Silicon Valley expects you to start a company by finding a problem you have yourself, solving it, and it being a problem for others. But Amazon’s story was basically, “I did the math on this new thing’s growth, then systematically found the ideal product to play into it.”
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Would love to hear if either of them had other recommendations. Oh also all the shareholder lettershttps://medium.com/@austenallred/every-amazon-shareholder-letter-as-downloadable-pdf-4eb2ae886018 …
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There isn’t much that’s directly about Amazon. A good place to start is the shareholder letters and
@AustenAllred’s links above. Past that, it’s more about abstract theory: - The Outsiders by Thorndike - Origin of Wealth by@EricBeinhocker - The Goal by Goldratt -
Thanks Austen and Zack, will check those out. Going to start with the shareholder letters.
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They're sooooo good. I recommend rereading the first one every year, it's mad inspiring.
@stratechery's stuff on Amazon is also pretty good, and if you read it in chronological order you get to see Ben make a wrong call and correct it, which is neat -
The origin of wealth is also very, very good
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A couple more in this general category of thought (which is effectively radical decentralization): - Antifragile by Nassim Taleb - Team of Teams by Stanley McChrystal - Good Profit by Charles Koch - Buffets letters to shareholders ;)
End of conversation
New conversation -
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Don’t miss the top reviews for The Everything Store on http://Amazon.com itself. Some pretty senior folks weigh in pretty extensively with their takes on what is fact vs fiction.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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