Showing posts with label Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos. Show all posts

Sunday, August 9, 2015

Will New Amazon Dash Buttons Make Us Lazy Shoppers? - http://clapway.com/2015/08/09/will-amazons-new-dash-buttons-make-us-lazy-shoppers789/

Have you ever bought an item from Amazon so often that you wished there was a button that could be pressed to have the item just show up on your doorstep? Yeah, me either, but apparently there are plenty of people who do because Amazon Dash buttons do just that.


How do You Make Online Shopping Even More Effortless?


If you’re the type of person who gets frustrated while looking through the endless amount of consumer products available online, then you’ve probably wondered how getting some of those items could be less of a hassle. After all, Amazon’s 1-click ordering option still requires you to search for the item you want to buy. Fortunately, Amazon has thought of a solution, Amazon Dash buttons. Amazon partnered up with eighteen brands in order to sell products to consumers without even needing to visit Amazon’s website. Each of these buttons are linked directly to the user’s account. They’re small, have one button, and have an adhesive back that let’s users place them anywhere. Stick a Tide detergent Dash button on your washing machine and the next time you run out, just press the button and wait for the detergent to show up in two days (assuming you’re a Prime member).


Do Amazon Dash Buttons Really Work?


Amazon may not have a great track record when it comes to making tablets and phones, but they sure can get you to buy things in record numbers. The key to Amazon Dash buttons lies in the brands it chose to partner with. Brands like Tide, Gillette, Glad, and Maxwell House all make products that people buy on a fairly regular basis. Each Dash button costs $5, and when you receive it you have to register it with your Amazon account. The device pretty much tethers itself to your home’s Wi-Fi network through the Amazon app on your smartphone. Once everything is set up then you just need to press the button when you notice you’re getting low on the corresponding item. When the button is pressed you’ll receive a confirmation email from Amazon — just like you do when you make a purchase from the website — and then you wait for your package. If you decide you want to cancel the order then you can do so via the confirmation email. The Amazon Dash button is a bit smarter than it leads on, too. For instance, if you accidentally press the button twice when making an order the button won’t recognize the second press. In fact, user’s can’t make another purchase from the button until they’ve received the previous order.


Is the Internet Just Making us Lazy


Amazon is hitting consumers on two levels: they’re giving people an “uh-oh” button that they can press when they suddenly notice they’re running low on something but don’t want to run to the store to grab it, and they’re cutting down the amount of trips to the store people have to make. The device is really all about convenience since it won’t be eliminating serious grocery trips in its current state. In fact, the best use of Dash buttons are for items you frequently forget to pick up while at the store because you purchase them at all intervals, like toilet paper or shaving cream. So far, Amazon’s Dash buttons feel more like a useful tool than anything else.



In between pushing your Amazon Dash Button take a ride on a Penny Skateboard



 



Will New Amazon Dash Buttons Make Us Lazy Shoppers?

Apple Spends $700,000 a year to keep Tim Cook Safe - http://clapway.com/2015/08/09/apple-spends-700000-a-year-to-keep-tim-cook-safe768/

As the CEO of the world’s most profitable technology, Tim Cook is a very important man, and important men need serious security. Tim Cook requires so much security that Apple is willing to pay out somewhere in the amount of $700,000 on his personal security each year.


THIS WAS REPORTED IN THE APPLE SCHEDULE 14A REPORT


This large figure was spotted in Apple’s Schedule 14A report with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission by Patently Apple. In the full section in question, this was under a title heading called “All Other Compensation”. This read that this amount represents Apple’s contributions to Tim Cook’s 401(k) plan in the amount of $15,6000, life insurance premiums paid by the company in the amount of $2,520, vacation time in the amount of $56,923 and lastly security expenses in the amount of $699,133. Apple has clarified its expenses on Tim Cook’s security later on in the report, explaining that it doesn’t generally provide “prerequisites to its officers that aren’t available to employees”. Apple apparently provides both home and personal security for Cook, because his security and personal safety are of the “utmost importance to the company and its shareholders”.


LOTS OF TECH COMPANIES SPEND LARGE AMOUNTS FOR CEO SAFETY


Apparently, these kinds of figures for safety and security aren’t all that ludicrous. Amazon spent around $1.6 million to protect Jeff Bezos in 2013. Larry Ellison, the former CEO of Oracle, had a security and safety fund that cost about $1.5 million annually. Many analysts put the upper end of the bodyguard pay scale to be around $120,000 per year. If it is at that price, then Apple is putting out enough money to keep no less than five personal security officers by Tim Cook’s side at all times. Realistically, all of this money isn’t going towards strictly to body guards. Oftentimes, large companies spend money on surveillance cameras and home security systems for their executives as well as body guards.


THIS IS A SMALL AMOUNT IN COMPARISON TO APPLE’S OVERALL PROFITS


Yet, in the grand scheme of things this $700,000 is a small amount of Apple’s earnings for a year. They are currently on their way to reporting a $53 billion profit this fiscal year.


 


You may have to spend a fortune to protect your Apple CEO, but you don’t have to break the bank to protect your Apple iPhone.




 


 



Apple Spends $700,000 a year to keep Tim Cook Safe