterized by four key ingredients: pride in operational excellence, an obsession with customers, long-term thinking, and an eagerness to invent.

What are the four pillars of Amazon's culture of innovation? ›

Uncovering Amazon's culture of innovation

Working backwards and innovating on behalf of customers is in Amazon's DNA. Learn more about our unique culture and how we innovate through four distinct elements: Culture, Mechanisms, Architecture, and Organization.

What are the core values of Amazon culture? ›

Amazon is guided by four principles: customer obsession rather than competitor focus, passion for invention, commitment to operational excellence, and long-term thinking.

What is Amazon's approach to innovation? ›

At Amazon, the focus on our customers isn't an idle tenet; it is the very root of our approach to innovation. Amazon's mission is to be Earth's most customer-centric company, and the very first of our 16 Leadership Principles—Customer Obsession—states that, “Leaders start with the customer and work backwards.

What type of innovation strategy does Amazon use? ›

#1) Amazon's 'Day 1' innovation strategy

In short, the 'Day 1' strategy involves keeping the sense of dynamism and adventure that defines new enterprises, and avoiding the lack of responsiveness that can set in within established systems and business models over time.

What type of innovation did Amazon use? ›

While we have innovated the standard delivery van, we also have designed and built an autonomous electric drone system through Prime Air that can deliver packages under 5 pounds in less than an hour from click to delivery.

What has Amazon done to improve working conditions? ›

Investing in safety improvements

The progress shown above is the result of investments of more than $1 billion in safety initiatives, technologies, and programs since 2019. We've also continued to invest in our robotics that help make our operations safer by reducing employees' workload.

What are 5 facts about Amazon? ›

But there are also many under-the-radar fun facts about Amazon's current ventures—such as its cashier-less stores and drone delivery.
  • Amazon Held Its Meetings at Barnes and Noble. ...
  • Amazon Launched as an Auction Site. ...
  • It Was Also an Early Competitor of Yahoo! ...
  • Amazon Users Can Donate to Charities When they Buy.

Does Amazon have a strong sense of purpose and the culture to support that purpose? ›

Our unique Amazon culture, described by our Leadership Principles, helps us relentlessly pursue our mission of being Earth's most customer-centric company, best employer, and safest place to work.

How do you answer describe the culture of a company? ›

Use your organization's mission statement to inform how you describe your company's current or ideal culture. For example, a company whose mission statement is "to create a better everyday life for customers" may describe its culture as friendly, motivating and customer-focused.

How do you describe a company's culture in one word? ›

Let's start with nine positive words that could describe your company culture:
  1. Agile. An agile company culture is one that allows its employees to work in the way that suits them best. ...
  2. Autonomous. ...
  3. Inclusive. ...
  4. Collaborative. ...
  5. Empathetic. ...
  6. Innovative. ...
  7. Motivating. ...
  8. Casual.
Jan 9, 2024

How would you describe Amazon's industry? ›

Amazon.com, Inc., doing business as Amazon (/ˈæməzɒn/, AM-ə-zon; UK also /ˈæməzən/, AM-ə-zən), is an American multinational technology company, engaged in e-commerce, cloud computing, online advertising, digital streaming, and artificial intelligence.

What are the beliefs of Amazon company? ›

Amazon is guided by four principles: customer obsession rather than competitor focus, passion for invention, commitment to operational excellence, and long-term thinking.

Does Amazon have an innovative culture? ›

Founder Jeff Bezos's innovation strategy is a key reason why Amazon remains on top, and is often named as the world's most innovative company.

How does Amazon support innovation? ›

By working backwards from our people's needs, we develop mechanisms that reinforce our core values so that our people can deliver customer-centric innovation consistently, at scale and speed.

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