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Paul Misener of
Amazon.com Speaks at 2005 Netcentricity
Conference
Smith’s
Fifth Annual Netcentricity Conference,
“Exploring the Intersection of Social
and Digital Networks,” featured keynote
speaker Paul E. Misener, vice president
for global public policy at Amazon.com.
The conference was held on April 29 at
the Smith School and was sponsored by
Smith's
Center for Electronic Markets and
Enterprises (CEME).
The existence of the Internet has
resulted in major changes in business,
society and the economy, and companies
today are doing things that weren’t
possible five years ago because of the
availability of information, and the
rapidity with which information can be
acquired. This year’s Netcentricity
Conference focused on the interplay of
digital and strategic networks
connecting organizations and the social
networks made up of the people within
those organizations, examining the
effects of the interaction from a
strategy perspective.
“The information that flows between
networks, both digital and social, have
the potential to make the market more
transparent, and therefore more
perfect—and more competitive,” said Anil
Gupta, Ralph J. Tyser Professor of
Strategy and Organization, chair of the
management and organization department
at Smith, and co-chair of the
Netcentricity Conference, with Ritu
Agarwal, Robert H. Smith Dean’s Chair in
Information Systems, and Joseph Bailey,
research associate professor of decision
and information technologies.
Amazon.com, an Internet-only company
with no bricks-and-mortar stores, has
taken advantage of the opportunities
offered by the Internet to become not
just a vehicle for commerce but a
complex online community connected in
myriad ways. “Netcentricity really is
the core of our business,” said Misener.
“Computers used to be instruments of
calculation, but now they are
instruments of communication.”
Amazon
has had remarkable success in its
strategies for building its own social
network. One successful strategy has
been to encourage other retailers and
service providers, called associates, to
link directly to Amazon from their Web
sites by providing a small fee for
purchases made from the associate’s
site. This brings the associate’s social
network into contact with Amazon.
Associates receive a small commission
for purchases made through the link. For
example, books offered on the
Smith
School site contain a link to purchase
the book at Amazon.com, and the
commission for purchases made through
this link is then donated to the
school’s scholarship fund.
Individuals also have the opportunity
to form their own networks on Amazon
through a variety of self-created lists
and book and item reviews. Amazon does
post editorial reviews, but it also
allows customers to post reviews, even
when the review is distinctly
uncomplimentary. Amazon also allows
people to review the reviewers; people
who read reviews can rate whether or not
the review was helpful, allowing
customers to see whose reviews are rated
most highly and are considered most
helpful by others on the site.
Misener compared this type of
communication to the over-the-back-fence
trading of information that used to be a
common part of community life. “This is
the kind of thing you’d have in your
neighborhood if you just knew who to
ask,” said Misener.
“Netcentricity can be an
observation—‘this is happening;’ or it
can be an aspiration—‘this is what we
want to happen;’ or it can be an
aphorism—‘this must happen,’” said
Misener. “Netcentricity is really the
core of Amazon’s business. We see that
it is already happening, and we continue
to aspire.”
The 2005 Netcentricity Conference
also included forums on virtual
communities in health care, public
policy issues, and the impact of mobile
technology.
►2005 Conference
Agenda |