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Zappos CEO Letter to Employees

17th August 2009

Date: Wed, 22 Jul 2009
From: Tony Hsieh (CEO – Zappos.com)
To: All Zappos Employees
Subject: Zappos and Amazon

Please set aside 20 minutes to carefully read this entire email. (My apologies for the occasional use of formal-sounding language, as parts of it are written in a particular way for legal reasons.)

Today is a big day in Zappos history.

This morning, our board approved and we signed what’s known as a “definitive agreement”, in which all of the existing shareholders and investors of Zappos (there are over 100) will be exchanging their Zappos stock for Amazon stock. Once the exchange is done, Amazon will become the only shareholder of Zappos stock.

Over the next few days, you will probably read headlines that say “Amazon acquires Zappos” or “Zappos sells to Amazon”. While those headlines are technically correct, they don’t really properly convey the spirit of the transaction. (I personally would prefer the headline “Zappos and Amazon sitting in a tree…”)

We plan to continue to run Zappos the way we have always run Zappos — continuing to do what we believe is best for our brand, our culture, and our business. From a practical point of view, it will be as if we are switching out our current shareholders and board of directors for a new one, even though the technical legal structure may be different.

We think that now is the right time to join forces with Amazon because there is a huge opportunity to leverage each other’s strengths and move even faster towards our long term vision. For Zappos, our vision remains the same: delivering happiness to customers, employees, and vendors. We just want to get there faster.

We are excited about doing this for 3 main reasons:

1) We think that there is a huge opportunity for us to really accelerate the growth of the Zappos brand and culture, and we believe that Amazon is the best partner to help us get there faster.

2) Amazon supports us in continuing to grow our vision as an independent entity, under the Zappos brand and with our unique culture.

3) We want to align ourselves with a shareholder and partner that thinks really long term (like we do at Zappos), as well as do what’s in the best interest of our existing shareholders and investors.

I will go through each of the above points in more detail below, but first, let me get to the top 3 burning questions that I’m guessing many of you will have.

TOP 3 BURNING QUESTIONS

Q: Will I still have a job?

As mentioned above, we plan to continue to run Zappos as an independent entity. In legal terminology, Zappos will be a “wholly-owned subsidiary” of Amazon. Your job is just as secure as it was a month ago.

Q: Will the Zappos culture change?

Our culture at Zappos is unique and always evolving and changing, because one of our core values is to Embrace and Drive Change. What happens to our culture is up to us, which has always been true. Just like before, we are in control of our destiny and how our culture evolves.

A big part of the reason why Amazon is interested in us is because they recognize the value of our culture, our people, and our brand. Their desire is for us to continue to grow and develop our culture (and perhaps even a little bit of our culture may rub off on them).

They are not looking to have their folks come in and run Zappos unless we ask them to. That being said, they have a lot of experience and expertise in a lot of areas, so we’re very excited about the opportunities to tap into their knowledge, expertise, and resources, especially on the technology side. This is about making the Zappos brand, culture, and business even stronger than it is today.

Q: Are Tony, Alfred, or Fred leaving?

No, we have no plans to leave. We believe that we are at the very beginning of what’s possible for Zappos and are very excited about the future and what we can accomplish for Zappos with Amazon as our new partner. Part of the reason for doing this is so that we can get a lot more done more quickly.

There is an additional Q&A section at the end of this email, but I wanted to make sure we got the top 3 burning questions out of the way first. Now that we’ve covered those questions, I wanted to share in more detail our thinking behind the scenes that led us to this decision.

First, I want to apologize for the suddenness of this announcement. As you know, one of our core values is to Build Open and Honest Relationships With Communication, and if I could have it my way, I would have shared much earlier that we were in discussions with Amazon so that all employees could be involved in the decision process that we went through along the way. Unfortunately, because Amazon is a public company, there are securities laws that prevented us from talking about this to most of our employees until today.

We’ve been on friendly terms with Amazon for many years, as they have always been interested in Zappos and have always had a great respect for our brand.

Several months ago, they reached out to us and said they wanted to join forces with us so that we could accelerate the growth of our business, our brand, and our culture. When they said they wanted us to continue to build the Zappos brand (as opposed to folding us into Amazon), we decided it was worth exploring what a partnership would look like.

We learned that they truly wanted us to continue to build the Zappos brand and continue to build the Zappos culture in our own unique way. I think “unique” was their way of saying “fun and a little weird.” :)

Over the past several months, as we got to know each other better, both sides became more and more excited about the possibilities for leveraging each other’s strengths. We realized that we are both very customer-focused companies — we just focus on different ways of making our customers happy.

Amazon focuses on low prices, vast selection and convenience to make their customers happy, while Zappos does it through developing relationships, creating personal emotional connections, and delivering high touch (”WOW”) customer service.

We realized that Amazon’s resources, technology, and operational experience had the potential to greatly accelerate our growth so that we could grow the Zappos brand and culture even faster. On the flip side, through the process Amazon realized that it really was the case that our culture is the platform that enables us to deliver the Zappos experience to our customers. Jeff Bezos (CEO of Amazon) made it clear that he had a great deal of respect for our culture and that Amazon would look to protect it.

We asked our board members what they thought of the opportunity. Michael Moritz, who represents Sequoia Capital (one of our investors and board members), wrote the following: “You now have the opportunity to accelerate Zappos’ progress and to make the name and the brand and everything associated with it an enduring, permanent part of peoples’ lives… You are now free to let your imagination roam – and to contemplate initiatives and undertakings that today, in our more constrained setting, we could not take on.”

One of the great things about Amazon is that they are very long term thinkers, just like we are at Zappos. Alignment in very long term thinking is hard to find in a partner or investor, and we felt very lucky and excited to learn that both Amazon and Zappos shared this same philosophy.

All this being said, this was not an easy decision. Over the past several months, we had to weigh all the pros and cons along with all the potential benefits and risks. At the end of the day, we realized that, once it was determined that this was in the best interests of our shareholders, it basically all boiled down to asking ourselves 2 questions:

1) Do we believe that this will accelerate the growth of the Zappos brand and help us fulfill our mission of delivering happiness faster?

2) Do we believe that we will continue to be in control of our own destiny so that we can continue to grow our unique culture? n>

After spending a lot of time with Amazon and getting to know them and understanding their intentions better, we reached the conclusion that the answers to these 2 questions are YES and YES.

The Zappos brand will continue to be separate from the Amazon brand. Although we’ll have access to many of Amazon’s resources, we need to continue to build our brand and our culture just as we always have. Our mission remains the same: delivering happiness to all of our stakeholders, including our employees, our customers, and our vendors. (As a side note, we plan to continue to maintain the relationships that we have with our vendors ourselves, and Amazon will continue to maintain the relationships that they have with their vendors.)

We will be holding an all hands meeting soon to go over all of this in more detail. Please email me any questions that you may have so that we can cover as many as possible during the all hands meeting and/or a follow-up email.

We signed what’s known as the “definitive agreement” today, but we still need to go through the process of getting government approval, so we are anticipating that this transaction actually won’t officially close for at least a few months. We are legally required by the SEC to be in what’s known as a “quiet period”, so if you get any questions related to the transaction from anyone including customers, vendors, or the media, please let them know that we are in a quiet period mandated by law and have them email t...@zappos.com, which is a special email account that Alfred and I will be monitoring.

Alfred and I would like to say thanks to the small group of folks on our finance and legal teams and from our advisors at Morgan Stanley, Fenwick & West, and PricewaterhouseCoopers who have been working really hard, around the clock, and behind the scenes over the last several months to help make all this possible.

Before getting to the Q&A section, I’d also like to thank everyone for taking the time to read this long email and for helping us get to where we are today.

It’s definitely an emotional day for me. The feelings I’m experiencing are similar to what I felt in college on graduation day: excitement about the future mixed with fond memories of the past. The last 10 years were an incredible ride, and I’m excited about what we will accomplish together over the next 10 years as we continue to grow Zappos!

-Tony Hsieh
CEO – Zappos.com

Source: Zappos Corporate Blog

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Jeff Bezos Discusses Amazon’s Acquisition of Zappos.com

17th August 2009

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Jerry Yang’s Investor Presentation

2nd July 2008

Jerry Yang's Presentation

Here’s the link to the presentation Yang will be making on August 1, 2008.    In summary, his presentation will address four key areas:

  • Support the current board of directors
  • Provide details of the Microsoft discussions
  • Clarify benefits of the Google agreement
  • Discuss Yahoo’s Strategic Plan progress
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Yahoo Round 2: Here Comes Icahn

15th May 2008

Carl IcahnThe following is letter to Yahoo’s board from billionaire investor, Carl Icahn, announcing his intent to launch a proxy battle:

Dear Mr. Bostock:

It is clear to me that the board of directors of Yahoo has acted irrationally and lost the faith of shareholders and Microsoft. It is quite obvious that Microsoft’s bid of $33 per share is a superior alternative to Yahoo’s prospects on a standalone basis. I am perplexed by the board’s actions. It is irresponsible to hide behind management’s more than overly optimistic financial forecasts. It is unconscionable that you have not allowed your shareholders to choose to accept an offer that represented a 72% premium over Yahoo’s closing price of $19.18 on the day before the initial Microsoft offer. I and many of your shareholders strongly believe that a combination between Yahoo and Microsoft would form a dynamic company and more importantly would be a force strong enough to compete with Google on the Internet.

During the past week, a number of shareholders have asked me to lead a proxy fight to attempt to remove the current board and to establish a new board which would attempt to negotiate a successful merger with Microsoft, something that in my opinion the current board has completely botched. I believe that a combination between Microsoft and Yahoo is by far the most sensible path for both companies. I have therefore taken the following actions: (1) during the last 10 days, I have purchased approximately 59 million shares and share-equivalents of Yahoo; (2) I have formed a 10-person slate which will stand for election against the current board; and (3) I have sought antitrust clearance from the Federal Trade Commission to acquire up to approximately $2.5 billion worth of Yahoo stock. The biographies of the members of our slate are attached to this letter. A more formal notification is being delivered today to Yahoo under separate cover.

While it is my understanding that you do not intend to enter into any transaction that would impede a Microsoft-Yahoo merger, I am concerned that in several recent press releases you stated that you intend to pursue certain “strategic alternatives”. I therefore hope and trust that if there is any question that these “strategic alternatives” might in any way impede a future Microsoft merger you will at the very least allow shareholders to opine on them before embarking on such a transaction.

I sincerely hope you heed the wishes of your shareholders and move expeditiously to negotiate a merger with Microsoft, thereby making a proxy fight unnecessary.

Sincerely yours,

CARL C. ICAHN

Source: Fortune.com

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Facebook Grows Up

15th April 2008

Sheryl SandbergMeet Sheryl Sandberg.   As Facebook’s chief operating officer, she is in charge of helping the popular Internet startup grow up.  The company is betting that Sandberg will figure out how to build a profitable business from social networking.

Sandberg appears to have the right experience.  As the former vice president of global online sales and operations at Google, she built the operations to support Google’s international strategy, and she ran its lucrative AdWords program. She managed the division that handled sales for nearly all of Google’s online advertisers.

Check out the rest of the article here.

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SmugMug is not a Tech or Web 2.0 Company

19th February 2008

SmugMugSmugMug is the preferred service for serious photographers. In fact, it has over 100,000 paying customers who have uploaded over 100 million photos since 2002. In addition, this company is extremely profitable; revenues exceed $10 million per year.

There is no free version of the service. People pay a minimum of $40 per year to upload photos to the site. Even better, pro accounts, which are $150/year, enable photographers to sell downloads as well as prints of their work.

Don MacAskill is the “brains” behind this venture. In the video below, Don gives an in depth interview about SmugMug. Check it out.

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eBay’s Whitman Bids Farewell

24th January 2008

Meg WhitmanYesterday, eBay reported its earnings for the fourth quarter.  At the same time, the company announced its CEO, Meg Whitman, will be stepping down on March 31, 2008.  This decision was expected as the date marks Whitman’s ten-year anniversary at the company.  Previously, she had said no CEO should stay longer in his or her post than a decade.

John DonahoeWhitman will be replaced by John Donahoe, eBay’s President of Marketplaces.  Donahoe’s division accounts for more than 70% of the company’s global revenue.  For more information about this transition, there is plenty of coverage from “Fortune”.  The links below are just a few related articles.

“New CEO, uncertain future for eBay”

 ”Meet eBay’s new boss”

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The Face Behind Facebook

13th January 2008

Here’s an interesting video clip from Lesley’s Stahl’s recent interview with Mark Zuckerberg for “60 Minutes”.

Facebook

Enjoy!

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Giving US$10 Million Away!

24th August 2007

Yahoo! recently profiled a really cool start up called Kiva.org.

Kiva, which means “unity” in Swahili, is a lending organization with a twist: Anyone with a bit of money and an Internet connection can step forward as a microlender to assist struggling third-world entrepreneurs get out of poverty.

This social venture was started by Matt and Jessica Flannery after they found out they had different career goals during pre-marriage counseling.  Jessica wanted to study microfinance in Africa whereas Matt was headed to Silicon Valley.

Happily, things worked out; Kiva now has loans totaling $10 million.  Read more about this interesting couple and their social venture, Kiva.org on the People of the Web.

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Revver: Get Revv’d Up and Join the Revvolution!

18th August 2007

Although I really like YouTube, the service still hasn’t introduced their revenue sharing platform yet. Meanwhile, competitors such as Revver offer a viable alternative and are building greater customer adoption and loyalty.

I have been experimenting with Revver over the past few days. While this is not the first time Revver has caught my attention, I decided to take a serious look while incorporating clips from Joel Comm’s new Internet show.

So far, I am really impressed with how easy it is to incorporate into a blog platform such as Wordpress. In addition, I like how Revver is supporting the free enterprise system with the ad revenue sharing for both content creators and affiliates / promoters.

The downside I see right now is the fact that Revver doesn’t have nearly the amount of videos and traffic as YouTube. However, if more users start using this service and spreading the word, it is going to put the heat back on Google to roll out a video ad revenue sharing program soon!

Watch Revver’s CEO, Kevin Wells, discuss the company and service.

Check out Revver’s funky, hip video promoting its service too.

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