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The Amazon way: mixing ones and zeros with nuts and bolts

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Manage episode 389636685 series 2497238
内容由Baillie Gifford提供。所有播客内容(包括剧集、图形和播客描述)均由 Baillie Gifford 或其播客平台合作伙伴直接上传和提供。如果您认为有人在未经您许可的情况下使用您的受版权保护的作品,您可以按照此处概述的流程进行操作https://zh.player.fm/legal

Show notes

Amazon and DoorDash take different approaches to bridging the physical and digital worlds. Amazon has built an extensive infrastructure of warehouses, logistics networks and data centres to directly control its operations. DoorDash instead relies on partnerships with restaurants and stores for deliveries, limiting its capital investment. In this podcast, Baillie Gifford investment manager Kirsty Gibson analyses the advantages of each model and how both approaches can pose a disruptive challenge to more traditional businesses.

Amazon and DoorDash exemplify two distinct approaches to rooting a business in both the physical and digital worlds. Amazon has done so by investing deeply in physical infrastructure, including its vast logistics operations and data centres. DoorDash, by contrast, has focused on partnering with others to offer meal and grocery deliveries. Baillie Gifford investment manager Kirsty Gibson explores the merits of each approach and discusses how the two companies and others like them can pose a disruptive challenge.

Background

Kirsty Gibson is an investment manager in Baillie Gifford’s US Equity Growth Team and is joint manager of the American Fund and US Growth Trust.

In this episode of Short Briefings on Long Term Thinking, she explores how a growing number of companies are posing a challenge to incumbents by innovating in both the digital and physical realms. The podcast draws on an interview she gave as part of Baillie Gifford’s Disruption Week 2023 event.

In addition to discussing how Amazon and DoorDash put this into practice, Gibson also discusses the chemicals maker Solugen, self-driving lorries pioneer Aurora and electric car maker Rivian, among others.

Resources:

Where software meets steel

Disruption Week 2023 articles and videos

Growth waves: supporting companies and spotting opportunities

Past podcasts

Timecodes:

00:00 Introduction

1:30 Historical background

4:21 Capital-intensive and capital-light approaches

5:31 How Amazon blends its physical and digital operations

8:33 Rivian’s electric pickup trucks

9:57 Solugen: making chemicals with software

13:39 DoorDash’s capital-light approach

15:45 DashMart distribution centres

17:28 Aurora’s autonomous trucking business model

20:30 Reinvesting in Meta

23:25 Investing with conviction

24:18 Ginkgo Bioworks’ potential

Follow us via:

Twitter

LinkedIn

Companies mentioned include:

Alphabet

Amazon

Aurora Innovation

DoorDash

Ginkgo Bioworks

Meta

Netflix

Rivian

Solugen

Tesla

Twilio

  continue reading

67集单集

Artwork
icon分享
 
Manage episode 389636685 series 2497238
内容由Baillie Gifford提供。所有播客内容(包括剧集、图形和播客描述)均由 Baillie Gifford 或其播客平台合作伙伴直接上传和提供。如果您认为有人在未经您许可的情况下使用您的受版权保护的作品,您可以按照此处概述的流程进行操作https://zh.player.fm/legal

Show notes

Amazon and DoorDash take different approaches to bridging the physical and digital worlds. Amazon has built an extensive infrastructure of warehouses, logistics networks and data centres to directly control its operations. DoorDash instead relies on partnerships with restaurants and stores for deliveries, limiting its capital investment. In this podcast, Baillie Gifford investment manager Kirsty Gibson analyses the advantages of each model and how both approaches can pose a disruptive challenge to more traditional businesses.

Amazon and DoorDash exemplify two distinct approaches to rooting a business in both the physical and digital worlds. Amazon has done so by investing deeply in physical infrastructure, including its vast logistics operations and data centres. DoorDash, by contrast, has focused on partnering with others to offer meal and grocery deliveries. Baillie Gifford investment manager Kirsty Gibson explores the merits of each approach and discusses how the two companies and others like them can pose a disruptive challenge.

Background

Kirsty Gibson is an investment manager in Baillie Gifford’s US Equity Growth Team and is joint manager of the American Fund and US Growth Trust.

In this episode of Short Briefings on Long Term Thinking, she explores how a growing number of companies are posing a challenge to incumbents by innovating in both the digital and physical realms. The podcast draws on an interview she gave as part of Baillie Gifford’s Disruption Week 2023 event.

In addition to discussing how Amazon and DoorDash put this into practice, Gibson also discusses the chemicals maker Solugen, self-driving lorries pioneer Aurora and electric car maker Rivian, among others.

Resources:

Where software meets steel

Disruption Week 2023 articles and videos

Growth waves: supporting companies and spotting opportunities

Past podcasts

Timecodes:

00:00 Introduction

1:30 Historical background

4:21 Capital-intensive and capital-light approaches

5:31 How Amazon blends its physical and digital operations

8:33 Rivian’s electric pickup trucks

9:57 Solugen: making chemicals with software

13:39 DoorDash’s capital-light approach

15:45 DashMart distribution centres

17:28 Aurora’s autonomous trucking business model

20:30 Reinvesting in Meta

23:25 Investing with conviction

24:18 Ginkgo Bioworks’ potential

Follow us via:

Twitter

LinkedIn

Companies mentioned include:

Alphabet

Amazon

Aurora Innovation

DoorDash

Ginkgo Bioworks

Meta

Netflix

Rivian

Solugen

Tesla

Twilio

  continue reading

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